Yahoo! - Jason Cole - Cowboys LB Spencer plays role in Jones’ legacy"

ETex

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Cowboys LB Spencer plays role in Jones’ legacy

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By Jason Cole, Yahoo! Sports 34 minutes ago

ARLINGTON, Texas – Three Super Bowl titles, billions of dollars for himself and his NFL counterparts, and a stadium that is part high-end department store and casino have combined to cement Jerry Jones’ image as a business genius.

But for all his brilliance at turning a profit, the Dallas Cowboys owner would still like to be known as a football man. It’s a nebulous title reserved for the likes of Bill Walsh, George Halas and Bill Parcells – people who build teams of men, not just piles of cash.

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Jones is prouder of his role as general manager.
(Jim Prisching/AP Photo)

That is why, in a subtly significant way, linebacker Anthony Spencer(notes) may be as important to Jones’ legacy as the palace that is Cowboys Stadium. If Spencer and some of the other young defensive players Jones has acquired over the past three years continue to play well, Dallas may win another Super Bowl.

“As GM, I’m proud of the fact that we have positioned ourselves the way we have,” said Jones, whose Cowboys meet the Minnesota Vikings in Sunday’s NFC divisional playoff game. “Playing the way we are, as healthy as we are … we have a very talented team. We’ve got some depth and these guys are now starting to get experience under fire.”

Since Parcells’ departure following the 2006 season, Jones has augmented the talent his former coach brought in with a nucleus of drafted players and free agents. Michael Jenkins(notes), Felix Jones(notes), Tashard Choice(notes), Leonard Davis(notes), Keith Brooking(notes) and Ken Hamlin(notes) are among the key players who Jerry Jones and his staff have collected since the start of 2007.

However, Spencer may be the most significant find. Moreover, Spencer is finally proving Jones right after the Cowboys made a risky move to cut 34-year-old Greg Ellis(notes) before the start of this season.

Ellis, 34, was a proven pro, the type of player teams usually hang onto when making a run at a title. During his final two years with Dallas, Ellis had 20½ sacks. Spencer, a first-round NFL draft pick in 2007, had 4½ in that same time.

During the season’s first 10 games, the decision was looking like the wrong one as Spencer failed to register a sack. Since then, he’s recorded seven, including one in the 34-14 wild-card win over the Philadelphia Eagles last weekend. Ultimately, he is giving the Cowboys the kind of play that has made their pass rush, led by fellow linebacker DeMarcus Ware(notes) and defensive tackle Jay Ratliff(notes), arguably the best of all the teams in the playoffs.

“What we have together now is something really special,” Spencer said. “I’ve just really started to focus on things more, make sure the little things are taken care of and it’s all come together. I’m just a lot more comfortable.”

The turning point for Spencer was in a Week 4 loss to Denver that dropped the Cowboys to 2-2 and had some fans pushing the panic switch. Late in that game, Spencer had a critical pass go through his hands that he felt he should have intercepted.

“That’s when I realized that it was about focus on the details,” Spencer said. “That was a ball I should have had, but I took my eyes off the play for just a second and it was through my hands and we lose the game.”

While that moment clearly inspired Spencer to do better, others noticed the hard work well before then.

“All I’ve seen since I got here is how hard Anthony has worked to become a good player and it’s all going right for him now,” said Brooking, in his first year with the Cowboys after spending 11 with the Atlanta Falcons. “He just works and works. He didn’t let the stuff with [Ellis] get in his head at all. He just worked to prove to himself and everybody else that he could be that guy.”

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Spencer celebrates during the Cowboys wild-card victory over the Eagles.
(Sharon Ellman/AP Photo)

Spencer’s play during the season’s second half makes Jones, who played college ball at Arkansas and dreamed of running the team back when he rode buses to and from the games, recall the glimpses he saw during the defender’s first two years.

“He was close on a lot of plays, right there about to make it happen, that you knew it was just a matter of time before it all came together for him,” Jones said.

Perhaps, but this is the same Jones who bungled draft after draft and trade after trade following Jimmy Johnson’s tenure. After Troy Aikman and Michael Irvin were gone, Jones tried to replace them with the likes of Quincy Carter, Joey Galloway(notes) and James McKnight.

All the while, Jones heard from Cowboys fans that he needed to give up control of the team. He did, for a while, to Parcells, but eventually wanted it back.

And this time, Jones may be on the verge of another title. One that he helped build from a football perspective.
 

