Sturm- Decoding Linehan: Week 1 - San Francisco

jsmith6919

Honored Member - RIP
Joined
Aug 26, 2013
Messages
28,407
Tuesday, September 09, 2014
Decoding Linehan: Week 1 - San Francisco
Welcome to another season of our in-depth blog breakdowns of the Dallas Cowboys. On Tuesdays (or so), we lift the hood on the Scott Linehan-Jason Garrett-Tony Romo-Wade Wilson-Bill Callahan offense, and then on Wednesday (or so), the defense of Rod Marinelli-Monte Kiffin will get a similar treatment.

Our effort is to dig a little deeper and try to analyze what we think they are trying to accomplish each week, how well that objective went, and what we can learn from that moving forward. As I have said a million times, this is not intended for the beginner, but we also try to keep it simple enough that the beginner can figure it out if he finds it interesting enough.

If not, carry on to another place as there are many more traditional ways to follow the Cowboys. But, if you think this might be for you, you might want to read the first post of this series that ran last week and will serve as a bit of a tour guide for this entire project. You can read that here and I think it might really help you as you attempt to break down personnel groupings and other terms that are quire common here, but uncommon around your water cooler (most likely).

Week 1 - 49ers

Now, on to the 49ers game. First, just know that all of this effort and research can be helpful most weeks, and then others - in which they go Fumble-Field Goal-Interception-Interception-Interception in the first half - all of the raw numbers don't really illuminate much.

Below is a list of the 11 times the Cowboys have turned the ball over 4 times or more since Jason Garrett and Tony Romo joined forces back in 2007 - thanks to the ProFootballReference Game Finder:

As you can see, aside from that miracle in Buffalo - against a very bad Bills side - you don't turn the ball over 4 times and win. You simply cannot pull that off against a good team, especially one that is good enough to be favored at your place (at least it was technically your place, until they bought all the tickets).

The 49ers game showed some interesting things from this offense. 15 carries for 87 yards from under center for this new running game should have us pretty fired up about the possibility of lining it up and running it at a stout front like San Francisco and how that might apply moving forward. I didn't see much chaos in those zone stretch plays and very few negative plays in general from the running game. They, of course, get the fumble returned for the TD on their ledger, but overall, the running game at 5.8 a clip under center and 5.47 overall is strong to quite strong.

The pass protection was passable. Tyron was not very good, but overall, that is a difficult team to deal with (albeit without key members of their front 7) and the Cowboys survived pretty well, despite the 3 San Francisco sacks. The Niners were content to sit back and rush 4 or less on 98% of the Cowboys pass plays, given that they were up by 4 scores for most of the afternoon. There will be more difficult days for pass protection down the road, but that OL look organized and capable for what we saw. Of course, the games conditions require us to place quite a bit of context on all of our conclusions.

The team was beaten because their QB was massively outplayed. This won't happen often with Tony Romo, but on Sunday, he imploded about as badly as we can recall. The mental busts were uncharacteristic and one must hope that it was a rusty Romo and that is all. As we spoke about at length on Monday, if it is a trend then the Cowboys will be doomed for years of cap jail. They have put many, many eggs in his basket and he has 95 of the 96 games left on his contract extension. We have to assume this is an aberration and not panic at this juncture.

Now, the game turned on a sack. This sack was a result of mass confusion. But, it also is something we have studied for a long time around here.

Let's go back to the 2010 season when the Cowboys played in Houston. This is the first time I can remember a real discussion about these Run/Pass QB options that the Cowboys and the entire league runs being a topic of conversation. I recommend you review the entire post from that week, but if you simply watch and listen to this video, you can kind of get the picture of what is going on:
So, as Kubiak breaks down, Romo and the WR are the only guys who know it is not a run play. That is the basis for "giving Romo more control of the offense". When we were kids, the QB called the plays at the line quite a bit. They would call their own plays and that was a pretty cool thing to hear about and it made you think that they were coaches on the field. Then, in the 1990s, they weren't calling their own plays because things had become too advanced - we were told. So, now the offensive coordinators would call a play and the QB would obey most of the time.

Now, this advance that is common place is all over the league and for sure this particular playbook. If you are looking for it, you see it several times a game - the packaged play where it has many variations in a decision tree type format for the QB. The team knows they are running a particular play, but they are simply carrying out their task and are not to worry about what the QB decides on his way up the decision tree.

The play above shows how it works beautifully. Romo catches the safety sneaking up to stop the run so he finds Roy Williams in space and the touchdown makes everyone celebrate this innovation.

However, it comes with terrible consequences some times when the QB thinks he sees something and you wonder why you ever gave the QB the chance to impact a game with a sudden rush of blood to the head.

You could easily make the case that the play below cost the Cowboys the season. And, it is the same decision tree where this is a called run where Romo checks into the backside pass to Miles Austin and leaves Clay Matthews to either fall for the run fake or be unaccounted for on the pass rush. This might remind you of Justin Smith on Sunday - because it is identical in many ways - zone stretch right with backside throw to the left. If you have time, you can read all about that fateful day. It is a real amazing scenario from Week 14 of last year.


