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Cotton

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Division holds key for Cowboys
October, 8, 2013

By Todd Archer | ESPNDallas.com

IRVING, Texas – Dallas Cowboys coach Jason Garrett is a task-at-hand kind of guy. As far as he is concerned the only game on the schedule is Sunday’s against the Washington Redskins at AT&T Stadium.

“You get your eyes moving forward,” Garrett said. “They’ll be a great challenge for us. They’re a great football team. We got our work cut out for us. We just got to go to work, have a great week of preparation.”

He doesn’t much care that the Cowboys are playing their next two games against NFC East foes with an Oct. 20 trip to the Philadelphia Eagles following this game.

It is too soon to think about playoff possibilities, but seven NFC teams have a better record than the Cowboys. Winning the division is always the top goal and easiest way to make the playoffs. At 2-3, the Cowboys are tied for the NFC East lead with the Eagles.

A loss to the Redskins on Sunday would move them to third in the division, ahead of only the winless New York Giants.

“Guys know what’s at stake right now,” defensive tackle Jason Hatcher said. “It’s a division game and we’ve got to go out and win.”
 

boozeman

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It is Redskins/Cowboys week and this is a bigger deal right now than the game. I wonder if this is a good thing or a bad thing.

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Just How Many Indians Think "Redskins" Is a Slur?



By Jesse Washington

| Tuesday, Oct 8, 2013 | Updated 5:15 PM EDT


The name of a certain pro football team in Washington, D.C., has inspired protests, hearings, editorials, lawsuits, letters from Congress, even a presidential nudge. Yet behind the headlines, it's unclear how many Native Americans think "Redskins" is a racial slur.

Perhaps this uncertainty shouldn't matter -- because the word has an undeniably racist history, or because the team says it uses the word with respect, or because in a truly decent society, some would argue, what hurts a few should be avoided by all.

But the thoughts and beliefs of native people are the basis of the debate over changing the team name. And looking across the breadth of Native America -- with 2 million Indians enrolled in 566 federally recognized tribes, plus another 3.2 million who tell the Census they are Indian -- it's difficult to tell how many are opposed to the name.

The controversy has peaked in the last few days.

President Barack Obama said Saturday he would consider getting rid of the name if he owned the team, and the NFL took the unprecedented step Monday of promising to meet with the Oneida Indian Nation, which is waging a national ad campaign against the league.

What gets far less attention, though, is this: There are Native American schools that call their teams Redskins.

The term is used affectionately by some natives, similar to the way the N-word is used by some African-Americans. In the only recent poll to ask native people about the subject, 90 percent of respondents did not consider the term offensive, although many question the cultural credentials of the respondents.

All of which underscores the oft-overlooked diversity within Native America.

"Marginalized communities are too often treated monolithically," said Carter Meland, a professor of American Indian Studies at the University of Minnesota.

"Stories on the mascot issue always end up exploring whether it is right or it is wrong, respectful or disrespectful," said Meland, an Ojibwe Indian.

He believes Indian mascots are disrespectful, but said, "It would be interesting to get a sense of the diversity of opinion within a native community."

Those communities vary widely.

Tommy Yazzie, superintendent of the Red Mesa school district on the Navajo Nation reservation, grew up when Navajo children were forced into boarding schools to disconnect them from their culture. Some were punished for speaking their native language.

Today, he sees environmental issues as the biggest threat to his people.

The high school football team in his district is the Red Mesa Redskins.

"We just don't think that [name] is an issue," Yazzie said. "There are more important things, like busing our kids to school, the water settlement, the land quality, the air that surrounds us. Those are issues we can take sides on."

"Society, they think it's more derogatory because of the recent discussions," Yazzie said. "In its pure form, a lot of Native American men, you go into the sweat lodge with what you've got -- your skin. I don't see it as derogatory."

Neither does Eunice Davidson, a Dakota Sioux who lives on the Spirit Lake reservation in North Dakota. "It more or less shows that they approve of our history," she said.

North Dakota was the scene of a similar controversy over the state university's Fighting Sioux nickname. It was decisively scrapped in a 2012 statewide vote -- after the Spirit Lake reservation voted in 2010 to keep it.

Davidson said that if she could speak to Dan Snyder, the Washington team owner who has vowed never to change the name, "I would say I stand with him. We don't want our history to be forgotten."

In 2004, the National Annenberg Election Survey asked 768 people who identified themselves as Indian whether they found the name "Washington Redskins" offensive. Almost 90 percent said it did not bother them.

But the Indian activist Suzan Shown Harjo, who has filed a lawsuit seeking to strip the "Redskins" trademark from the football team, said the poll neglected to ask some crucial questions.

