Sturm's Morning After: The Feeling of A New Era Being Ushered In

Jiggyfly

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All I could think of during that impressive rally and destruction late in the game of San Francisco in front of their own crowd (sort of) is that I don't believe I recognize these guys.
Sure, some of the players are the same as we have seen. Some of them, at least. But, this was a group wearing Cowboys uniforms that seemed to be mostly brand new.

First, you have the brand-new QB who still looks like he is not really worried about too much. He was far from perfect on this day, but the more you watch him, the more you actually enjoy seeing him tackle new challenges. On this day, it was the challenge of being out there on the road without some of those luxuries that he normally enjoys - like Dez Bryant and Tyron Smith - and, then a nice big deficit to overcome early in the game. His accuracy was off and he was dealing with some significant threats from the San Francisco front seven. Running might not be easy for a while. He would have to keep his composure and not get impatient.

But, it feels like we already know that Dak Prescott will do that. He is not ever going to get too anxious and impatient. He waits and then pounces. He puts the ball in there and asks you to make a play. Prescott in some ways was more impressive than we have seen him. He exhibited "dude" qualities yesterday in the face of adversity. And he never acted like any of it was any big deal.

Then, there was this rookie runner from Ohio State. Ezekiel Elliott is really a player to get excited about in a game like this. The 49ers were determined to not let him get loose and it showed early. They were stacking the box and trying to limit his rushes. But, as the day went along, you see why this guy is going to be such an issue for the NFL behind these guys up front. Some plays, he makes something out of nothing because he runs so darn hard. Other times, you could drive a truck through some of the holes he enjoys. Still other times, it is both. He is proving his quality while they are proving theirs, and before long, it is over. If you didn't rub your eyes and think you were watching young Emmitt Smith at Candlestick Park behind Nate Newton and Mark Tuinei yesterday, than we might not have watched the same game. That was an awesome show of strength as the game went along. Once Navorro Bowman was hurt, it was over. The Cowboys biggest runs of the day all came after Bowman left in the middle of the 3rd Quarter and from there fatigue and his absence conspired to end any chance the 49ers had against the repeated battering ram of those zone plays and the push up front.

How about having a few wide receivers trying to keep the passing game going without Dez Bryant available? It wasn't all great, but the back shoulder fade touchdown to Terrance Williams and another rollout bullet to Brice Butler for a TD were something to get fired up about. In fact, I realize Butler will be properly criticized this week for his taunting flag that killed a drive, but overall, I really liked what I saw for the player who has been given some chances since being acquired from the Raiders last September with a 6th round pick for a 5th. He is a very large man who competes for balls in tight spaces. This makes him ideal to fill in for Dez on those same routes - slants, digs, and fades - with strength and conviction. He is 26, and has some rough edges to smooth over, but I think that is a very useful player to have on the roster and I want to continue to see more. In fact, as we saw last year once time in New Orleans, he is a real deep threat and the Cowboys still have yet to really show us they are willing to test how far Dak can throw the deep ball on a play-action opportunity. They must be saving that for Cincinnati or Green Bay.

That Brice Butler trade I just mentioned? Let's not forget that 6th round pick turned into; the pick was the corner from Purdue, Anthony Brown. I would normally hope that you aren't trying to ask a 6th round rookie to handle 50 snaps out of the slot where he is being repeatedly attacked by the opponent's game plan, but next man up. The Cowboys needed him to compete and battle his tail off and I thought he did fine, too.

That is why this thing is becoming awfully unrecognizable. It is a franchise that used to have such small contributions from the rank and file players that we used to think that Tony Romo, Jason Witten, and DeMarcus Ware were the only players allowed to do the heavy lifting for years at a time.

Now, they play a road game without Tony Romo, Dez Bryant, Tyron Smith, and Orlando Scandrick and they bully the game with relative ease in the 2nd half. They get contributions from all corners of the team and the coaching staff starts giving more and more belief to what they can do - so they aren't afraid to allow Dak to throw the ball as opposed to running into a wall with a conservative and careful call.

I am not saying that Dak to Cole Beasley late was Troy hitting Alvin Harper in 1992, but many of you asked me if I was reminded of the similarities. It at least cracked a smile.

