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By Jeff Cavanaugh 2h ago
Each week I study tape on a few Cowboys players who I find particularly interesting. I’ll start with this disclaimer: Without being a member of the Cowboys team or coaching staff, it is impossible to say with 100% certainty what the responsibility is for a particular player on a particular play. I can feel pretty confident most of the time with the context of the things happening around them, but complete certainty just isn’t possible. I’ll do the best I can to try and give you an idea of how the players performed with an educated guess as to their role on each play and then assign a letter grade at the end.
Connor Williams – LG (#52)
One thing we’re going to learn over the course of this study is that Seahawks defensive tackle Jarran Reed (#90) is an absolute monster. He’s in his third season as a pro, and as a second-round pick, has one more year on his rookie deal before he becomes a very rich man.
Connor Williams spent the majority of his evening facing off with either Reed or Seattle’s other DT, Shamar Stephen. Stephen wasn’t a problem, Reed was.
This was the first snap Williams spent pass-protecting against Reed. It obviously ended quite poorly for both him and the second man to the party, Ezekiel Elliott. Reed showed some serious upper-body strength in getting free and moving Williams like that without even getting into his body. Connor will at times try and compensate for his (relative) lack of power and ability to anchor against some big bodies by getting too far forward with his lean, which can get him in trouble when he gets swatted or pulled.
Williams faces Jarran Reed again here. He survives the snap, but within 2.5 seconds or so Prescott has to move and can’t throw to his left because there’s a giant man stopping him from being able to step or throw the ball that way.
Williams was able to protect against Reed on some snaps, and when the Cowboys provided help, they were able to block him up. Then there were snaps where Williams drew the long straw and got to block someone not named Jarran Reed. Those results were far more positive for the second-round rookie from Texas.
One of the scenarios in which Williams appears very comfortable and smooth is when the defensive line employs some sort of twist game to try and free up a rusher. He has a good feel for what’s happening and situational awareness seems to come pretty easily to him. That, along with his ability to move laterally, makes him rock-solid at responding to stunts.
Here we get a look at a stunt both from Williams’ right and from his left. The majority of the time, what you’ll see is a defensive end and defensive tackle playing a game to free one up. In the first clip, you actually have two defensive tackles stunting so the man Williams is responsible for blocking comes from his right and he has no trouble picking him up. It may help some that the Seattle defender basically runs into him to try and free the other tackle heading away from him.
The second clip features a typical stunt between a defensive end and tackle, and it’s easy as can be for Williams. He sees things well and is blessed with extremely smooth lateral movement.
There was one stunt where Dak Prescott ended up taking a sack and I’ll reinforce my opening statement that I include before each article: I can’t say with 100% certainly whose ‘fault’ it is; I can just offer the best guess I have without being in the offensive line meeting room.
I believe this is the responsibility of Tyron Smith. Ideally, you’d be able to switch on this but with Williams having to initially block Jarran Reed, and being at a different depth than Tyron Smith, there’s no way that Tyron can be there to pick up Reed and therefore no way that Williams can let Reed go to go block Frank Clark. They were on different pages in the way they’d like to be spaced, and it would have been impossible for Williams to slide inside and block Clark without allowing Reed a free shot at his quarterback.
As a pass protector, Williams has room for growth when it comes to handling power. That’s been a consistent theme this season, and it’s something at which he will need to gradually improve. An entire offseason of focusing on lower-body and core strength can help to address it.
Let’s move on to run blocking. One of the things that I (and others) mentioned when Xavier Su’a-Filo first started a game was that he was a stouter lineman, capable of playing with a little more power and a stronger base than Williams. That is true, but it’s also not the only thing that matters when run-blocking for the Cowboys. They’ll ask one of three things from their guards on most run plays. Let’s look at an example of each.
1: Inside Zone
On inside zone plays where Williams is on the back side, he and the left tackle are both asked to just wall their defender to the outside and let the combo blocks on the opposite side work to create a hole for Ezekiel Elliott. Williams consistently does this well.
2: Outside Zone
On outside zone, the guard is asked to make sure that the man next to him is able to secure his block on the defensive lineman, then move to the second level and block a linebacker. The idea is to have every lineman flowing in the same direction and let Zeke find a hole. Williams is generally very good at this.
3: Pull
On this counter play, Williams pulls from left to right and in open space, is going to get enough of a block on Bobby Wagner to take him out of the play. This is another strength of his.
If one of the best defensive tackles in football lines up across from Connor Williams, he is going to be at a power disadvantage. But with all the Cowboys ask their guards to do, power is not at the very top of the list of required traits. He may require some help as a pass-protector against Aaron Donald and Ndamukong Suh this weekend the way he occasionally did against Jarran Reed. But we’ve moved past the point of a discussion about Connor Williams vs. Xavier Su’a-Filo in my eyes. Williams is fine, he’s improving, and his skill set fits most of what the Cowboys want from an offensive guard. They can’t all be Zack Martin.
