Cowboys still refuse to run and they let a close game turn into a blowout b/c of it

D

Deuce

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Rick Gosselin
Dallasnews.com

ARLINGTON — Close your eyes, Emmitt Smith.

You too, Tony Dorsett.

You took the big handoffs in big games for the Cowboys. You gained yards, won championships and earned busts in Canton.

There will be no busts in Canton for the current Cowboys. Not for any running backs, anyway.

Despite all the talk this summer about a renewed commitment to the running game, the Cowboys still have an aversion to handing the ball off when it matters most. Two of those failures Sunday provided the impetus for a season-opening 28-17 loss to the San Francisco 49ers.

Down 7-0 midway through the first quarter, the Cowboys drove 78 yards to the San Francisco 2. DeMarco Murray had been gashing the 49ers the entire possession with runs of 7, 6, 5 and 6 yards.

It’s second-and-1 from the 2. A running down, right? Make a statement with those three big hoss offensive linemen you drafted in recent first rounds.
Stick the ball in Murray’s gut, and take it to a physical defense like the 49ers. Punch them in the mouth, punch the ball into the end zone and tie the score.

Nope. Not these Cowboys. Romo didn’t like what he saw at the line of scrimmage so he called a timeout. When he returned to the field, Romo came ready to throw. But Pro Bowl pass rusher Justin Smith blew past Pro Bowl blocker Tyron Smith for a 9-yard sack of Romo.

An incomplete pass later, the Cowboys had to settle for a 29-yard field goal by Dan Bailey. Instead of a tie game, the Cowboys were only able to cut the deficit to 7-3. That’s as close as the Cowboys would get the rest of the day.

Cowboys coach Jason Garrett was in no mood to discuss the ill-fated, game-changing sequence.

“I don’t want to get into how the plays were called or not called,” Garrett said. “We tried to put our team in the best situation down there inside the red zone, and we didn’t convert that opportunity.”

Owner Jerry Jones, however, said Romo audibled out of a run to a pass on the play. Let Romo make the call, and it will always be a pass.

Nonetheless, the Cowboys did have one more chance to at least make a game out of it.

Three plays into the second quarter, trailing 21-3, the Cowboys found themselves in a first-and-goal at the San Francisco 5. Again, Murray fueled the 75-yard drive with 46 yards on seven rushes.

Don’t get cute here. Give it to Murray two more times. If he can’t get it in, then spread the field on third down in short yardage and give Romo’s arm a whack at it.

Instead, Romo became the first option on first down. He missed a wide open Dwayne Harris on a slant, was flushed from the pocket and tried to squeeze a pass to tight end Jason Witten in the corner of the end zone on a busted route. But linebacker Patrick Willis intercepted the soft toss.

Instead of cutting the San Francisco lead to 21-10 by showing some trust in Murray, the talent and money of the Cowboys once again trotted off the field and left an undermanned defense in charge of the team’s fate.

Afterward, Romo talked about defenses loading up in the box to stop the run. But if the Cowboys didn’t hand the ball off to Emmitt Smith against loaded fronts back in the 1990s, he never would have won any rushing titles.

Sometimes you need to show a little faith in your people, especially when you have three first-rounders up front trying to open holes and a Pro Bowl back running behind them.

Romo threw three interceptions in the first half, and the 49ers converted them into two touchdowns and a 28-3 lead by intermission. And that’s all the 49ers would need on this day.

The Cowboys are obsessed with throwing the football. It doesn’t matter if it’s Jason Garrett, Bill Callahan or Scott Linehan calling the plays. Minus the victories, the Cowboys do love their stats.

Romo, Dez Bryant and Jason Witten have all benefited statistically in their careers when the football has been in the air. But not the Cowboys as a team, not in the last four years, anyway.

Murray wound up with 118 yards on 22 carries. But they were mere window dressing in yet another loss. It’s hard to believe the Cowboys spent almost four weeks in California and neglected to install a short-yardage rushing package.

The Cowboys wasted Murray Sunday, and this team is not that talented to be wasting its assets.
 

Texas Ace

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Nope. Not these Cowboys. Romo didn’t like what he saw at the line of scrimmage so he called a timeout. When he returned to the field, Romo came ready to throw. But Pro Bowl pass rusher Justin Smith blew past Pro Bowl blocker Tyron Smith for a 9-yard sack of Romo.

Cowboys coach Jason Garrett was in no mood to discuss the ill-fated, game-changing sequence.

“I don’t want to get into how the plays were called or not called,” Garrett said. “We tried to put our team in the best situation down there inside the red zone, and we didn’t convert that opportunity.”

Owner Jerry Jones, however, said Romo audibled out of a run to a pass on the play. Let Romo make the call, and it will always be a pass.
See, this right here is a huge part of the problem.

When Garrett actually does try to run the ball, you still have to worry about Romo checking out of it as he did so many times last season.

My question is the same it was last year - why is this guy allowed to do that? Why is a QB who has never been too sharp when it comes to reading defenses and is prone to mistakes allowed to have so much control over the offense?

Hell, even if you wanted to let him continue to make those decisions on the field, you can at least tell him in certain instances when to not change the play.

"Look Tony, we wanna stick with the run on this one, ok?"

