Watkins: Bill Callahan developing chemistry

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Bill Callahan developing chemistry
September, 28, 2013

By Calvin Watkins | ESPNDallas.com

IRVING, Texas -- After three weeks, the Cowboys' offense ranks fifth in scoring (27.7) and the middle of the pack in total offense (17th), passing (18th) and rushing (17th).

New offensive coordinator/playcaller Bill Callahan said he's got a good chemistry going between himself and quarterback Tony Romo and expects things to improve in the coming weeks.

"I think every game you learn and you go back to every game that you call and try to take the good things on and try to reflect on what you can get better at," Callahan said. "And I know I do that every practice. I go back and try to look at where the preparation could be better, where the reps could get featured a little bit better for the quarterback and the receivers and the running game. I think that’s huge to go back and take a self inventory of where you're at now. After each game we’ll go back and fill out a report, it’s like an after action report and find out the pluses and the minuses and what you did well and what you do differently and we’re trying to learn from that."

Callahan has a script of plays he begins the game with but has to go off script due to down and distance.

In the first game of the season, against the New York Giants, the Cowboys' first offensive possession occurred at the Giants 19 because of a turnover. So, Callahan began the game in the shotgun with a three-receiver set. Instead of going with his planned script, Callahan called his red zone plays.

Week 2 in Kansas City was different as well. The Cowboys got the ball in the traditional sense, their own 20, but were down 7-0. Callahan started with a two-tight end set and sent tight end Jason Witten in motion and lined up Miles Austin in the slot.

Last week against St. Louis, the Cowboys offense watched the Rams get the ball twice before stepping onto the field due to a muffed punt by Dwayne Harris.

When the Cowboys offense took the field, the ball was placed at their 38 and they ran the Pistol formation with Harris as the third receiver.

The Cowboys have started the first three games with runs to DeMarco Murray.

"You can be off your script in a heartbeat," Callahan said. "You can be in a backed up situation, first play of the year, we get the ball in the red zone, so there goes that script. Just throw it out the window. There are times you will come off the script. There are certain plays and formations and personnel groupings you want to throw out there, just to see how they respond to it and see how they want to defend it. It either verifies what they’re doing or it makes you adept or adjust."
 
Cowboys' offense ranks fifth in scoring (27.7) and the middle of the pack in total offense (17th), passing (18th) and rushing (17th).

Notwithstanding the notion that this is only after 3 games, I like that we have departed from the habit of racking up a boat load of yards and not scoring. I'd rather be #1 in scoring and 32 in total offense.
 
Let's not start jerking each other off...it was really one game where we had balance...the Giants game was weird and KC confused us.
 
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Cowboys' offense ranks fifth in scoring (27.7) and the middle of the pack in total offense (17th), passing (18th) and rushing (17th).

Notwithstanding the notion that this is only after 3 games, I like that we have departed from the habit of racking up a boat load of yards and not scoring. I'd rather be #1 in scoring and 32 in total offense.

Getting a shat ton of turnovers week one inflated those stats. Scoring will drop unless the offense can step up from being below average.
 
Bill Callahan developing chemistry
September, 28, 2013

By Calvin Watkins | ESPNDallas.com

IRVING, Texas -- After three weeks, the Cowboys' offense ranks fifth in scoring (27.7) and the middle of the pack in total offense (17th), passing (18th) and rushing (17th).


False.

The Cowboys have 2 defensive scores.

The Cowboys offense is averaging 23.3 points per game, which would rank them tied for 15th.

Completely changes the perspective.
 
False.

The Cowboys have 2 defensive scores.

The Cowboys offense is averaging 23.3 points per game, which would rank them tied for 15th.

Completely changes the perspective.

Did you make sure to adjust every NFL teams scoring the same way?
 
We'd be tied for 9th overall in points with 23.3 by removing any return TD's by defense and special teams and removing safeties.
 
That's fair, and I knew I was ignoring that aspect of the equation. I don't want to detract from my main point which was to tear down this stupid article that's trying to tell us how kick-ass this offense has been by giving us factually inaccurate statements. 27.7 YPG would be really good but offensively we are averaging a good deal less than that. A top 5 offense is awesome except we actually don't have one.

The truth is our offense needs work. Sure it looked very good against the Rams, but in our other two games it looked pretty pedestrian, scoring offensively 16 and 23 and struggling to get TDs instead of FGs.

That's the real article, not this fluff piece claiming we have all this chemistry based on the false premise that we are a top 5 offense.
 
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We are now averaging 21 offensive points per game. Putting aside the Rams anomaly, we have scored on offense 23, 16, and 14.

With a healthy Romo, Bryant, Witten and Murray, and an offensive line that has been pretty good.
 
We are now averaging 21 offensive points per game. Putting aside the Rams anomaly, we have scored on offense 23, 16, and 14.

With a healthy Romo, Bryant, Witten and Murray, and an offensive line that has been pretty good.

And that's because dinking and dunking without actually doing anything doesn't typically generate a lot of points.
 
BINGO.

But we can't trust him, either, because noodle-arms can't hang onto the ball.

If you're going to stop using him because he's fumbled a mere two times (once in preseason), then just cut him. It's idiotic to not even try to get him the football.
 
If you're going to stop using him because he's fumbled a mere two times (once in preseason), then just cut him. It's idiotic to not even try to get him the football.

I mean you could say that about every talented guy that screws up. David Wilson, etc. He still has value, esp on STs, but he doesn't have enough positive equity built up carrying the ball to ignore the fumbles yet.
 
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