"Are you a tribal person? What is your nation? What is your tribe? Would you say you are culturally or socially or politically native?" Harjo asked. Those without such connections cannot represent native opinions, she said.

Indian support for the name "is really a classic case of internalized oppression," Harjo said. "People taking on what has been said about them, how they have been described, to such an extent that they don't even notice."

Harjo declines to estimate what percentage of native people oppose the name. But she notes that the many organizations supporting her lawsuit include the Cherokee, Comanche, Oneida and Seminole tribes, as well as the National Congress of American Indians, the largest intertribal organization, which represents more than 250 groups with a combined enrollment of 1.2 million.

"The 'Redskins' trademark is disparaging to Native Americans and perpetuates a centuries-old stereotype of Native Americans as 'blood-thirsty savages,' 'noble warriors' and an ethnic group 'frozen in history'," the National Congress said in a brief filed in the lawsuit.

The Merriam-Webster dictionary says the term is "very offensive and should be avoided."

But like another infamous racial epithet, the N-word, it has been redefined by some native people as a term of familiarity or endearment, often in abbreviated form, according to Meland, the Indian professor.

"Of course, it is one thing for one 'skin to call another 'skin a 'skin, but it has entirely different meaning when a non-Indian uses it," Meland said in an email interview.

It was a white man who applied it to this particular football team: Owner George Preston Marshall chose the name in 1932 partly to honor the head coach, William "Lone Star" Dietz, who was known as an Indian.

"The Washington Redskins name has thus from its origin represented a positive meaning distinct from any disparagement that could be viewed in some other context," NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell wrote in June to 10 members of Congress who challenged the name.

Marshall, however, had a reputation as a racist. He was the last NFL owner who refused to sign black players -- the federal government forced him to integrate in 1962 by threatening to cancel the lease on his stadium.

When he died in 1969, his will created a Redskins Foundation but stipulated that it never support "the principle of racial integration in any form."

And Dietz, the namesake Redskin, may not have even been a real Indian. Dietz served jail time for charges that he falsely registered for the draft as an Indian in order to avoid service. According to an investigation by the Indian Country Today newspaper, he stole the identity of a missing Oglala Sioux man.

Now, 81 years into this jumbled identity tale, the saga seems to finally be coming to a head. The NFL's tone has shifted over the last few months, from defiance to conciliation.

"If we are offending one person," Goodell, the NFL commissioner, said last month, "we need to be listening."
 

Clay_Allison

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"If we are offending one person," Goodell, the NFL commissioner, said last month, "we need to be listening."
Absent the rest of this story, that is a silly ass thing to say.
 

Cotton

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Gosselin: Redskins need to run, and Cowboys hope they do

Rick Gosselin
rgosselin@dallasnews.com
Published: 08 October 2013 10:28 PM
Updated: 08 October 2013 10:28 PM

The Washington Redskins are a welcome sight for the Cowboys.

Any team with an inclination to run the ball is a welcome sight to this defense, and the Redskins will run the ball Sunday against the Cowboys.
Washington ran the ball down the throats of the Cowboys last season in sweeping the two games and capturing the NFC East.

Rookie Alfred Morris rushed for 113 yards and a touchdown in his last visit to Cowboys Stadium, then plowed through Rob Ryan’s defense for 200 yards and three more scores in the winner-take-all season finale.

Morris averaged 5.5 yards per carry against the Cowboys in his rookie season, so he’s as eager to see them as the Cowboys are to see him. The sight of any quarterback standing in the pocket would give Monte Kiffin’s defense the shakes these days.

The Cowboys can’t defend the pass. They rank last in the NFC with an average yield of 326 yards per game. They have already allowed three individual 400-yard passing games and an NFL-leading 14 TD passes. They are on pace to allow 5,222 passing yards and 45 passing touchdowns. Both would be franchise worsts by wide margins.

So handoffs constitute victories for this defense.

The Redskins are 1-3 and hope to get back into the NFC East race with a victory over the Cowboys. To do that, they must reclaim the identity that earned them their first division title in 13 years — the identity of a running team.
The Redskins collectively led the NFL in rushing last season, and Morris finished second individually with 1,613 yards. He averaged 21 rushes per game last season. He hasn’t carried the ball more than 16 times in any game this season, and the Redskins find themselves a piddling 17th in the NFL in rushing.

Still, the best thing the Redskins have done this fall is hand the ball to Morris, who has a 100-yard game against Green Bay and is averaging 5.3 yards per carry despite his reduced workload.
If the Redskins hope to start feeling good about themselves again as a contender, they need to return Morris to a place of prominence in the weekly game plan.

