Ellis - Ratliff: Going To Shut Up And Do Our Jobs

bkeavs

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Ellis - Ratliff: Going To Shut Up And Do Our Jobs





Ratliff: Going To Shut Up And Do Our Jobs

Posted by jellis at 6/20/2012 10:03 AM CDT on dallascowboys.com



For the second straight year, Cowboys nose tackle Jay Ratliff couldn't participate in on-field work with teammates and coaches. Last year it was because of the lockout, and this year to give him some rest from a foot injury.

While Ratliff's own performance didn't seem to suffer too much in 2011 - he made his fourth consecutive Pro Bowl - most of the defensive players on this team agree that the work stoppage was not conducive to learning a new defense.

"We didn't have OTAs and all of that," Ratliff told KTCK-AM in Dallas on Wednesday. "We were learning on the fly. Rob (Ryan) has a high volume defense. There's a lot of things, a lot of terminology, we had to get used to."

This year, Ratliff said, there will be no way to justify things if the defense doesn't work out the kinks. However, he doesn't want teammates getting ahead of themselves thinking that anything has been accomplished just because the D is going into Year 2 with Ryan.

"This year there's no excuses," Ratliff said "We're not going to sit here and talk about what we're going to do this year or all the expectations everyone else has for us. I think the attitude this year needs to be we're going to be quiet. Well, to put it bluntly, we're going to shut up, not going to say a thing, and do our jobs.

"Honestly we don't have room to talk. The Giants are the Super Bowl champions. They're won two Super Bowls in the last five years. We just need to just be quiet and do our job. Nothing else."

In the Cowboys locker room, Ratliff is a shining example of quiet leadership, a player who rarely has much to say, but simply plays his position as well as anyone. It's a role he's grown into, rising up the depth chart after being picked in the seventh round in 2005, and later taking over the starting nose tackle job in 2007.

Despite seemingly annual concerns over Ratliff's chances for longevity playing as an undersized nose, he says he personally feels as strong and athletic as he did when he was younger, but his mentality has changed with age.

"You really want to take advantage of these moments," Ratliff said. "The window is kind of closing, you're in your 30s. The way this business is, that's kind of old or whatever. Again, I don't feel old, but I think the word I'm looking for is 'urgency.'"

If Ratliff acknowledges that time is running out for himself and the Cowboys' other centerpieces to win in a big way, it's probably a sentiment that is not lost on his teammates.
 
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I love this guy. It's such a shame he likely will never be mentioned among the great Cowboys Dlineman because he's been a part of so many average to bad to underachieving teams.
 

Theebs

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Jason witten said the exact same thing last week on one of the local shows.

So It must be a theme with the vets.

With Bennett and choice gone, the only guy I could see breaking this is Bryant and I am sure he will cause he has his own rules there anyway. He is a Jerry pet guy.

And of course rob Ryan.
 
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You have to let players and coaches be who they are. Some guys, it helps them to talk. Gets them into the mentality they need to perform at a higher level. Some other guys like to be quiet. It doesn’t really matter. All that matters is they work as hard as they can in practice and leave it all on the field.
 

ThoughtExperiment

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I love Jay, but every year they say no excuses. But there always is one, like no OTAs or full offseason or whatever.
 

Theebs

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I love Jay, but every year they say no excuses. But there always is one, like no OTAs or full offseason or whatever.

Yep. The no excuses thing is the spring mantra every year.

It's not guys like jay ratliff's fault. It's the front office fault for not finding more guys like him.

I always feel like Ratliff is similar to jim jeffcoat. He was an excellent player on a bad team for years and then was a huge forgotten piece on an incredible team.
 

ThoughtExperiment

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And I don't even blame the players that much... "No excuses" is one of those Bull Durham cliches athletes just say.

But they really have used the No OTA excuse this year. It would be nice if even one player stepped up and said other NFL defenses excelled with new coaches and no OTAs, so we should have, too.
 

CowboysRMX

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I love this guy. It's such a shame he likely will never be mentioned among the great Cowboys Dlineman because he's been a part of so many average to bad to underachieving teams.

IMO Ratliff has done nowhere near the randy whites, ed too talls, charles haleys. Rstliff has been very good but the greats are in a different class. Ratliff is what Danny White was to Dallas. Good but not great.
 

Sheik

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IMO Ratliff has done nowhere near the randy whites, ed too talls, charles haleys. Rstliff has been very good but the greats are in a different class. Ratliff is what Danny White was to Dallas. Good but not great.

This take is very fair.

Ratliff is just an easy guy to root for. If you can't get behind a player like him, you're dead inside.
 
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IMO Ratliff has done nowhere near the randy whites, ed too talls, charles haleys. Rstliff has been very good but the greats are in a different class. Ratliff is what Danny White was to Dallas. Good but not great.

Randy White and Too Tall were from before I watched football, so they don't count as far as I'm concerned.

The greatest Cowboys defensive lineman, as far as I'm concerend, is Charles Haley. Followed by Leon Lett. Them Jimmie Jones. Then Jon Nix. La'Roi Glover. Alonzo Spellman. and then probably Ratliff.

Cowboys win a Championship and Ratliff goes up at least ahead of Spellman.

But yeah, couldn't care less about people who played pre-High Def televisions and shit.
 

Jon88

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Randy White and Too Tall were from before I watched football, so they don't count as far as I'm concerned.

The greatest Cowboys defensive lineman, as far as I'm concerend, is Charles Haley. Followed by Leon Lett. Them Jimmie Jones. Then Jon Nix. La'Roi Glover. Alonzo Spellman. and then probably Ratliff.

Cowboys win a Championship and Ratliff goes up at least ahead of Spellman.

But yeah, couldn't care less about people who played pre-High Def televisions and shit.

lol

I forgot all about John Nix.
 

CowboysRMX

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This take is very fair.

Ratliff is just an easy guy to root for. If you can't get behind a player like him, you're dead inside.

I like the guy. But he's not great IMO as compared to the great DL in the cowboys history. IMO Ratliff falls in the area of Leon Lett Russell Maryland guys like that.
 

buckup

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The greatest Cowboys defensive lineman, as far as I'm concerend, is Charles Haley. Followed by Leon Lett. Them Jimmie Jones. Then Jon Nix. La'Roi Glover. Alonzo Spellman. and then probably Ratliff.

Cowboys win a Championship and Ratliff goes up at least ahead of Spellman.

But yeah, couldn't care less about people who played pre-High Def televisions and shit.

I think you mean Willie Blade.
 
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I think you mean Willie Blade.

Jon Nix forced a fumble against Stephen Davis when they Redskins were trying to run the clock out during our epic 0-4 vs 0-5 MNF clash.

We recovered the ball, and Anthony Wright got us into field goal range for the win.

That was arguably the greatest moment in franchise history. And it was because of Jon "Trash can full of dirt" Nix.

All Willie Blade ever did was shit his pants on Hard Knocks.

Learn the history of your team, asshole.
 

buckup

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Jon Nix forced a fumble against Stephen Davis when they Redskins were trying to run the clock out during our epic 0-4 vs 0-5 MNF clash.

We recovered the ball, and Anthony Wright got us into field goal range for the win.

That was arguably the greatest moment in franchise history. And it was because of Jon "Trash can full of dirt" Nix.

All Willie Blade ever did was shit his pants on Hard Knocks.

Learn the history of your team, asshole.

Lay off the coffee.
 
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