Why is that so hard to do? Does Garrett not have the balls to do that or is he just too stupid to do it?
 

boozeman

28 Years And Counting...
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Romo has the mandate from Jones to do whatever he wants. It has to stop.
 

Texas Ace

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Romo has the mandate from Jones to do whatever he wants. It has to stop.
Oh, he definitely has been empowered by Jones, but that still shouldn't keep Garrett or any of the other offensive coaches from telling him to not audible in specific instances.

I knew we were in trouble when he called timeout because I was thinking that we shouldn't have run anything complicated at that point to even warrant a timeout. If it was a run, we don't have a need for the timeout, and if we don't call timeout, we don't come out of it attempting to run yet another pass play.

I guess it's just a frustrating problem that isn't going to go away until both the Garrett and Romo eras come to an end.
 

E_D_Guapo

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Romo has the mandate from Jones to do whatever he wants. It has to stop.
I haven't been able to get this image out of my head since reading it in that recent ESPN the magazine article and it is particularly infuriating after a shit performance like this:

'This guy could handle any damn thing -- this is your fighter pilot. This is your fighter pilot. This is the guy you want goin' in, droppin' and winkin' at 'em, and comin' out, and drinkin' beer. This is him.'

The analogy, such as it is, puts a smile on Romo's face. He takes a long pull on his Miller Lite bottle.
 

Cotton

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Outside of Romo's ineptness the calls inside the 10 were the most frustrating thing about yesterday's game. I mean, my god man, how in hell do you not run it on 2nd and 1 from the 2? I don't give a flying fuck what the defense shows you, run right up their ass and make them stop you... something they hadn't been able to do all god damn game.
 

E_D_Guapo

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Outside of Romo's ineptness the calls inside the 10 were the most frustrating thing about yesterday's game. I mean, my god man, how in hell do you not run it on 2nd and 1 from the 2? I don't give a flying fuck what the defense shows you, run right up their ass and make them stop you... something they hadn't been able to do all god damn game.
Fighter pilot. Drops bombs, comes out winkin' and drinking beer. I think Romo really sees himself that way. This organization has given him way more power/latitude than he's ever deserved. He's done this type of shit so many times that he should have the power to change the play at the line revoked. Especially inside the goddamn 5 yard line.

It's Romo's fault for his boneheaded decisions, but it's the fault of the GM and coaching staff for letting him get away with it and doing nothing about it.
 
D

Deuce

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Outside of Romo's ineptness the calls inside the 10 were the most frustrating thing about yesterday's game. I mean, my god man, how in hell do you not run it on 2nd and 1 from the 2? I don't give a flying fuck what the defense shows you, run right up their ass and make them stop you... something they hadn't been able to do all god damn game.
They did it twice on 2 separate drives. The first time was a pick, the second time it forced them to run on 3rd and eventually get the TD. They are just ridiculously inept at gameplanning and then learning from their mistakes.
 

L.T. Fan

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They did it twice on 2 separate drives. The first time was a pick, the second time it forced them to run on 3rd and eventually get the TD. They are just ridiculously inept at gameplanning and then learning from their mistakes.
You are not giving Garrett a pass on this are you? It's up to him to direct the OC to give Romo his marching orders. If Romo is making boneheaded decisions it is also up to Garrett to over ride him even if he has to take it to the GM. Garrett doesn't get a pass from me about Romo's audible.
 

Texas Ace

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You are not giving Garrett a pass on this are you? It's up to him to direct the OC to give Romo his marching orders. If Romo is making boneheaded decisions it is also up to Garrett to over ride him even if he has to take it to the GM. Garrett doesn't get a pass from me about Romo's audible.
For once, you and I are in total agreement.
 

BipolarFuk

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I could have sworn that I read that Romo only had to power to change to another running play.

Guess not.
 

VA Cowboy

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You are not giving Garrett a pass on this are you? It's up to him to direct the OC to give Romo his marching orders. If Romo is making boneheaded decisions it is also up to Garrett to over ride him even if he has to take it to the GM. Garrett doesn't get a pass from me about Romo's audible.
As bad as Garrett is you do have to realize that when it comes to Romo his hands have been tied by Jerry. It was just over a year ago that Jerry said he wanted Romo to be like Peyton Manning with Peyton $$$ and control at the line.

You are seeing first hand the problems of having not only a mediocre HC, but one with no real control over the team. Garrett couldn't reign Romo in or bench him even if he wanted to. He doesn't have the authority to do so, unlike most HC's.
 
D

Deuce

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You are not giving Garrett a pass on this are you? It's up to him to direct the OC to give Romo his marching orders. If Romo is making boneheaded decisions it is also up to Garrett to over ride him even if he has to take it to the GM. Garrett doesn't get a pass from me about Romo's audible.
"They" is referring to Romo, Garrett and the playcaller.
 

Cotton

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You are not giving Garrett a pass on this are you? It's up to him to direct the OC to give Romo his marching orders. If Romo is making boneheaded decisions it is also up to Garrett to over ride him even if he has to take it to the GM. Garrett doesn't get a pass from me about Romo's audible.
This has been my stance since about mid-year of last season. If Romo is fucking it up, then it's just as much on Garrett's enabling as it is on Romo's ineptness.
 
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