The Redskins have the ability to throw it. Robert Griffin III has three 300-yard passing games, but Washington lost all three games. You can bet the Redskins will put the ball in the air some against the Cowboys.

But testing the Cowboys on the ground will be important to re-establishing Washington’s identity as an offense and as a contender. The Redskins need to run the ball to be successful. Sunday would be an opportune time to start against a defense that now has an identity as a pushover.
 

boozeman

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Bye Week Was Excellent Timing For Redskins To Plan For Dallas

Posted 18 hours ago

David Helman DallasCowboys.com Staff Writer








Cowboys

The Cowboys had a chance to grab a commanding lead in the NFC East, and they didn’t do it. Two weeks and two losses later, they’re below .500 and are now faced with what looks like a must-win game against a division rival.

A loss to the Redskins, who downed the Cowboys in Arlington, Texas, on Thanksgiving last year, would drop Dallas to 2-4 on the year and 1-1 in the division with a two-game roadswing coming up on the schedule.

The script seems to have flipped quite a bit from the first few games of this season, as well. The Cowboys defense, which for a minute looked like the strength of the team, has been humiliated for more than 1,000 total yards in the past two weeks. Meanwhile, the offense, which drew criticism for its conservative playcalling, exploded for nearly 600 yards in the loss to the Broncos.

The Broncos and Chargers and ranked No. 1 and No. 4, respectively, in the league through five weeks. So it’s reasonable to expect the defensive performance to improve against a less explosive opponent. Unfortunately, the Redskins are averaging 390 yards of offense per game despite their 1-3 record, and they had a Week 4 bye week to prepare for the trip to Dallas.

It’s also worth noting that Redskins quarterback Robert Griffin III is among the least-sacked quarterbacks in the league, going down just seven times in four games. That isn’t encouraging news for a Cowboys’ pass rush that has struggled in the past two games.

Washington is allowing the fourth-most passing yards in the league, and their rushing defense is giving up 142 yards a game. The Cowboys should be able to score points, but it remains to be seen if they can prevent points from being scored.

Washington

One week can make all the difference in the NFL, let alone two. The last time the Redskins played a game, they were happy just to avoid a 0-4 hole and get out of Oakland with a workmanlike 24-14 win.

When they the field at AT&T Stadium, they’ll be playing for a chance to insert themselves into the NFC East race once again. The team that looked left for dead during September still has plenty to play for – especially considering how mediocre the division has been this point in the year.

A win would push Washington to 2-3 and drop Dallas two games below .500. Depending on what happens Sunday when Philadelphia plays Tampa Bay, it might even be enough to give the Redskins the lead in the division.

Of course, this is all assuming Washington can pick up where it left off two weeks ago in Oakland. Griffin had his most effective performance of the young season against the Raiders, as he completed 58 percent for 227 yards and a touchdown with no interceptions. Alfred Morris only managed 71 yards, but he combined with Roy Helu Jr. to help Washington to 122 rushing yards on the day.



Griffin has not been the runner he was in 2012 during his trip back from his torn ACL. He has just 72 rushing yards after a quarter of the season, which has to make Dallas coaches happy. Griffin ran for 63 yards and a touchdown in last season’s playoff clinching win against the Cowboys. The lack of a second option to run the ball should make Morris slightly easier to contain.

Of course, the bye week will give Griffin 13 days of rest between live games – not to mention an extra week to prepare the gameplan. Here’s guessing the Redskins will have some extra wrinkles in store, especially considering the Cowboys’ recent struggles to contain tight ends and running backs.
 

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Broaddus: Surprising Where RGIII, Redskins Are Struggling Most
Posted 53 minutes ago

Bryan Broaddus
Football Analyst/Scout

The Cowboys and Redskins meet on Sunday night with both teams desperate for a victory. In a division where every team is struggling, this game has a playoff feel to it. The Redskins won the division last season and were favored to repeat, but a 1 – 3 start has left them with more questions than answers at this point.

The Redskins have had their issues on both sides of the ball but that’s not to say, as a group they cannot put it all together at the flip of a switch. They still rely on Robert Griffin III and his surgically repaired knee to make plays. Through four weeks of the season, we have seen a Griffin III that has been more interested in making plays with his arm, than he is his legs. To this point, Griffin III only has 72 yards rushing, with 21 of that coming on one run. There have been times on film, like in the Green Bay game where he could have had an easy 15 yard run going to his left but instead of taking that he delivered the ball to his receiver for a 8 yard gain. The Redskins still get in a pistol formation or “Ace” and run the read option out of it with Alfred Morris.


