MacMahon: Can Tony Romo commit to the run?

Carp

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OXNARD, Calif. -- The general manager, head coach and offensive coordinator have all firmly vowed that the Dallas Cowboys would commit to the run this season.

What's the man who ultimately has the final say on every play call think about that? Franchise quarterback Tony Romo says he's all for it.

"I think what you find is a misconception sometimes that quarterbacks just want to throw," Romo said. "It's far easier to win when you run the ball well. If we can run the ball, and I envision us being able to do that, it's going to take a lot off a lot of different areas in the football team, so I think that's a huge thing we're trying to do is create the environment where we can rely on that in the situations we want to and just be able to continue. To me, that's important.

"Obviously, you want to be a balanced team and have teams not understand what's coming, but a big part of that is being able to run the football. I like the way we've been doing that."

The Cowboys' commitment to the run was nothing but lip service last season despite DeMarco Murray's success when Romo handed him the ball. Dallas had the second-fewest rushing attempts in the NFL despite ranking tied for seventh in yards per carry at 4.5, including 5.2 for Murray.

From the front office on down, the Cowboys recognize that an offensive line featuring recent first-round picks Tyron Smith, Travis Frederick and Zack Martin is the team's greatest strength. A commitment to the run would relieve pressure from Romo, who is coming off back surgery, and a defense that ranked last in the league last season.

Offensive coordinator Scott Linehan has stressed the importance of running the ball when the Cowboys want instead of allowing the opposing defense to dictate to them.

That would require Romo to stick with running plays even against defensive looks that load up the box. He usually has the option to switch to a pass play, which resulted in a disastrous interception late in the Cowboys' meltdown against the Green Bay Packers last season.

"We always talk about the one or two times where it obviously went negative," Romo said. "But over the course of your career, for every one there were nine that were very successful that we just don't talk about. You guys don't know we checked them and they produced a first down to win the game.

"It's not necessarily going from run to pass, it can be run to run, pass to pass and pass to run. I think that you just need to be good and execute at a high level with whatever direction you go. Long story short, you want to be able to run the ball when you really feel like you're in a tough situation or you get eight-man boxes or when it gets tough. If you can do that you're ahead of the game. I think we have that ability, so I'm excited about that."
 

ravidubey

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"We always talk about the one or two times where it obviously went negative," Romo said. "But over the course of your career, for every one there were nine that were very successful that we just don't talk about. You guys don't know we checked them and they produced a first down to win the game.
I strongly doubt that it is a 1:9 ratio.

What I see is an inability to see the forest for the trees, and almost every pass-heavy QB has this problem. The great ones, Bradshaw, Aikman and even Montana... they knew when to pound with the run. The rest just don't know how. It might be becoming a lost art for the new breed of super-passing QB.

Manning and Brady have failed exactly the same way Romo did vs. Green Bay. They were better and had much better teams to get alot further than Romo, but they still failed. Those two only won it all when they stopped being pass-happy bitches and ran the football. Only thing that saved Brees was that he faced Manning.

Had Brady demonstrated any ability or even the merest desire to run the football they'd have won Superbowl XLII. Instead they had 48 pass attempts vs 16 runs in a game they trailed only at the very end and then by just 3 points. A 75:25 run pass ratio is comical, and actually two carries worse than what Dallas did vs. Green Bay.

Dominick Rhodes and Joseph Addai kept Manning from going 0-3 in Superbowls, and John Elway was 0-3 before Terrell Davis took over that team and got them those two rings in a row.

The toughest thing to understand for a QB and OC is just how valuable a run for 1.8 yards into an 8-man front can be at times.
 

Simpleton

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The other thing that saved Brees is that Minnesota turned the ball over about 6 times and they still needed OT just to beat them at home.

It's true that nowadays alot of these extremely talented QB's just want to sling it around all game and forget the importance of staying somewhat balanced and committed to the run. There is a reason that above average but not elite QB's like Eli, Flacco, Wilson and Roethlisberger have all won Super Bowls recently, and it damn sure isn't because they were throwing the ball 45 times a game.

To be fair our run game has been horrendous for basically half a decade up until last season so I can't blame Romo too much, but now that we have a possibly elite OL he has to stay committed and not go off the reservation. The problem is our HC and OC are just as likely to go off the reservation as Romo, if not more so.
 
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