Chocolate Lab

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Um, please. Jerry was just listening to Ciskowski and Wade on Spencer and I'm sure Jenkins as well.

Don't get me wrong, he gets credit for listening to his football people and not making picks on his own like he has in the past. But let's not act like he made the decision to draft these guys on his own.
 

Woods

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I have to say, when we go into the Draft, I feel soooo much more confident than 5-7 years ago.

I think the process that's in place has been refined over the past years, and I think JJ has and continues to learn from his mistakes (in developing and honing the process).

That's not to say each of the recent drafts is A+ or anything, but the Cowboys have a plan, and they follow it.

Not to mention, look at the incredibly high quality of UDFA we have recently picked up. Literally, Pro Bowl calibre. Just incredible.
 

TellerMorrow34

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I don't care who you give the majority of the credit to or not but the last few drafts we've had have been pretty darn good ones, IMO.
 

Hostile

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Back when theebs and I were telling people about Tom Ciskowski, we were homers. theebs is the man who got me to looking into Ciskowski. We were dead when Parcells stole away Jeff Ireland and Brian Gaine. Our front office is actually pretty well established as a top notch NFL staff. It is a shame more people who root for this team don't realize it.
 

TheMarathonContinues

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Chocolate Lab;3223936 said:
Um, please. Jerry was just listening to Ciskowski and Wade on Spencer and I'm sure Jenkins as well.

Don't get me wrong, he gets credit for listening to his football people and not making picks on his own like he has in the past. But let's not act like he made the decision to draft these guys on his own.

Who was Jerry listening to when he wanted Ware over Merriman and Spears? Because it sure as hell wasn't Parcells. At the end of the day we give credit to Parcells for the talent on this team but even he had football guys he listened to. At the end of the day Jerry got the player he wanted and actually co-signed a trade with a rival to do it. Props to Jerry.
 

TheMarathonContinues

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Woods;3223940 said:
I have to say, when we go into the Draft, I feel soooo much more confident than 5-7 years ago.

I think the process that's in place has been refined over the past years, and I think JJ has and continues to learn from his mistakes (in developing and honing the process).

That's not to say each of the recent drafts is A+ or anything, but the Cowboys have a plan, and they follow it.

Not to mention, look at the incredibly high quality of UDFA we have recently picked up. Literally, Pro Bowl calibre. Just incredible.


Well one thing Jerry is doing now that he didn't do before is pick the best player on the board. We picked Jenkins and Felix in the 1st round after having just signed Pac-Man and already having Henry and Newman on the team and even also drafted Choice and Scandrick in later rounds. There was a time when Jerry just drafted based on what position we needed the most.
 

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ETex;3223900 said:
The turning point for Spencer was in a Week 4 loss to Denver that dropped the Cowboys to 2-2 and had some fans pushing the panic switch. Late in that game, Spencer had a critical pass go through his hands that he felt he should have intercepted.

“That’s when I realized that it was about focus on the details,” Spencer said. “That was a ball I should have had, but I took my eyes off the play for just a second and it was through my hands and we lose the game.”
10/4/2009 (during the Broncos game)
DallasEast;2987314 said:
Spencer with the great coverage, but no INT. Wow.
10/20/2009
DallasEast;3025577 said:
I would debate that, if Spencer had simply closed his hands an instant sooner on the touchdown pass from Orten to Moreno, we would be 5-0 under those circumstances.
11/2/2009
DallasEast;3050890 said:
The one negative, which can be held against Anthony Spencer this entire season, was the missed interception which passed right through his hands for a Moreno touchdown during the Denver game. Otherwise, he has been a more than adequate replacement for Greg Ellis. Sacks are great, but in a 3-4 defense, an outside linebacker has a lot more to do than just rush the quarterback. He has done very well in the other phases of his game.
11/26/2009
DallasEast;3101805 said:
That's exactly what I was harping on after that particular game. That one play was the difference between Denver's actual touchdown and Spencer either taking the interception back to the house or returning it deep into Bronco territory. Even though the results didn't pan out as hoped for, it was just one of several examples which have been seen in Spencer's level of play.

He does play strong against the run and has positioned himself very well in pass coverage. Everyone wants a pass rusher to do more than just pressure the quarterback. We want to see Spencer put the other guy on his backside, but no one should overlook what his other responsibilities are. And in my opinion, he has exceeded Ellis' overall level of play at this stage. Once his pass rush equals that of Ellis', it should remove all doubt.

Just my two cents.
 