Where Griffin III has struggled the most and this was something that was one of his strengths last season, is protecting the ball. He was one of the best in the league when it came to not allowing turnovers. This season, he has already thrown four interceptions which is rare for him. When he is on target, usually in the middle of the field, it is to Pierre Garcon who leads the club in receptions. What is difficult for a corner in dealing with Garcon is how physical he is coming off the line. He does a really nice job of using his strength and power to bully defenders. He gets separation with his power and he has the ability to catch the ball on the move and present problems in the open field. The coaches like to get him the ball on screens and let him just run through the secondary.

Josh Morgan is the starter on the other side but he will also split time with Leonard Hankerson, who is another big bodied receiver. The always dangerous, Santana Moss is also in the mix but what has been different about him in the games that I was able to study, he had some bad drops of the ball while he was on the move. Throughout his career, he has been a “Cowboy Killer” so I would expect nothing different from him.

The Redskins most productive passing formation is when they get in “11” personnel with the three wide receivers and Logan Paulsen. Rookie Jordan Reed has also pitched in for Fred Davis who has not been as productive as he has been in the past. There is nothing that Paulsen does great but he also can make a play or two when you are not expecting it. As much as this Cowboys defense has struggled with tight end play these last two week, there are things that these Redskins players skill wise can cause problems with.

When Trent Williams was drafted with their first pick in 2010, I remember asking a Redskins scout why they made that selection. His answer was very simple, to block these elite rushers in the NFC East. Williams has been a very steady and at times, dominate left tackle. He has a nasty side to him and when he gets his hands on you, he can finish the job. Throughout his playing career, he has given DeMarcus Ware fits. He is a relentless run blocker and shut down pass blocker. He is not the smoothest moving player but he just keeps coming after you. This is never an easy matchup for Ware to have to handle.

With Williams on the left side, he is paired with who I think is their second best linemen, in Kory Lichtensteiger. When you study the tape, this combination is awfully solid for the Redskins. Lichtensteiger is very quick off the ball and getting into his blocks. He knows how to play in order to get in position to control his man. He does a really nice job of playing on his feet and it is rare that you see him on the ground or knocked back. When the Redskins want to run the ball, their left side is where they like to go. The club is averaging 6.1 yards a carry behind these two.

Where it appears that the weakness is with this line, is at right guard with Chris Chester. I do not see a powerful player here and in the running game, there are plays where he gets no movement and often times, he is handled at the point of attack. Tackle Tyler Polumbus also has his issues with power and when rushers take him hard down inside, there are problems there. Where he does have some success is when he kicks wide, gets his hands extended and work his feet to the outside. He is more of a catch blocker than one that is going to sit down on the line with the rusher.

Alfred Morris is a perfect back for this Mike Shanahan offense. There is nothing fancy about the way he carries the ball. He is an attacking downhill runner that punishes tacklers along the way. In will line up in this “Ace” formation and they will hand him the ball or they will toss it to him on the sweep. He is not a breakaway type of back with home run speed, but a consistent grinder of the ball. He is a load to deal with and if you don’t get to him early, he can wear you out.

Roy Helu is the 3rd down back and where he is most effective is catching the ball out of the backfield. Have to be aware of him, acting like he is blocking, then releasing out of the backfield. If he does have to protect, he really struggles. Could be something that these linebackers take advantage of.
 

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Friendship set aside for Williams, RG III

October, 9, 2013

By Todd Archer | ESPNDallas.com


IRVING, Texas -- Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Terrance Williams and Washington Redskinsquarterback Robert Griffin III will have to put their friendship on hold this weekend.

Close friends from their days at Baylor, Williams and Griffin talk and text often, though rarely about football.

“I’m happy to see him, but we have a game to play and I’m pretty sure we’re both going to try to do our best so we can come away with a victory,” Williams said. “But during the game I can’t talk to him. After the game, I sure will be able to talk to him.”

They were teammates for four seasons. Williams caught 59 passes for 957 yards and 11 touchdowns in Griffin’s Heisman Trophy season.

“Talking about Terrance is going to make me sad so I’m not going to do that,” Griffin said. "Terrance is a great player and he knows how I feel about him and I’m glad he’s able to shine down there in Dallas.”

Why sad?

“All the guys that are in the league, him Josh Gordon, Kendall Wright, all my receivers that are playing well with other teams, it gives you flashbacks to what we did in college,” Griffin said, “and that was a lot of fun to watch. And hopefully we’ll all reunite eventually.”

Williams had a Baylor-like game for him last week against Denver with four catches for 151 yards and an 82-yard touchdown. He smiled when talking about his time with Griffin.

