icup

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I think its stupid that they built the stadium that way and didn't think about it up front, but in a way I agree with Jones. There's far more important shit to worry about.

They should be good enough to cover one play a game (if that) that could get impacted by the sun.

The 14 penalties and lousy run/pass blocking, lousy tackling have nothing to do with the sun or the TV screen
if the organization was run the right way, all avenues should be possible. you should have droves of interns and minions for ground work on stupid fucking curtains.

belichick wouldve had those windows covered the day after robert kraft opened the stadium.... delegate the stupid shit to open up your time for more important matters, and then you wouldnt have such a long to-do list.

same way he should delegate all GM responsibilities including final say

jones is a human flask who thinks things only work the way that he thinks they do
 

Dodger12

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Doesn't sound good for MM. What's funny is that after years of 8 and 8 and underperforming with the Red Dolt, somehow he's pissed at MM in year 2 after a 12 and 5 (regular season). I get the issues and ultimately the HC is accountable for coaching the team, but it's till funny none the less.
 

dbair1967

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Doesn't sound good for MM. What's funny is that after years of 8 and 8 and underperforming with the Red Dolt, somehow he's pissed at MM in year 2 after a 12 and 5 (regular season). I get the issues and ultimately the HC is accountable for coaching the team, but it's till funny none the less.

Yeah, shows how blindly married he was to JG and his family, to an extreme fault.

I do think some of it was knowing he fucked up dumping Jimmy when he did and at least in his warped mind, Garrett was at least somewhat tied to Jimmy's time here. You'd have thought more of what Jimmy did would rub off on him (Garrett) but it was obvious it didnt.

That said, after that third 8-8 season Garrett should have been shown the door without question. It was OBVIOUS to all that he wasnt going to get it done, but by then Jones was completely invested in proving everyone wrong
 

dbair1967

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Above he praised Moore for his role in "getting them in a position to win a Super Bowl" but these comments look like a drect shot at the coaching staff aout how Cooper was utilized, something that Aikman and Irvin also called out (same for Lamb)



 

dbair1967

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Yeah he was one of the guys in-house thought to be in-line for the OC job here should Moore depart.

You'd think McAdoo would have preferred Cowboys OC gig to Panthers. Either he believes Moore isnt going anywhere (likely, because nobody is going to hire him as HC) OR he really believes McCarthy is in big trouble and is going to get axed.
 

bbgun

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McCarthy and Moore staying but Quinn leaving would be an off-season disaster.
 

dbair1967

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That's what I was saying too. He and McCarthy are supposedly tight, so it seems logical had Moore left McAdoo would become OC.

The fact he bailed before even seeing the situation play out is somewhat telling IMO.
 

dbair1967

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The list of Cowboy greats trashing the current coaching gets longer every day.

 

touchdown

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Stephen A. Smith, Kendrick Perkins and Marcus Spears debate whether the Los Angeles Lakers or Dallas Cowboys are the bigger disappointment this season.

 

dbair1967

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After disappointing finish, Cowboys offensive line needs a reboot​

6:00 AM ET

Todd ArcherESPN Staff Writer

FRISCO, Texas -- Every game, they lead the Dallas Cowboys onto the field with Tyron Smith always first, provided the left tackle is healthy. Right beside him is La’el Collins, provided he’s healthy and available to play. Then it is Zack Martin, Connor Williams and Tyler Biadasz.

It is happened every week, so it can’t be a coincidence.

For years, the Cowboys have been led by their offensive line. For a few years, they were called the best offensive line in football. Then one of the best. With perennial Pro Bowlers in Smith and Martin, who is considered the best guard in football by many, it is easy to see what’s to like.

Yet as the Cowboys look to regroup after a disappointing finish to 2021 with a wild-card loss to the San Francisco 49ers, it is time to reinvest in the position not because they should but because they must.

In the moments after the loss to the Niners, Collins and Martin were asked about the offensive-line play.
The Cowboys' offensive line struggled in pass protection and with penalties in 2021. Is the line meeting their standard? “I wouldn’t say so,” Collins said. “I think we have a lot of work to do. Definitely didn’t reach the potential that room, the ability we have.”

Does the line need to improve? “It’s no secret we need to get better,” Martin said. “We got smacked in the mouth early, and credit to our guys for coming back and fighting through and making it a game. We need to get better.”
There are serious questions the Cowboys need to ask and answer:

Is Joe Philbin the right coach?

The Cowboys were the most penalized offensive line in the NFL, and some of that falls on coaching. The line had 54 penalties total, 49 accepted. The Las Vegas Raiders were second with 47 and 40. The Los Angeles Rams and Seattle Seahawks had the fewest accepted penalties for an offensive line (16).

Offensive Line Penalty Leaders​

TEAMACCEPTED
PENALTIES
TOTAL
PENALTIES
YARDS
1. Dallas Cowboys4954425
2. Las Vegas Raiders4047315
3. Minnesota Vikings3339279
4. Buffalo Bills3238276
5. Kansas City Chiefs3238262
The 49 penalties negated 373 yards gained.