So, the QB takes a run play and turns it into a pass which he has the power to do. In the case above against Green Bay and the case below on Sunday, the run game was having great success and gaining confidence. Of course, the play above was late in the 4th Quarter and the one below was very early in this contest.

2nd and 1 from the 2 yard line and the 49ers are already up 7-0. The Cowboys broke the huddle in 23 personnel (2 RB, 3 TE) and they were going to ram it in or at least get the 1st down. But, the play clock went down and they called timeout.

During the timeout, they decided to go Shotgun 11 (1 RB, 1 TE, 3 WR) and spread out the Niners. That is not a bad plan because it might make the running opportunity easier. But still the call was the zone run right with Murray and a lighter defense because of the Cowboys putting Beasley, Williams, and Bryant back out there.

Another frustrating element of this is the play clock is down again. The play clock is the one consistent enemy of this offense and it appears to not matter who is coordinating. They are never in their stance with :12 left. It is always :05 or less it seems. That doesn't help and there is no excuse coming out of a timeout.

Anyway, clearly Romo wants the Dez back shoulder fade on the left, but he has to see the corner pressing and the safety lingering. Dez is doubled. Meanwhile, you can see the 49ers not sure how to line up on the other side and the safety is trying to move the LB off of Beasley as this is all happening.

Now, Romo doesn't give the ball to DeMarco and Tyron blocks down to the right (check Tyron's movement above in the Green Bay game). Tyron is going to get blamed for Justin Smith running free to Romo, but that is what the play calls for. Romo knows this. Tyron is supposed to - on both plays - dive right to cut off his inside gap and to keep anyone from breaking into the zone block right. If Justin Smith is going to get DeMarco, he needs to go outside Tyron and chase down Murray from behind. That is unlikely. But, if Romo keeps, Smith is not accounted for so the ball has to get out quickly. Once Romo hesitates, the play is dead. And look at DeMarco and how annoyed he appears to be after the play.

The Cowboys end up settling for 3 instead of a physically dominating 7 and the afternoon was never the same. It was a day of repeated Romo poor decisions, but this is the one that bothered me the most. Yes, I want Dez to get chances in the red zone - many, many. But on this one, he has to see they are sitting on it and to give this OL a chance to prove that they can help DeMarco get a yard or two.

QB power in the offense is a very wonderful tool, as long as the QB sees everything properly. If he sees it wrong, games are lost. In this case, I am sure he would agree that this is not the type of mental busts that the team should have to overcome.

Offensive Participation: All hands on deck for the offense. OL played all 73 snaps together, Smith-Leary-Frederick-Martin-Free. Romo - Murray - Bryant - Williams. Reserve snaps: Beasley 47, Street 20, Hanna 15, Escobar 10, Harris 9, Dunbar 4, Parnell 4, Clutts 1. - Courtesy Pro Football Focus Participation Charts.

1 snap for your Fullback. 10 for your 2nd round tight end. 4 for your secret weapon Lance Dunbar. We shall hold off on any snap judgements for several weeks, but that is not the type of work load we had in mind for any of the above.

STATS FOR WEEK 1 AGAINST SAN FRANCISCO

Run Plays 23
Pass Plays 40
Avg Starting Position D18
1st Down R-P 15-17
2nd Down Avg to Go 6.3
2nd Down R-P 6-15
3rd Down Avg to Go 5.4
3rd/4th Down R-P 1-9
3rd Down Conversions 5-9, 56%
4th Down Conversions 1-1, 100%
Yards Per Play 6.1
Yards Per Pass Attempt 7.6
Red Zone TDs - Drives 2-4, 50%

PASSING CHART

Last season, intern Tim created (outstanding) passing charts in order to display release points from the pocket. This season, we're attempting to track both passing and drive progression. For instance, if you were to start at the first yellow line (D27) and work your way up, you would be tracking that possession from beginning to end. The dotted-lines are incompletions (and noted if separate events occurred). Large gaps between throws are mostly YAC or carries.


DRIVE STARTERS - The 1st play of each drive can often reveal the intent of a coach to establish his game plan. How committed is he to the run or pass when the team comes off the sideline? We track it each week here -

Wk 1 - San Francisco: 5 Run/5 Pass - 50% Run

2013 Totals: 176 Drives - 84 Run/92 Pass - 47% Run
2012 Total: 173 Drives - 76 Run/97 Pass - 44% Run
2011 Total: 181 Drives - 79 Run/102 Pass - 44% Run

* This statistic doesn't count the 1-play kneel down drives.

SHOTGUN SNAPS

Shotgun snaps are fine on 3rd Down and in the 2 minute drill. But, we track this stat from week to week to make sure the Cowboys aren't getting too lazy in using it. They are not efficient enough to run it as their base, and with a 15%/85% run/pass split across the league, there is no way the defense respects your running game. When shotgun totals are high, the Cowboys are generally behind, scared of their offensive line, or frustrated.

