JJT: Cowboys new 'Triplets' leading NFL's best offense

Cotton

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Cowboys new 'Triplets' leading NFL's best offense
October, 19, 2014

By Jean-Jacques Taylor | ESPNDallas.com

ARLINGTON, Texas -- It’s blasphemous to think it, let alone say it. But the Dallas Cowboys’ offense is so good these days that comparing it to The Triplets’ offense led by Troy Aikman, Michael Irvin and Emmitt Smith seems like the right thing to do.

Especially since the Cowboys have the NFL’s best record -- proof a higher power exists, right -- and its best offense.

Dallas 31, New York 21.

It all starts with DeMarco Murray, who broke Jim Brown’s 56-year-old record with his seventh straight 100-yard game to start the season and finished with 128 yards on 28 carries.

Tony Romo completed 17 of 23 passes for 279 yards and three touchdowns and Dez Bryant caught nine passes for 151 yards. Those are the kind of days Aikman, Irvin and Smith seemingly had all of the time during the glory days of the 1990s.

Jason Witten and Gavin Escobar, who caught two touchdown passes Sunday, certainly give this offense everything tight end Jay Novacek gave those offenses whether it’s converting third downs or attacking the seam.

Terrance Williams, who scored his sixth touchdown with a leaping 18-yard catch, is doing a pretty good imitation of Alvin Harper's big-play production. Cole Beasley and Dwayne Harris provide play-making from the slot the way Kelvin Martin did.

And they do it behind an offensive line that dominates the line of scrimmage each week.

“Obviously, DeMarco is at the highest level of his position and Dez is at the highest level of his position,” Romo said, “but I’d be hard-pressed to name a lot more players who are playing better than Jason Witten, Cole, Terrance and the guys up front.

“We’re just a balanced team that can get the ball to a lot of different people, and it’s just hard on teams to figure out what they’re going to take away. It’s my job to figure out what they’re doing and find the guy who’s going to be in position.”

The Cowboys’ offense is even good enough to compensate for a scrappy, hard-playing defense that remains suspect because it can’t rush the passer. They barely touched Eli Manning in 33 pass attempts.

Dallas also kept the ball for 33:49 Sunday, the fourth consecutive time it has had the ball for more than 33 minutes, something the Cowboys hadn’t accomplished since 1980. All that time of possession keeps the defense rested and off the field, where they can’t be exposed.

All of this is why the Cowboys have the NFL’s best offense.

Yes, the Cowboys’ offense is better than Peyton Manning's show in Denver. It’s better than Andrew Luck's offense in Indianapolis. It’s better than Drew Brees' offense in New Orleans or Aaron Rodgers’ offense in Green Bay.

It’s better because the Cowboys can run the ball, something each of those other teams struggles to do, while still throwing it nearly as well as each of those other clubs.

The Cowboys’ offense will function on the road and in domes. It works in frigid weather, a monsoon or under a blazing sun. The Cowboys had 400 yards of offense Sunday for the fourth consecutive game, a feat they hadn’t accomplished since 1976.

Heck, the Cowboys’ offense is so good it even made New York coach Tom Coughlin panic.

After the Cowboys took a 7-0 first-quarter lead, Coughlin wanted to go for it on fourth-and-1 from the New York 46 on the Giants’ next possession because he feared his team would trail by two touchdowns the next time they touched the ball.

A procedure penalty forced the Giants to kick, but he went for it on fourth-and-1 from the Dallas 38 in the second quarter for the same reason and it led to a touchdown.

The Giants pulled within 28-21 on a 5-yard touchdown pass to Odell Beckham with 5:28 left.

Well, the Giants didn’t get the ball again until 59 seconds remained and the lead had been stretched to 10 on a 49-yard field goal by Dan Bailey. That’s exactly how the Cowboys used to win games in the '90s.

“We don’t like to compare things,” said Garrett, when asked about The Triplets. “Those are some of the best teams in the history of the National Football League.

