Sturm: The offense that needed change

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Cowboys 2012: The offense that needed change
BOB STURM
July 29, 2013, 10:45am

I was asked by one of you to review the final results of Decoding Garrett 2012. For those new to this space, you may be interested in knowing that since 2008, we have cataloged each offensive snap of the Cowboys from a standpoint of personnel group and then what type of play it was (run or pass). This helps us track the progress of the offense in greater detail than your average analysis piece, but more importantly, it helps us compare apples to apples when looking at how the team is doing offensively.

Given that play calling has been delegated to Bill Callahan in 2013, we do have the opportunity to re-name this study, but I do think since Garrett is still the mastermind behind the offense and the man sitting at the head of the table when game plans are designed, we likely will keep it just the same.

For those who are new, the reason we look at the offense from a personnel grouping point of view, is that it replicates the actual discussions that the coaches actually have - rather than this fantasy football viewpoint that many fans obsess over this time of year. If you play fantasy football, that is all fine - millions do, but it has very little use from a "real football" standpoint.

Teams do not care about personal statistics and they understand how a player drawing coverage is just as valuable to the big picture as his teammate who is making all of the catches as a direct beneficiary of the player who is drawing the coverage. Dez Bryant, in other words, can really help the team with a 2-catch performance, but his fantasy owners will be angry. Here, in this space, we don't care at all about fantasy football implications. There are plenty of places on the internet for you to get that information and analysis.

Here, we are attempting to see what the real performances mean, what Jason Witten's coverage means to Bryant, what play-action passing does to the safeties, and what a real running game could do to the linebackers in helping free up the shallow routes.

It also keeps us from getting caught up in the raw numbers of statistics and how misleading the Cowboys yardage totals were in 2012 and how meaningless they truly were in terms of the win-loss totals.

Garrett cannot believe that his offense was one of the more productive offenses in the NFL. There is simply no way he believes that.
Incidentally, the 376 points they scored in 2012 ranks them 10th in the NFC out of 16 teams. That is 1 point better than the Bears, 4 points better than the Lions. And exceedingly more productive than the Panthers, Rams, Eagles, or Cardinals. So there is that.
They were 6th in the entire NFL in yardage, but I think most of us watched enough Cowboys football this year to see that much of that came during abnormally long stretches of "garbage time" football that the Cowboys offered in a number of home blowout losses.

Regardless of the results of 2012 and the reasons the Cowboys compiled impressive and hollow production numbers, the point is that they did move the ball with the effectiveness of a playoff team, and yet missed the playoffs. Most times and in most places, it then is time to blame the defense. Not here. We remained steadfast in the idea that the Cowboys offense - with very acceptable levels of health all season - was as frustrating and ineffective as it has been under Garrett.

They had garbage time yards and that was pretty much the sum total of the year. More from what we wrote in February:

overall, with roughly 3 games where you say the offense did what it needed to do (at NY, at Balt, and Pittsburgh) and 13 other games where the offense needed to show more than what it did to get good grades, I have very little use for hearing where it ranked in yards and points. Granted, in some of those 13, the Cowboys showed great grit and determination, but nobody would confuse will with a fantastic offensive performance. And least they shouldn't.
This offense was almost completely spared of injuries (comparatively speaking) and yet did not live up to the resources invested in it by any stretch of the imagination. Looking at boxscores and totaling numbers is fun, but meaningless if you are constantly falling behind and then facing prevents to catch up. Those numbers don't matter at all.
I appreciate the man defending his performance and thereby, his job security, but I found his optimistic appraisal of 2012 and the offense's performance to be misleading and I bet he would agree once he dug a little deeper - which I know he has in private.

Below are the final numbers from a standpoint of production per personnel grouping. I assume everyone is up to speed on the definition of each of the groups, but if you are not, please click on this link and read up.