“It was one of the best experiences I’ve had,” Williams said. “That’s college. But we’re with whole different teams now. Those are good stories we can always bring up when we always go back to Baylor.”
 

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Griffin’s Favorite Target Could Give Dallas Secondary Problems

Posted 16 minutes ago

Bryan Broaddus
Football Analyst/Scout


The Nemesis: Jason Witten

In 20 games played against the Washington Redskins, Jason Witten has caught 94 passes for 1,060 yards and six touchdowns. Throughout his long career, Witten has always been a thorn in the side of the Redskins, who have found it very difficult to match his ability to get up the field. In this game on Sunday, Witten should once again get those opportunities to find space in this secondary who will most likely have to use their safeties to help in coverage on Dez Bryant and Miles Austin.
With Jason Garrett and Bill Callahan coming up with schemes that get multiple receivers on the field, as we saw in the Broncos game, it stretches the defense horizontally and it creates space for Witten to work underneath and up the field. It will be interesting to see if the Redskins treat Witten like a receiver and match him that way or does Brandon Merriweather and Bacarri Rambo draw that assignment. I believe that Rambo would be more physical in coverage than Merriweather but because he has more experience than the rookie in these situations that he will most likely get that call. Regardless, I expect a big game, once again from Witten.


The Weapon: Dan Bailey
It would have been real easy for me to talk about Dez Bryant, DeMarcus Ware or Tony Romo for the weapon here but if you take a closer look at the numbers in the last 10 meetings between the Cowboys and Redskins, five of those games were decided by three points of less and this is where Dan Bailey comes it. Bailey has attempted 12 field goals in his career against the Redskins and he has yet to miss. In 2011, Bailey was even a perfect six-for-six, which accounted for all the points in a victory over the Redskins 18 – 16.
Where Bailey has been automatic, his work as a kickoff man, has been flawless. In 30 kick off opportunities, opponents have only been able to return the ball eight times for an average starting field position of 20.5. Bailey’s kick offs last week against the Broncos was one of the deciding factors that held the dangerous Trindon Holliday in check only allowing him 24 yards a return. Despite what we have seen from both the Cowboys and Redskins through five games, I believe that this will be another tight game and will most likely come down to three points which I would happily put on the toe of Dan Bailey.

Under The Radar: Orlando Scandrick
The Washington Redskins are going to throw the ball 58% of the time on first down. How this Cowboys secondary plays on those downs, will be vital to their success on Sunday night. There has been less running by Robert Griffin III and more of him making throws from the pocket. The last two weeks, pressure from this Cowboys defensive line has struggled to get home and something needs to be done about it.
The most consistent player on this defense has been Orlando Scandrick whether he has played outside in the base or out of the nickel. Where Scandrick can help this defense the most is not only in his coverage but as a slot blitzer to create some problems for Griffin III in the pocket. Monte Kiffin has used Scandrick in that role that he once had for Ronde Barber and he has had some success. Of Scandrick’s 6.5 career sacks, two of them have come against the Redskins. Scandrick has a really nice feel for how to attack the pocket and do it in a way not to draw a penalty on his blitz. I would not be one bit surprised to see Kiffin take advantage of bringing Orlando Scandrick off the edge.

Washington Redskins

The Nemesis: Robert Griffin III
There are very few quarterbacks in the National Football League that can say they have never lost to the Dallas Cowboys, but Robert Griffin III is one of those. Though his sample size is only two games, his play against them in my view, was the difference in those games. What is different about Griffin III from what I have seen from last season to this, is more of a willingness to make throws from the pocket. I am not saying that, Griffin III is Peyton Manning back there, because you will see him move and buy a second or two more to get the ball down the field.
The Redskins will still line up in “Ace” formation and go through all the play action reads, which is a strength of Griffin III. For a young quarterback, he is one of the best that I have seen handling the ball on the move. He is extremely smart and it is rare that you see him make a poor or bad read, when running the read option. When throwing the ball, he is going to look down the field first. He looks more comfortable throwing the ball in the middle of the field than anywhere else, which is where the Cowboys have had their troubles.

The Weapon: Pierre Garcon
If I were on the Cowboys defensive coaching staff, I would be very concerned about how we were planning on how to deal with Pierre Garcon in this game. Offensive coordinator, Kyle Shanahan has done a really nice job of creating plays to get the ball in Garcon’s hands and allowing him to do the rest. There has become a really nice bond between Garcon and Griffin III, to the point where Griffin III will just throw the ball in the general direction of Garcon with the understanding that he is going to make the play regardless where the ball is.
What has been impressive about Garcon is how much power that he plays with when they get him the ball. You will see him catch a quick screen and he explodes up the field, leaving tacklers in his wake. Garcon likes to also work the middle of the field and not just on simple routes, but those deep crossing routes between the linebackers and the safeties. He is not afraid to catch the ball in traffic and will compete, if he has too. When you play Garcon, you have to be physical with him because if you don’t, he will try and beat you up. Tough matchup.