“That was a good formula for playing winning football back then -- being able to run the ball and spread it around to everybody. That’s certainly an objective of ours.”

Garrett played for those championship teams in the '90s, and he has built this team in their image.

And a new collection of Triplets has made the Cowboys contenders.
 

Cotton

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Streaking Cowboys beat Giants 31-21 for sixth consecutive win
Posted Monday, Oct. 20, 2014

BY CLARENCE E. HILL JR.
chill@star-telegram.com


ARLINGTON — With each passing game and win, the Dallas Cowboys are starting to get an old familiar look, making it hard for fans not to start thinking back to the future and a possible Super Bowl run for the first time since 1995.

It’s been a long time since then, and there’s a long time to go before any “super” dreams can be realized, but the run-oriented philosophy behind a dominant offensive line is the same now as it was then.

And so are the key figures.

Quarterback Tony Romo, running back DeMarco Murray and receiver Dez Bryant are serving as the new Triplets, doing what Hall of Famers Troy Aikman, Emmitt Smith and Michael Irvin did so many years ago.

It was never more evident than in Sunday’s 31-21 victory against the New York Giants before 91,028 fans at AT&T Stadium.

Romo, Murray and Bryant led the Cowboys (6-1) to their sixth consecutive win to remain the hottest team in the NFL with the best record in the league. The Arizona Cardinals, the Denver Broncos and the Philadelphia Eagles are 5-1.

Murray rushed 28 times for 128 yards and a touchdown, surpassing Hall of Famer Jim Brown to become the first player in NFL history to start a season with seven consecutive 100-yard games.

Romo completed 17 of 23 passes for 279 yards with touchdowns of 15 and 26 yards to tight end Gavin Escobar and 18 yards to Terrance Williams.

Bryant caught nine passes for 151 yards, including seven for 136 in the second half.

Cowboys coach Jason Garrett, who was backup quarterback on the 1993 and 1995 Super Bowl- season teams, lives in the present, but couldn’t deny the play of Romo, Bryant and Murray “harkens you back” to the 1990s Triplets.

“We don’t like to compare things. Those are great teams. They were some of the best teams in the history of the National Football League,” Garrett said. “There was a good formula for playing winning football back then, being able to run the football and spreading it around. That’s certainly an objective of ours.”

“It harkens you back. It harkens you back”, Garrett later added with a smile during a private moment in the locker room.

The comparison wasn’t lost on owner Jerry Jones, who is enjoying the team’s 6-1 record and six-game winning streak, the longest for the Cowboys since 2007.

“I think our record is above what we could have expected, but we have it and it’s a credit to a team that’s building in their confidence,” Jones said.

Jones credits the new Triplets for laying the foundation for the Cowboys’ success in 2014 just as Aikman, Smith and Irvin did in the 1990s.

“They are great. They’re making great plays at significant times for us,” Jones said. “That certainly was what Michael, Emmitt and Troy did. In that sense, that’s got everything to do with why we’re 6-1.”

Now, as then, the foundation to the Cowboys’ success is the running game. Murray’s historic success behind the best offensive line in football can’t be understated.

“Jim Brown is probably one of the greatest running backs ever to play this game,” Murray said. “I have a lot of respect for what he’s done. Like I said, I’m excited about the win. That’s a great accomplishment for us as a team. I got to give credit to those guys, the o-line, the tight ends and receivers blocking downfield.”

It’s certainly a team thing for the Cowboys as Murray’s success opens up everything else for an offense that produced 423 total yards, marking the fourth consecutive game with 400 or more yards, tying the longest streak in team history set in 1976.

Romo missed on just six passes, while fashioning a passer rating of 135.7 His only interception was due to a slip by Bryant in the second quarter.

Romo sizzled on third down as the Cowboys converted 9 of 14 to continue a season-long trend. The Cowboys are No. 1 in the NFL in converting third downs one year after being ranking last in the league in the same category.

