Archer: Cowboys' D plan vs. Seattle? Discipline

Carp

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IRVING, Texas -- In a seven-minute interview on Tuesday, Dallas Cowboys defensive end Jeremy Mincey used the word disciplined 12 times when describing the best way to defend the Seattle Seahawks.

“That's the name of the game man,” Mincey said. “The smart teams win. You just go to be aware of all situations and you got have to have that sixth sense that anything is possible within the snap and that’s what we are getting us ready for. It’s going to slow down a few things. Their offense will slow down your rush but just being disciplined can change it all.”

The run defense, in particular, has to have “gap discipline.” In defending Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson the defense has to have good eye discipline.

Wilson ran for 122 yards in the Seahawks' win against the Washington Redskins’ on Monday Night Football. He confused the Redskins with the zone read, with bootlegs and with improvisational runs.

“It goes back to discipline, man,” Mincey said. “If you watch films on guys, guys are getting out of their gaps and over pursuing. You can’t blame them. They’re just trying to make a play. With this team you’ve got to be focused and disciplined and swarm the ball and have a bunch of hats on Marshawn (Lynch) and just be aware of Russell’s feet.”

The adverse effect of being so focused on Wilson’s running is that it slows down the pass rush. The Cowboys have just five sacks in five games and don’t need to have a pass rush slowed down by a quarterback’s ability to run.

“There’s no question, a quarterback’s mobility impacts the front,” coach Jason Garrett said. “A guy you know is going to be in a certain spot, is going to be a target for you, makes it easier on the defensive line, because they know they can rush to that spot. But this guy is all over the place. All over the place by design and just by just his sheer athletic ability and feel for the game. Again, he’s very effective throwing from the pocket and equally dangerous when he gets out in space.”

In the season-opening loss against the San Francisco 49ers, the Cowboys faced a running quarterback in Colin Kaepernick and limited him to 11 yards on five carries. In the Seahawks’ Week 2 loss to the San Diego Chargers, Wilson was limited to 18 yards on two carries.

Mincey said he noticed the Chargers played with a lot of poise … and discipline.

“It’s obviously tough to stop them,” Mincey said, “but we just got to be disciplined and that’s the key to beating Seattle, a lot of discipline.”
 

Carp

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This is a real key to the game...Seattle loves misdirection and Wilson is very good at waiting until the last minute to leave it in the RBs hands or pull it out and run with it.
 

Texas Ace

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They don't usually get a lot of big plays in the air, so if I'm Marinelli, I'm going to be relatively conservative and ask everyone to stay put and prevent as many out of the pocket plays from Wilson as possible while also calling very few blitzes.

We may not make many plays ourselves with this approach, but I think if we limit their big plays, they're not gonna score a lot and we make it anyone's game in the 4th.
 

UncleMilti

This seemed like a good idea at the time.
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Washingtons D actually played very well against Seattle the other night...the problem was their offense kept putting them back out on the field and I believe in the end the Redskins D was just gassed.

If the Cowboys can get some offense going and keep the Seahawks off the field, they have a chance. Its a slim chance, but its still a chance.
 

ravidubey

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This is a real key to the game...Seattle loves misdirection and Wilson is very good at waiting until the last minute to leave it in the RBs hands or pull it out and run with it.
Despite Wilson's skills and smarts, their passing game is limited. Gotta keep lane discipline and make sure Harvin doesn't make back-breaking plays. I could see Harvin salivating at the film of Andre Johnson cracking the defense wide open on that WR screen.
 

ravidubey

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I'm afraid Percy Harvin is going to kill us...
Johnson's WR screen really pissed me off, but I get that the defense was gassed and confused missing McClain, Carter, and Lee at that point. But still, it was like Swiss cheese.

Harvin is even faster than Johnson.

I think the D will handle him as long as the Dallas offense maintains time of possession and can give them a break.
 

boozeman

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Wilson ran around like that because the Redskins ran a lot of man coverage, leaving a lot of running lanes wide open.

Don't see us doing that.
 

Carp

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Wilson ran around like that because the Redskins ran a lot of man coverage, leaving a lot of running lanes wide open.

Don't see us doing that.
We'll run zone, just hope we tighten it up because we looked lost against SF running it.
 

ravidubey

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Wilson ran around like that because the Redskins ran a lot of man coverage, leaving a lot of running lanes wide open.

Don't see us doing that.
The lack of contain was also ridiculous. The pass rushers would hone in on Wilson in the pocket and he'd just outrun them to the outside once they committed inside.

The key is to hurt his ass if he runs. Punish him.
Definitely and almost goes without saying. Wilson won't risk his own ass. Not out of fear, but because he knows his team needs him healthy.
 
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