Under The Radar: Jordan Reed
The Redskins like to use their tight ends on game day and all of them play a role. There was a time where Fred Davis was the lead dog in the sled for the Redskins offense, but Logan Paulsen has taken a lot of his responsibilities when it comes to being the only tight end on the field. Matter of fact, the Redskins most successful passing formation is when Paulson is on the field, with three other wide receivers.
But keep an eye on rookie Jordan Reed, who has had two weeks to recover from a deep thigh bruise that he suffered in the Lions game. What I have seen from Reed is a player that is more of a route runner than he is a blocker. Very good on his run after catch and with 4.71 speed, can be a matchup problem for linebackers and safeties to have to deal with. Has made 13 catches in three games with one touchdown.
The Redskins like to move their tight ends around the formation and line them up in different spots and this is to take advantage of players like Reed to get him in space off play action fakes. Reed can be a mismatch player for a defense that has struggled in coverage with the tight end position the last two weeks.
 

boozeman

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Scout’s View: Numbers Are Deceiving With Skins’ Defense

Posted 10 hours ago

Bryan Broaddus Football Analyst/Scout


Defensively the numbers say that the Redskins are struggling badly. Teams have been able to run the ball but throw it as well with equal success against them. This is where I do not believe the numbers tell the whole story. In studying the Green Bay game, this pass rush knocked Aaron Rodgers around all day. There were times where he did not even get set up before someone was on him. I am not saying this to blow smoke or trying to steer you down the wrong path, but this front can cause some problems.

Outside linebacker, Ryan Kerrigan is a heck of a player and Doug Free will have his hands full all day. Kerrigan is relentless and never stops attacking the scheme. He can rush from a two point stance or put his hand down and come at you that way. There are situations where they put he and Brian Orakpo on the same side and let them attack you that way. Orakpo who missed all of last season with an injury, is working

himself back into shape. There still is that ability as an edge rusher to his game. Where teams have taken advantage of him is when they run the ball at him. He is very aggressive trying to get up the field and tackles have been able to work him out of the play.

Barry Cofield is very active at nose and he will be a nice test for Travis Frederick, who had trouble with the quick swim move which Cofield can pull off. Cofield is playing with one hand because the other is completely covered with a cast. When the Redskins go to nickel, they will move Cofield to tackle and slide Kerrigan inside to rush the passer and this gives them their best pass rushing group. There is nothing special or dynamic about the way that Stephen Bowen or Kedric Golston are playing up front. Both seem to get stuck on blocks in the running game and give them very little when opponents throw the ball on early downs.

London Fletcher is still the leader of this linebacker group and if you leave him unblocked, he is going to find ways to make plays. Fletcher might have slowed down a step or two but he still plays this game with a great deal of passion and intensity. Perry Riley plays next to Fletcher and he leads the team in tackles. Where he does a nice job is reading the scheme, then making his way to the ball. On tape you can see that if he gets in position, he can finish plays. Rookie Brandon Jenkins is not a starter at outside linebacker but he does see action as a nickel rusher off the edge.

Defensively where the Redskins has struggled the most has been in the secondary with their pass coverage and opponents have been taking advantage of that.
DeAngelo Hall is the veteran of the group and still plays with that swagger during a game. He has made a career of playing routes and staying in position while in coverage. He can play press man and do it quite well. Where Hall has always been productive was when it came to baiting a quarterback into a throw. There are times where you see him playing this way. There is always a risk when throwing it in his direction. This year, he already has one interception for a touchdown.

If there is a corner to attack, it’s Josh Wilson who is the starter on the right side. Wilson also doubles as the nickel and there are plays to be made there. Where Hall shows aggressiveness, Wilson shows none. Ball that are thrown in his direction are generally successful plays. There is some separation in the way he plays. He is not as physical as he needs to be in coverage. Against Green Bay, he struggled when the screen was thrown in his direction and he came forward and dove on to the ground going for an ankle tackle. Have been used as a blitzer from the slot and has one sack to his credit. Would take my chances going after him instead of Hall.