“The one thing that stands out to everybody is that we are running the ball,” Romo said. “But I think a big part of that is that this is the best we have ever been on third down. That is really changing the game. It is our ability to stay patient and run the ball over and over again. When you run the ball, you can keep those third-down yards to a minimum.”

Bryant didn’t catch any touchdown passes as Romo hit Escobar and Williams for the scores, showing the Cowboys have a diversity of players similar to the team of the 1990s that also made key plays to Alvin Harper, Kevin Williams, Jay Novacek.

But Bryant’s importance in the trio can’t be denied, especially his second-half play that was driven by the first-half slip and subsequent interception.

Bryant had a 44-yard catch to set up the 26-yard touchdown pass to Escobar, giving the Cowboys a 21-14 lead in the third quarter.

His 24-yard catch to the 1-yard line set up Murray’s 1-yard run to make the score 28-14 in the fourth quarter.

And after the Giants made the score 28-21 with 5:28 left, Bryant helped the Cowboys ice the game.

He had two catches for 23 yards to complement 27 yards by Murray on the final drive, setting up the 49-yard field goal by Dan Bailey to put the game out of reach.

Bryant declined to get caught up in the “new Triplets” conversation because he said the Cowboys have more to accomplish.

“It’s still the beginning of the season,” Bryant said. “I’m not trying to make any statements like that. We’re just grinding. We’re just working.”

The new Triplets have the Cowboys thinking back to the future and a possible Super Bowl run.
 

Plan9Misfit

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We shouldn't be thinking about anything other than kicking the living piss out of Washington next Monday.
 

DontCryWolfe

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Just putting it out there that Romo leads the league in completion %, is second in QBR and YPA, and is fourth in passer rating. I know this team goes as Murray goes, and without him and that OL none of those numbers are possible. But someone still has to throw the ball, and Tony has been lights out.
 

lostxn

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Just putting it out there that Romo leads the league in completion %, is second in QBR and YPA, and is fourth in passer rating. I know this team goes as Murray goes, and without him and that OL none of those numbers are possible. But someone still has to throw the ball, and Tony has been lights out.
...and we're not even to Rovember!

 
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UncleMilti

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:lol
 

ravidubey

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Tony Romo completed 17 of 23 passes for 279 yards and three touchdowns and Dez Bryant caught nine passes for 151 yards. Those are the kind of days Aikman, Irvin and Smith seemingly had all of the time during the glory days of the 1990s.
How often did Aikman go 17 of 23 passes for 279 yards and three touchdowns? 74% passing and 12.13 YPA is ridiculous.

Romo has 45 regular season 300 yard games. Troy has 13.

But what made Troy great was that he did it in the playoffs: 24/34 for 322 yards and 2 TDs in the 1992/1993 NFC Championship game and 22/30 for 273 and 4 TDs in the Superbowl.

Peyton Manning, for all the games he's played has nine 300 yard games in the playoffs-- and Troy has 4. Amazing considering Manning has 87 in the regular season.

Romo of course has 0 in the playoffs, and he needs to get more tries at it.

Just putting it out there that Romo leads the league in completion %, is second in QBR and YPA, and is fourth in passer rating. I know this team goes as Murray goes, and without him and that OL none of those numbers are possible. But someone still has to throw the ball, and Tony has been lights out.
Romo deserves MVP consideration, but Murray's accomplishments are overshadowing him a bit and giving the media a great excuse to channel their general dislike of Romo into a chance to completely ignore him.

The Watt play, the Williams catch in Seattle... even the Williams catch in this Giants game-- all terrific plays by Romo. People must be viewing those plays online over and over again, but the media hit the ignore button regarding Romo a long time ago.

Frankly I don't care. I just want to see Romo in the playoffs with a strong team around him. It's been since the 2007 postseason that we've seen anything close, and that team had some key late-season injuries and bad coaching.
 
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