You have rookies everywhere. DT Maliek Collins is a 3rd round pick who shows up and makes plays and is darn near a full time player already, too. That would be four players from a rookie class who are doing heavy lifting, with reserves being called into action and doing fine. Jaylon Smith and Charles Tapper could knock this draft class into the historically great class if they do anything, but if you really have a QB and a RB of this quality from the same draft class, we might need to stop 2nd-guessing what they could've and should've done on draft day. It appears they did quite well.

And maybe the best theme of the young rookie class is the frequent pleas from Elliott to the sideline. Feed me. It might not always be charming if not done in the right situations, but it is seems like a really unexpected theme for the Cowboys rookie performers. 2 guys who were asked to do plenty for their college programs and carry so much of the mail that it seems the Cowboys situation here in the early going is not too big for them. Prescott and Elliott are both ready for whatever you want to ask of them and it is amazing to behold. Dak may not be as demonstrative with his hand gestures, but you can tell they both want to continue to be fed more.

That may not fit well into the time frames and the relationships that were built before their arrival, but pro football is not about that. Pro football is about finding capable bodies to do tough jobs and that usually falls to those who are able to answer the bell week after week.

In other words, it sure feels like we are finding ourselves on the doorstep of a new era being ushered in. These young guys look capable and ready to step in.

Did you know that there are 29 new players on this roster since the start of 2015? 29! That means that over half your squad doesn't remember being on the sideline in that playoff game in Green Bay.

I say that because life comes at you fast in the NFL. You might remember Jimmy Johnson coaching your favorite team, but many of these guys weren't born yet. Ezekiel Elliott was born in July of 1995, which means that when Tony Romo took the starting QB job here in Dallas, he was 11 years old. He was a few months short of his 8th birthday when Jason Witten was drafted and Romo was signed. Dak Prescott was a high school kid when Jason Garrett was hired to be the head coach in 2010.

But, if I am not mistaken, the future looks like it is creeping up on us now. These kids can play. It might come with some level of pain to admit that time waits for nobody, but the mirror verifies this daily.

For now, we shall call it a good problem to have. The Cowboys are 3-1, largely because they have prepared themselves to win with players who are young and just getting started.

For you the fan, this might be the best news you have heard in years.
 

Simpleton

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All of a sudden the future looks pretty bright.
Yea, although to be fair Prescott is the central reason for that, and he has more or less been a miracle.

If we were rolling out Kellen Moore or Connor Cook I'm pretty sure you wouldn't hear much talk about Maliek Collins or Anthony Brown.
 

Cotton

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Texas Ace

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For most of the Romo era, the Cowboys were the biggest chokers in all of football and they set so many bad records for the franchise in that span.

Biggest lead ever given up, most points allowed in X amount of time, etc.

It really was disgraceful how this team kept finding new ways to choke and embarrass the franchise each and every year. A big reason for that was a lack of mental toughness, and that lack of mental toughness stemmed from us not having any real leaders for a very long time.

So when I see a rookie QB yelling at his receivers when they screw up coupled with this obvious confidence and poised, it makes me wonder if things could be different for us going forward.

When I see a rookie RB playing in just his 4th NFL game be the guy who goes out onto the field in the 4th quarter to encourage the defense to make a stop, I can't help but get excited at the idea that this team could finally have the leadership that it so sorely lacked from 2008-2013.

It's just another reason why I want Dak to play out the year. I'm just ready for the new era to begin and to move on past what was for me, personally, the worst stretch in Cowboys history.
 

townsend

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For most of the Romo era, the Cowboys were the biggest chokers in all of football and they set so many bad records for the franchise in that span.

Biggest lead ever given up, most points allowed in X amount of time, etc.

It really was disgraceful how this team kept finding new ways to choke and embarrass the franchise each and every year. A big reason for that was a lack of mental toughness, and that lack of mental toughness stemmed from us not having any real leaders for a very long time.

So when I see a rookie QB yelling at his receivers when they screw up coupled with this obvious confidence and poised, it makes me wonder if things could be different for us going forward.