At safety, Brandon Merriweather finally looks healthy and is capable of making plays in coverage. Bacarri Rambo is only a rookie but there have been snaps where he has played very well. What I like about Rambo is that for a young guy, he is always looking to create a turnover. These ball carriers need to be fully aware that when he comes forward to make a tackle, he is going to try and rip the ball from you.
 

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:lol
 

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A maturer Dez Bryant ready for battle DeAngelo Hall, won’t let him get to him

Cowboys receiver Dez Bryant said he is ready for battle against Redskins cornerback DeAngelo Hall Sunday but he doesn’t expect the fisticuffs that nearly broke open between the two the last time Cowboys played the Redskins at AT&T Stadium.

It was last year on Thanksgiving Day when Hall escalated are argument by taking a swipe at Bryant. Bryant raised his fist like he was going to punch him but was pulled away.

Bryant said all of that is in the past.

“There’s no issue between us,” Bryant said. “I just think it’s the competition of the game. That’s all it is. We have mutual respect for one another. Sunday, it’s going to be a battle.”

Bryant said he has grown and he believes Hall has too. He also pointed out that nothing arose between the two in last year’s season final against the Redskins. But does admit that Hall knew how to push his buttons and get under his skin.

“Of course. No doubt. No doubt. No question. He did,” Bryant said. “I think I’m kind of past that and I think he thinks that too. It’s a respect between me and him. Last game that we played, we didn’t say a word, as far as disrespect. It was more, ‘Let’s go. Let’s play.’ Basically competing against one another.”

Clarence Hill
 

Cotton

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Maturer and gooder.
"ready for battle DeAngelo Hall"

I'm not sure exactly Hill got or has kept a job as a writer.
 

Cotton

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Stopping Redskins "Other Guy" Just As Key; Hands Full For Free

Posted 39 minutes ago

Bryan Broaddus
Football Analyst/Scout






In this matchup between the Cowboys and Redskins, there are several ones along the offensive and defensive lines that can shift the direction of this game either way. DeMarcus Ware vs. Trent Williams and Tyron Smith vs. Brian Orakpo are all worthy of our thoughts, but the one that has my attention, deals with Doug Free vs. Ryan Kerrigan.

As much as I have seen Orakpo play, I believe that Kerrigan is just as dangerous. He plays both the run and pass with equal effort and skill. Kerrigan is one of those players that keep coming after you. There is no give-up or quit in his game. Just when you think you have him blocked, he gets you with that burst of extra effort and gets a sack or a tackle for loss. Where Free has to be careful, is not allowing him to finish plays, because that’s his best trait. Kerrigan has good football strength and he will use it to his advantage. Free has been playing at a high level this season and he will need to continue to do so if he is going to be able to counter from what I have seen in Kerrigan.

Free’s technique has improved to the point, where it has allowed him to just play with ease and there has been far less struggle in his game than what we had seen the past two seasons. This is one matchup where Doug Free cannot have an off day or there will be trouble for this Cowboys offense.

Cowboys LB Sean Lee vs. Redskins RB Alfred Morris

Offensive coordinator Kyle Shanahan has been 58 percent pass to 42 percent run through four game this season. As talented as Robert Griffin III is throwing the ball, I believe that is the balance that Shanahan doesn’t want. The Redskins have struggled on defense this season and have been behind in the majority of their games and have to throw to get back in them. If Shanahan can play with a lead or be equal in a game, I can see him trying to use Alfred Morris in a way to control the game like he was able to do against the Cowboys last year.


There is no secret that Monte Kiffin and his defense has struggled with the pass but he needs to worry about Morris running the ball downhill at him. Morris is one of those backs that can wear you down as the game moves along. When you play a read option, you need to have defenders in place to handle all the options. If you don’t, there will be problems. What I have noticed on tape is that you still see the “Pistol” or “Ace” formations, so the threat is still there to run the ball but it hasn’t been on the legs of Griffin III or even Morris that much.

If Shanahan does strive for that balance, look for Morris to get plenty of opportunities and this is where Sean Lee needs to be at his best to stop Morris before he has a chance to get going. There will be some serious collisions between these two Sunday night.
 

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Cowboys TE Jason Witten on last game against Washington: “It’s a tough tape to go back and watch”
By David Moore/ Reporter
dmoore@dallasnews.com
3:46 pm on October 10, 2013 | Permalink

The Cowboys face Washington for the first time this season.

The last time these teams met was on the final night of the 2012 regular season in a winner-take-all game that Washington captured 28-18.

“They outplayed us,” tight end Jason Witten. “They brought a lot of pressure against us and got there in different ways. It felt like we were on our heels the entire game, turning the ball over, doing all of those things you hope not to in a big game like that.