Grade: C+
Each week I study tape on a few Cowboys players who I find particularly interesting. I’ll start with this disclaimer: Without being a member of the Cowboys team or coaching staff, it is impossible to say with 100% certainty what the responsibility is for a particular player on a particular play. I can feel pretty confident most of the time with the context of the things happening around them, but complete certainty just isn’t possible. I’ll do the best I can to try and give you an idea of how the players performed with an educated guess as to their role on each play and then assign a letter grade at the end.
Connor Williams – LG (#52)
One thing we’re going to learn over the course of this study is that Seahawks defensive tackle Jarran Reed (#90) is an absolute monster. He’s in his third season as a pro, and as a second-round pick, has one more year on his rookie deal before he becomes a very rich man.
Connor Williams spent the majority of his evening facing off with either Reed or Seattle’s other DT, Shamar Stephen. Stephen wasn’t a problem, Reed was.
This was the first snap Williams spent pass-protecting against Reed. It obviously ended quite poorly for both him and the second man to the party, Ezekiel Elliott. Reed showed some serious upper-body strength in getting free and moving Williams like that without even getting into his body. Connor will at times try and compensate for his (relative) lack of power and ability to anchor against some big bodies by getting too far forward with his lean, which can get him in trouble when he gets swatted or pulled.
Williams faces Jarran Reed again here. He survives the snap, but within 2.5 seconds or so Prescott has to move and can’t throw to his left because there’s a giant man stopping him from being able to step or throw the ball that way.
Williams was able to protect against Reed on some snaps, and when the Cowboys provided help, they were able to block him up. Then there were snaps where Williams drew the long straw and got to block someone not named Jarran Reed. Those results were far more positive for the second-round rookie from Texas.
One of the scenarios in which Williams appears very comfortable and smooth is when the defensive line employs some sort of twist game to try and free up a rusher. He has a good feel for what’s happening and situational awareness seems to come pretty easily to him. That, along with his ability to move laterally, makes him rock-solid at responding to stunts.
Here we get a look at a stunt both from Williams’ right and from his left. The majority of the time, what you’ll see is a defensive end and defensive tackle playing a game to free one up. In the first clip, you actually have two defensive tackles stunting so the man Williams is responsible for blocking comes from his right and he has no trouble picking him up. It may help some that the Seattle defender basically runs into him to try and free the other tackle heading away from him.
The second clip features a typical stunt between a defensive end and tackle, and it’s easy as can be for Williams. He sees things well and is blessed with extremely smooth lateral movement.
There was one stunt where Dak Prescott ended up taking a sack and I’ll reinforce my opening statement that I include before each article: I can’t say with 100% certainly whose ‘fault’ it is; I can just offer the best guess I have without being in the offensive line meeting room.
I believe this is the responsibility of Tyron Smith. Ideally, you’d be able to switch on this but with Williams having to initially block Jarran Reed, and being at a different depth than Tyron Smith, there’s no way that Tyron can be there to pick up Reed and therefore no way that Williams can let Reed go to go block Frank Clark. They were on different pages in the way they’d like to be spaced, and it would have been impossible for Williams to slide inside and block Clark without allowing Reed a free shot at his quarterback.
As a pass protector, Williams has room for growth when it comes to handling power. That’s been a consistent theme this season, and it’s something at which he will need to gradually improve. An entire offseason of focusing on lower-body and core strength can help to address it.
Let’s move on to run blocking. One of the things that I (and others) mentioned when Xavier Su’a-Filo first started a game was that he was a stouter lineman, capable of playing with a little more power and a stronger base than Williams. That is true, but it’s also not the only thing that matters when run-blocking for the Cowboys. They’ll ask one of three things from their guards on most run plays. Let’s look at an example of each.
1: Inside Zone
On inside zone plays where Williams is on the back side, he and the left tackle are both asked to just wall their defender to the outside and let the combo blocks on the opposite side work to create a hole for Ezekiel Elliott. Williams consistently does this well.
2: Outside Zone
On outside zone, the guard is asked to make sure that the man next to him is able to secure his block on the defensive lineman, then move to the second level and block a linebacker. The idea is to have every lineman flowing in the same direction and let Zeke find a hole. Williams is generally very good at this.
3: Pull
On this counter play, Williams pulls from left to right and in open space, is going to get enough of a block on Bobby Wagner to take him out of the play. This is another strength of his.
If one of the best defensive tackles in football lines up across from Connor Williams, he is going to be at a power disadvantage. But with all the Cowboys ask their guards to do, power is not at the very top of the list of required traits. He may require some help as a pass-protector against Aaron Donald and Ndamukong Suh this weekend the way he occasionally did against Jarran Reed. But we’ve moved past the point of a discussion about Connor Williams vs. Xavier Su’a-Filo in my eyes. Williams is fine, he’s improving, and his skill set fits most of what the Cowboys want from an offensive guard. They can’t all be Zack Martin.
Grade: C+