Wk 1 - San Francisco: 41 Shotgun/63 Total Plays - 65%

(Before you study the data below, I would recommend that if the numbers for the groupings are unfamiliar, that you spend some time reading a more expanded definition of the Personnel Groupings here.)

2013 Total - 566/945 59.8%
2012 Total - 565/1038 54%
2011 Total - 445/1012 43.9%

TOTALS BY PERSONNEL GROUPS

Package Plays Yds Run Pass 3rd/4th Yds Run Pass FD/TD
11 5 20 4-20 1-0 1 0 0-0 1-0 0/0
12 13 81 10-63 3-18 0 0 0-0 0-0 0/0
13 3 9 1-4 2-5 0 0 0-0 0-0 0/0
21 0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0/0
22 0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0/0
23 1 1 1-1 0-0 1 1 1-1 0-0 1/0
S01 4 15 0-0 4-15 2 19 0-0 2-19 2/0
S02 2 18 1-9 1-9 0 0 0-0 0-0 0/0
S11 33 228 6-29 27-199 5 66 1-2 4-64 2/1
S12 1 0 0-0 1-0 1 0 0-0 1-0 0/0
S13 0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0/0
Other 1 9 0-0 1-9 0 0 0-0 0-0 0/0
Totals 63 381 23-126 40-255 10 86 2-3 8-83 5/1
* - Knee Plays are not counted in play calls.

PLAY-ACTION PERFORMANCE

Wk 1: 1/5, 9 Yds, 3 INT, 1 FD

We wanted more play-action in the Cowboys offense. I refuse to back off that claim because it is a tool that needs to be used. But, wow. That was certainly not the start of the Linehan will employ more play action when he throws 5 passes and 3 are picked off from the run fake pass.

BLITZING ROMO

Pass Rushers Against Dallas - 40 Pass Situations vs San Francisco

Wk 1: SF Blitzed Dallas 1/40 - 2.5%

2013 - Season Blitz rate against Dallas offense 210/616: 34%


Thanks to John Daigle for his work on the charts and graphs.

SUMMARY: It is next to impossible to classify this game without making all of the commentary about the 4 devastating giveaways. The QB played brain dead most of the day and the game was a glorified preseason game for most of the afternoon.

Linehan wanted to run a balanced under-center offense with run to set up the play-action game that was going to be predicated on being able to stand up to the 49ers powerful front. Those missions were accomplished pretty well and there were some wrinkles that were new, with deployment of Dunbar being noted, as well as Dwayne Harris being motioned over to running back.

We need to temper our conclusions in these early weeks, in hopes that the franchise QB returns, the level of competition equalizes a bit, and everyone finds their roles. But, aside from the blowup at QB, there was a lot to like from the offense.

Which, of course, is like asking Mrs Lincoln how she liked the play.

On to next week.

http://sturminator.blogspot.com/2014/09/decoding-linehan-week-1-san-francisco.html

-----------------------------
couldn't get some of the charts/graphs to format right so goto link to see those if you want
 

Texas Ace

Teh Acester
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
23,473
But, if Romo keeps, Smith is not accounted for so the ball has to get out quickly. Once Romo hesitates, the play is dead. And look at DeMarco and how annoyed he appears to be after the play.
Of course DeMarco is annoyed. He has to keep dealing with his dumbass QB checking out of run plays only to watch as he throws a stupid pick.

Remember this after the Green Bay pick last year?



One of these days, Murray is going to punch Romo in the throat after another one of these stupid audibles, and I for one will love him for it.
 

Plan9Misfit

Appreciate The Hate
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
5,925
One of these days, Murray is going to punch Romo in the throat after another one of these stupid audibles, and I for one will love him for it.
Will Murray sprain his ankle in the process? It would be appropriate.
 

Simpleton

DCC 4Life
Joined
Apr 8, 2013
Messages
17,494
I am about 100% certain that if you took this offense, dropped it into Seattle, told Garrett and Romo to fuck off and replaced them with Bevell and Wilson, it would be miles better than what Seattle currently has.

Such a god damn shame what so much incompetence at the top can do to an otherwise talented group.
 

BipolarFuk

Demoted
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
11,464
I am about 100% certain that if you took this offense, dropped it into Seattle, told Garrett and Romo to fuck off and replaced them with Bevell and Wilson, it would be miles better than what Seattle currently has.

Such a god damn shame what so much incompetence at the top can do to an otherwise talented group.

No doubt.

Wilson wouldn't give a fuck if Murray ran for 150 and 3 TDs and he only threw for 175 as long as they won.
 

Carl

RIP Brother
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
1,372
Your QB has to be able to audible at the line. To say otherwise is silly. The two main issues I have are, always getting to the line very late doing the play clock and the mere fact that there is never an emphasis on the run. Not saying anything new here, but we should have run the ball down their throats in that scenario.

I do enjoy Sturm's article.

Also, Tyron, FFS wake up.
 
Top Bottom