When I see a rookie RB playing in just his 4th NFL game be the guy who goes out onto the field in the 4th quarter to encourage the defense to make a stop, I can't help but get excited at the idea that this team could finally have the leadership that it so sorely lacked from 2008-2013.

It's just another reason why I want Dak to play out the year. I'm just ready for the new era to begin and to move on past what was for me, personally, the worst stretch in Cowboys history.
Even though Romo's made mistakes in those humiliating losses. I still credit them to Garrett, and Rob Ryan.

Garrett over the last couple of years has gotten better at game management. He's not wonderful at it, but he's gotten more of a sense of establishing the run and dominating the time of possession. During the 2011-2013 season he was awful at figuring out when to pump the brakes on the offense. Romo would be out there slinging the ball with massive leads, and Rob Ryan's defense would choke.

Compare that to the 2014 season where we'd get in the habit of chewing up a quarter with our first possession. I don't think anyone would consider the team that came out after getting their clock cleaned on Thanksgiving to going undefeated through the rest of the regular season, as "gutless".

Even in 2015, when Romo was on the field this team played differently. That comeback to win against New York in the season opener was special. The defense got a key stop, Romo scored 2 TDs in the last two minutes, and made it look effortless.

Right now Dak's 3-1, last year Romo was 3-1, in 2014 Romo started 3-1 capping off week 4 with a clutch victory over Houston. In Romo's 1st 4 starts in 2006, he went 3-1.
 

UncleMilti

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For most of the Romo era, the Cowboys were the biggest chokers in all of football and they set so many bad records for the franchise in that span.

Biggest lead ever given up, most points allowed in X amount of time, etc.

It really was disgraceful how this team kept finding new ways to choke and embarrass the franchise each and every year. A big reason for that was a lack of mental toughness, and that lack of mental toughness stemmed from us not having any real leaders for a very long time.

So when I see a rookie QB yelling at his receivers when they screw up coupled with this obvious confidence and poised, it makes me wonder if things could be different for us going forward.

When I see a rookie RB playing in just his 4th NFL game be the guy who goes out onto the field in the 4th quarter to encourage the defense to make a stop, I can't help but get excited at the idea that this team could finally have the leadership that it so sorely lacked from 2008-2013.

It's just another reason why I want Dak to play out the year. I'm just ready for the new era to begin and to move on past what was for me, personally, the worst stretch in Cowboys history.
I agree. You have some serious attitude going on with Dak and Zeke. It was awesome to see Zeke out on the field getting everyone pumped up....that's the shit Irvin used to do. And seeing Dak screaming at WR's is even better. Thank God he's not sitting on the sidelines with his hat on backwards.
 

Chocolate Lab

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For most of the Romo era, the Cowboys were the biggest chokers in all of football and they set so many bad records for the franchise in that span.

Biggest lead ever given up, most points allowed in X amount of time, etc.

It really was disgraceful how this team kept finding new ways to choke and embarrass the franchise each and every year. A big reason for that was a lack of mental toughness, and that lack of mental toughness stemmed from us not having any real leaders for a very long time.

So when I see a rookie QB yelling at his receivers when they screw up coupled with this obvious confidence and poised, it makes me wonder if things could be different for us going forward.

When I see a rookie RB playing in just his 4th NFL game be the guy who goes out onto the field in the 4th quarter to encourage the defense to make a stop, I can't help but get excited at the idea that this team could finally have the leadership that it so sorely lacked from 2008-2013.

It's just another reason why I want Dak to play out the year. I'm just ready for the new era to begin and to move on past what was for me, personally, the worst stretch in Cowboys history.
Tony wasn't the reason for the vast majority of those chokes, though. It was our horrible defense, which we still haven't done much to address.

I think Brian Hoyer and Blaine Gabbert have a lot more to do with holding those leads than Zeke yelling at people.
 

mcnuttz

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Tony wasn't the reason for the vast majority of those chokes, though. It was our horrible defense, which we still haven't done much to address.

I think Brian Hoyer and Blaine Gabbert have a lot more to do with holding those leads than Zeke yelling at people.
He had his share of choke jobs early in his career.