“It’s a tough tape to go back and watch and learn. I’m sure we’ll expect Jim Haslett to do a lot of the same stuff. Hopefully, we’ve got some better answers this year.”

Haslett is Washington’s defensive coordinator. The two sacks Washington picked up in that game does not indicate how much the Redskins pressure effected Tony Romo and the Cowboys offense.

Washington leads the NFC and is fourth in the NFL this season with 15 sacks. Haslett will throw a lot of blitzes at the Cowboys Sunday night.

“He brings a lot of different ones,” Witten said. “He brings it from the open end on the slot, he brings it to the passing strength, he brings it up the middle when he gets down into their 3-4 technique where they squeeze those guys inside.”
 

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Dez Bryant recalls how ‘serious’ injury made him feel like he didn’t do his part in season-ending loss
By Jon Machota
jmachota@dallasnews.com
4:52 pm on October 10, 2013 | Permalink

IRVING – Dez Bryant needed a wheelchair to exit FedEx Field the last time the Dallas Cowboys faced Washington.

Bryant, who injured his back during that 28-18 Week 17 loss in December, said Wednesday that he didn’t know at the time if he had suffered a long-term injury.

“I didn’t know how it was going to come out,” Bryant said. “I think not only me but [head athletic trainer Jim Maurer] and [associate athletic trainer Britt Brown] they did a good job of bringing me back … because it was serious. It was very painful. It’s no longer an issue now.”

Bryant said he doesn’t think about that game any more, but he said it was on his mind throughout the off-season, mainly because he exited early in the fourth quarter and wasn’t able to help his team rally at the end of the win-or-go-home game.

“It was hard,” Bryant said. “I love football. It was heartbreaking. Just because not being able to finish the game and just thinking about all of the what-ifs, if I would’ve stayed in the game and all that kind of stuff. I kind of felt like there was nothing I could do about it because of my back. I kind of also felt like I didn’t do my part. It kind of wore off me getting closer to the season.”

Bryant finished with four catches for 71 yards.
 

boozeman

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Cowboys TE Jason Witten on last game against Washington: “It’s a tough tape to go back and watch”
By David Moore/ Reporter
dmoore@dallasnews.com
3:46 pm on October 10, 2013 | Permalink

The Cowboys face Washington for the first time this season.

The last time these teams met was on the final night of the 2012 regular season in a winner-take-all game that Washington captured 28-18.

“They outplayed us,” tight end Jason Witten. “They brought a lot of pressure against us and got there in different ways. It felt like we were on our heels the entire game, turning the ball over, doing all of those things you hope not to in a big game like that.

“It’s a tough tape to go back and watch and learn. I’m sure we’ll expect Jim Haslett to do a lot of the same stuff. Hopefully, we’ve got some better answers this year.”

Haslett is Washington’s defensive coordinator. The two sacks Washington picked up in that game does not indicate how much the Redskins pressure effected Tony Romo and the Cowboys offense.

Washington leads the NFC and is fourth in the NFL this season with 15 sacks. Haslett will throw a lot of blitzes at the Cowboys Sunday night.

“He brings a lot of different ones,” Witten said. “He brings it from the open end on the slot, he brings it to the passing strength, he brings it up the middle when he gets down into their 3-4 technique where they squeeze those guys inside.”
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I would hope they watched more tape of them from this year than the finale last year. They have four full games to digest....this is a different football team.
 

boozeman

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RGIII 'not the same' QB, Cowboys' Brandon Carr says

By Gregg Rosenthal
Around The League Editor
Published: Oct. 10, 2013 at 07:12 p.m.
Updated: Oct. 10, 2013 at 08:28 p.m.


It's been a while since we saw Robert Griffin III. The Washington Redskins quarterback showed great improvement during a Week 3 loss in Detroit, and then followed that up with a solid performance in Oakland.

This week's matchup in Dallas is Griffin's return to the big stage. It was the site of Griffin's most impressive performance a year ago. One of Griffin's victims that day, Cowboys cornerback Brandon Carr, doesn't see the same player anymore.

"He doesn't look the same," Carr said Thursday on NFL Network's "Around The League Live." "That's not saying we're going to fall asleep on him. He still has the same arm strength. He still has some type of elusive ability once he gets outside the pocket. ... But we know he's not the same."

We expect Griffin to continue to improve this year, and it's not like he's been terrible. Even at his diminished capacity, Griffin has been close to a league average quarterback or better. The Cowboys' defense has given up more than 500 yards to opposing defenses in back to back weeks, and they look vulnerable.

Griffin might not have to be the same guy he was last year to do damage to Monte Kiffin's defense.
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Even if you think this, why say it?
 
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