DallasEast

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EGG;3224065 said:
Is there a point to all of that?

Originally Posted by DallasEast
10/4/2009 (during the Broncos game)

10/20/2009

11/2/2009

11/26/2009
:confused:
 

Seven

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Hostile;3223966 said:
Back when theebs and I were telling people about Tom Ciskowski, we were homers. theebs is the man who got me to looking into Ciskowski. We were dead when Parcells stole away Jeff Ireland and Brian Gaine. Our front office is actually pretty well established as a top notch NFL staff. It is a shame more people who root for this team don't realize it.


Never heard of Gaine.


I've been satisfied with the drafts. I realize it's a crap shoot anyways. Last years draft was one of our best with where we were, IMO.
 

EPL0c0

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he wasn't getting the sacks, but it doesn't mean he wasn't being a problem for opposing offenses. He was putting pressure on QBs.

I think the biggest change has been his stunts, looping around Spears, having the speed to do it... that has made him much better.
 

Hostile

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Seven;3224096 said:
Never heard of Gaine.


I've been satisfied with the drafts. I realize it's a crap shoot anyways. Last years draft was one of our best with where we were, IMO.
Oh man, when we lost Parcells, Ireland and Gaine there was sackcloth, ashes, and prophesies of doom abounding.
 

yimyammer

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Hostile;3223966 said:
Back when theebs and I were telling people about Tom Ciskowski, we were homers. theebs is the man who got me to looking into Ciskowski. We were dead when Parcells stole away Jeff Ireland and Brian Gaine. Our front office is actually pretty well established as a top notch NFL staff. It is a shame more people who root for this team don't realize it.

How do you find out more about people like Ciskowski and the other staff? You don't hear much about them anywhere.
 

Cowboys22

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Chocolate Lab;3223936 said:
Um, please. Jerry was just listening to Ciskowski and Wade on Spencer and I'm sure Jenkins as well.

Don't get me wrong, he gets credit for listening to his football people and not making picks on his own like he has in the past. But let's not act like he made the decision to draft these guys on his own.

This is ridiculous. There isn't a single so called "football guy" anywhere in the world that doesn't listen to his scouts and coaches. Name me one guy that simply does all the research and single handily makes every pick by themselves. That person doesn't exist. Jerry is the GM and every draft pick and every free agent is his guy because he makes the final call. A big part of being a good GM is putting good people around you so that you have the resources to make good decisions. Jerry should get just as much credit as any GM or personell guy if the Cowboy's draft picks and free agents turn out to be good players.
 

skinsscalper

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Chocolate Lab;3223936 said:
Um, please. Jerry was just listening to Ciskowski and Wade on Spencer and I'm sure Jenkins as well.

Don't get me wrong, he gets credit for listening to his football people and not making picks on his own like he has in the past. But let's not act like he made the decision to draft these guys on his own.

To be fair CL there isn't a single guy in the NFL that does it on his own. The fact that Jerry Jones has stopped trying to maverick the whole thing and look like a genius, he has deferred to others more than in the past, I believe.

I read or heard somewhere that the greatest leaders aren't the guys who know everything. They're the guys who realize that they don't know everything and surround themselves with people that do. That's where I think Jerry Jones has made his biggest strides in his quest to return to glory.
 

Doomsday101

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Chocolate Lab;3223936 said:
Um, please. Jerry was just listening to Ciskowski and Wade on Spencer and I'm sure Jenkins as well.

Don't get me wrong, he gets credit for listening to his football people and not making picks on his own like he has in the past. But let's not act like he made the decision to draft these guys on his own.

Your right Jerry changed how we would go about selecting players and it is a group effort and Jerry is part of that. Even when BP was here it was not BP call alone other voices were brought into the mix along with Jerry.
 

Chocolate Lab

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I know they don't do it all on their own, but guys like Polian and Parcells when he was a GM would actually evaluate the players themselves.

Actually I am agreeing with what you guys are saying. It's the article that kind of makes it sound like the GM is the one scouting out these guys and picking them.

But for the record, this is why I've never had a problem with Jerry being the GM as long as he has a great head scout (Ciskowski) and will go by the draft board without getting crazy and picking his pets (like Quincy).

It's just like how the article gives Jerry credit for cutting Ellis. That's almost like giving him credit for cutting TO when the truth is he was one of the few guys in the entire organization who really wanted to keep him. Okay, he gets credit for doing it, but Stephen and Garrett and Wade (or whoever it was) had to twist his arm to do it.
 
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