While I appreciate the careers of both Romo & Witten, they were much like Ware...leaders by example.

Excellent players, some of the best this franchise has every known. But I don't think they inspired hope in and made their teammates raise their level of play. Diamonds in the rough kind of deal.
 

Texas Ace

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Tony wasn't the reason for the vast majority of those chokes, though. It was our horrible defense, which we still haven't done much to address.

I think Brian Hoyer and Blaine Gabbert have a lot more to do with holding those leads than Zeke yelling at people.
Tony Romo was most certainly to blame for those chokes. And it wasn't just these huge blown leads, it was also finding ways to lose games they should have won or not being mentally tough enough to win a big matchup. In so many of those contests between 2008-2013, his mistakes played a huge part in us losing those games.

It wasn't solely on him, but in so many of those failures (2008 Steelers, 2009 vs Giants, 2011 Jets, 2011 Lions, 2012 Redskins, Green Bay 2013) he had either multiple turnovers that absolutely killed us, or a late interception that sealed our fate.

That defense's ability to fall apart was shameful, yes, but they were all significant contributors in the biggest group of chokers the NFL has seen since the early 90's Houston Oilers.
 

Texas Ace

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He had his share of choke jobs early in his career.

While I appreciate the careers of both Romo & Witten, they were much like Ware...leaders by example.

Excellent players, some of the best this franchise has every known. But I don't think they inspired hope in and made their teammates raise their level of play. Diamonds in the rough kind of deal.
Exactly.
 

Genghis Khan

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Even though Romo's made mistakes in those humiliating losses. I still credit them to Garrett, and Rob Ryan.

Garrett over the last couple of years has gotten better at game management. He's not wonderful at it, but he's gotten more of a sense of establishing the run and dominating the time of possession. During the 2011-2013 season he was awful at figuring out when to pump the brakes on the offense. Romo would be out there slinging the ball with massive leads, and Rob Ryan's defense would choke.

Compare that to the 2014 season where we'd get in the habit of chewing up a quarter with our first possession. I don't think anyone would consider the team that came out after getting their clock cleaned on Thanksgiving to going undefeated through the rest of the regular season, as "gutless".

Even in 2015, when Romo was on the field this team played differently. That comeback to win against New York in the season opener was special. The defense got a key stop, Romo scored 2 TDs in the last two minutes, and made it look effortless.

Right now Dak's 3-1, last year Romo was 3-1, in 2014 Romo started 3-1 capping off week 4 with a clutch victory over Houston. In Romo's 1st 4 starts in 2006, he went 3-1.

Yep.
 

Genghis Khan

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He had his share of choke jobs early in his career.

While I appreciate the careers of both Romo & Witten, they were much like Ware...leaders by example.

Excellent players, some of the best this franchise has every known. But I don't think they inspired hope in and made their teammates raise their level of play. Diamonds in the rough kind of deal.
People can look at things however they want, but I think that's always been a false narrative.
 

Chocolate Lab

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Tony Romo was most certainly to blame for those chokes.
Wow, ok.

Romo also has the highest fourth quarter passer rating in NFL history with a mark of 102.9. His 93.1 passer rating in the final two minutes of a game is the highest among active quarterbacks and is good for fourth all-time, per pro-football-reference.com.
But I guess those are just numbers.
 

Texas Ace

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Wow, ok.

But I guess those are just numbers.
I'm fully aware of those numbers, but you're pretending that those games where he threw multiple interceptions to lose games didn't happen. And the argument isn't whether he's a career choker or not, it's whether he was to blame for a lot of those choke jobs and he absolutely was.

He didn't throw a pick 6 against the Steelers in 2008 with under 2 min to go to lose the game?

So he didn't throw 3 picks that led to 24 points against the Giants in 2009 to lose that game?

He didn't have 2 4th quarter turnovers vs the Jets in 2011 that were huge in denying us the win?

He didn't throw 3 interceptions, including 2 pick 6's in the 2nd half of the epic Lions collapse in 2011 to lose that game?

He didn't throw 3 interceptions against the Redskins in the season finale in 2012 to lose that game?


To absolve him of any blame is to deny the truth and pretend that they didn't happen.
 
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