Against San Francisco, the line was flagged five times with four accepted penalties as Williams and Collins were called for a hold and a false start each.

In the regular season, Williams was the most-penalized lineman in the league (15 total, 12 accepted) and when the coaches opted to bench him, replacement Connor McGovern did not play better.

“We have common philosophies and approaches: do not hold on a run play. We all understand that,” coach Mike McCarthy said. “There’s no excuse to hold on a run play. It’s simple math. I mean, minus-2 versus minus-10, do the math. But, we’ve had too many holding on run plays, so that’s something as a coach we’ll continue to take a hard look at, by individual, by technique, by concept, situation and so forth. ”

Is it time to move on from Smith?
He has not played a full season since 2015. He missed five games in 2021 with a recurring ankle injury and one because of COVID-19. He is just 31 but is about to enter his 10th season. He had a poor performance against San Francisco in the playoffs.

"I get to see Tyron every day, but also I have an understanding of not only how it happens and what goes into it,” McCarthy said. “I think players go through strings of injuries, particularly at his position. He's a cornerstone position. He plays in a high-stress position. I just have confidence in him and our process. So yeah, I don't see any reason why we can't see him bounce back and have a full season.”

Smith is set to count $17.5 million against the cap and make $13.5 million, but the Cowboys could save nearly $5.5 million by releasing him. That, however, sets up another question: Who is the replacement?

At the very least, the Cowboys have to start the transition process by finding Smith’s successor in the draft, potentially with a first-round pick. The Cowboys currently have the No. 24 pick.

Is it time to move on from Collins or move him back to guard?

Collins missed all of 2020 with hip surgery and then was suspended five games for violating the league’s substance-abuse policy. Because of the penalty, the guaranteed money remaining on his contract ($6.48 million) has voided, so the Cowboys can get out of his contract without much salary-cap penalty. They believe offensive tackle Terence Steele, an undrafted free agent in 2020, has the look of a decade-long player after starting 27 of 33 regular-season games his first two seasons.

It has been a disappointing run because Collins had his best season in 2019, signed a contract extension and looked like he would be a stalwart for years to come.

Maybe the answer is moving him back to left guard, where he opened his career. McCarthy hinted at the possibility as Collins was coming back from suspension but it never happened. Williams is set to become a free agent in March but his penalties make an exit more likely than a return at this point.

With Collins at guard, the Cowboys could go with Steele at right tackle and 2021 draft pick Josh Ball, who did not play his rookie year because of an ankle injury, as a candidate for the backup tackle job.

Is Biadasz the answer at center?

The Cowboys were spoiled by the Pro Bowl play of Andre Gurode and Travis Frederick for a good portion of the last 20 years. Biadasz started every game in his second season but had nine penalties. He does not have the strength of Gurode and Frederick and it appeared as if the Cowboys were holding a competition for the job in training camp by giving Williams a long look but he had troubles with the shotgun snaps. Once the season started, they began to give McGovern backup-center reps.

One pro scout said Biadasz should be viewed as a starting-type player, adding he is better with more stout players around him. With Martin, he doesn’t have a worry. The inconsistencies of Williams and McGovern hurt him.
Looking for a center in the draft makes some sense too, but the Cowboys will have needs across the roster that might be greater.

When McCarthy was named coach in January 2020, he thought he was inheriting a line that had four blue-chip players in Smith, Frederick, Martin and Collins. Frederick retired before the 2020 season. Smith and Collins have been hurt. Only Martin has maintained that level of play.

As good as the statistics say the Cowboys’ offense was in 2021, they could not run it effectively enough (they ranked 20th in yards before contact per rush) and they could not protect Dak Prescott effectively enough (ranked 23rd in average time QBs had to throw), especially against the Niners when it mattered most. The line needs a reboot.
 

Doomsday

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Doesn't sound good for MM. What's funny is that after years of 8 and 8 and underperforming with the Red Dolt, somehow he's pissed at MM in year 2 after a 12 and 5 (regular season). I get the issues and ultimately the HC is accountable for coaching the team, but it's till funny none the less.
TIME is the difference for jerruh. Time is the fire in which we burn. It's a predator, stalking us all. Jerruh feels its hot breath on his pimpled ass. He's 80. He knows the predator will soon make the kill and he wants that Lombardi Trophy one last time before that happens. He's not building for the next 5 years down the road. NOW is his meter.
 

Dodger12

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TIME is the difference for jerruh. Time is the fire in which we burn. It's a predator, stalking us all. Jerruh feels its hot breath on his pimpled ass. He's 80. He knows the predator will soon make the kill and he wants that Lombardi Trophy one last time before that happens. He's not building for the next 5 years down the road. NOW is his meter.

Well.....I'll just have to break the news that Jerry's out of time. We've seen this team's ceiling and now Parsons is Tweeting his support for Dak. These guys can hear the rumblings but Dak can take his 120 million and ride off into the sunset after another 3 years. He's the real winner in all of this.
 
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