Package Plays Yards Run Pass
11 72 359 48-233 24-126
12 143 767 65-251 78-516
13 27 125 19-84 8-41
21 121 820 66-286 55-534
22 73 272 58-165 15-107
23 35 57 31-53 4-4
S01 28 159 0-0 28-159
S10 1 0 0-0 1-10
S11 479 3141 46-188 433-2953
S12 42 0 1--1 41-256
Totals 1029 5967 335-1256 694-4731

Granted, that is a lot of numbers. And without explanation, it can certainly be confusing. So, just direct your attention to "S11" which is their default setting for the 2-minute drill, 3rd Down offense, and of course, the "we are way behind and need to pass every down to have any chance" offense. And, as you can see, that was nearly half of their snaps and over half of their production from last year.

And that is very bad.

We elaborated on the evils of S11 in this study which looked at 6 years of the Garrett offense from back in the spring.

Now, let's look at the same chart from above, except below, we will show you the yards per play in each category to show the production levels for each situation.

Package Plays Yards Run - Avg Pass - Avg
11 72 359 48 - 4.85 24 - 5.25
12 143 767 65 - 3.86 78 - 6.62
13 27 125 19 - 4.42 8 - 5.13
21 121 820 66 - 4.33 55 - 9.71
22 73 272 58 - 2.84 15 - 7.13
23 35 57 31 - 1.71 4 - 1.00
S01 28 159 0 - 0.00 28 - 5.68
S10 1 0 0 - 0.00 1 - 10.00
S11 479 3141 46 - 4.09 433 - 6.82
S12 42 0 1 - -1.00 41 - 6.24
Totals 1029 5967 335 - 3.75 694 - 6.82

Now this shows the performances with a bit better clarity. If you look at the running averages in the "21", "22", and "23" packages, where the Cowboys ran 155 runs for only 504 yards for only 3.25 yards per run, you now see why they don't have use for a fullback anymore. They were awful running with a fullback. Not saying it is all Lawrence Vickers fault, but rather that defenses would stack the line when Vickers was in the game and the Cowboys OL had no answer for the physical run defenses.

They also spent very little time in an "under center" offense, which then prevents from ever using play action passing or a balanced offense at all.

So, there is a review of the 2012 offense. Don't be fooled by the rankings or the yardages or the fantasy football points. This offense was very poor and needs to get better.

They know this and now look forward to their all new and hopefully improved look in 2013.
 
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The data and team record clearly show how ineffective he is at his job. It's amazing how he continues to decline and still manages to stay employed.
 
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The OL sucked. When you have a gaping hole in the hull, your boat is going to sink ... no matter how nicely equipped the rest of the boat or how exquisite the float plan.
 

ThoughtExperiment

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The data and team record clearly show how ineffective he is at his job. It's amazing how he continues to decline and still manages to stay employed.
He's right there with McCarthy and Turner and Payton as a genius OC... Just ask him.
 

Jon88

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The OL sucked. When you have a gaping hole in the hull, your boat is going to sink ... no matter how nicely equipped the rest of the boat or how exquisite the float plan.

It's a shame everyone but Jerry understands that.
 
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Did the offense change enough? The 3 plays down on the goal line in the live session looked a lot like last year. Run was stuffed on 1st down. Next play Romo was almost killed on a bootleg. 3rd down play action pass that was dropped by Escobar.
 
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The OL sucked. When you have a gaping hole in the hull, your boat is going to sink ... no matter how nicely equipped the rest of the boat or how exquisite the float plan.

Wahoo doesnt understand it either.

Garrett was here and in charge during that entire OL make over. He's also the one who praised last season's group as future HOFers
 
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Garrett was here and in charge during that entire OL make over. He's also the one who praised last season's group as future HOFers

No doubt. I gotta believe that Garrett has a major say in player acquisitions, particularly on offense. I'm sure Garrett was fine with Gurode's release and thought that the two reject Guards would work out just fine. He's culpable. As is Jerry.
 
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Garrett has had a hand in player acquisition on the offensive side of the ball since 2007.

Jerry himself has said this.

If the OL sucks because of a lack of talent... it falls on the head coach and the GM.
 
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