Bradie James gets some love
You can always tell what articles are going to be in the Dallas papers the next morning by the questions asked at the press conferences. Yesterday, we got a couple of questions out of the blue about ILB Bradie James. I knew right then someone was preparing a Bradie James love-letter. Sure enough, the DMN’s own Breerman was the man on the job.
But there's little question inside the locker room that he is among the defense's best players. And there's even less doubt that James is the unit's undisputed leader.
True that. As BTB-regular dunkman noted in a previous post, I was very high on James in training camp because you could see his ability to get to the ball and his lighter-frame was serving him very well at camp. He was making all the plays in camp and hasn’t stopped once the season started. In Parcells’ scheme he was forced to take on the guards on almost every play, but now he transitions between that and just getting to the ball.
"I can transition back and forth," James said. "In certain situations, I have to be a 'Stack,' a Bill Parcells linebacker. And in different situations, I have to be a Wade Phillips linebacker, where I rush the passer or play sideline-to-sideline. All these things helped mold me."
Nice job, Bradie.

Remember the other day when I posted about Tony Romo not really idolizing Brett Favre and that he actually rooted for John Elway in the Super Bowl against Favre? Jason Witten calls BS on all of that.
"The truth is he loved him. He can imitate him, he can do all that stuff," Cowboys tight end Jason Witten said. "He's done a good job of relaxing and understanding where he's at. I think he's playing it off pretty good. But that's his hero."
Leave it to Romo’s best-buddy on the team to call him out.

As was noted in the diaries, Redskins safety Sean Taylor died from his gunshot wound. This story makes me incredibly sad and angry. To see such a talented guy - who by all accounts had gotten his life in order after the birth of his child - cut down in the prime of his life is tragic. As a Cowboys fan, I hated Taylor as a player because he played for the Redskins and was such a force that he scared me on the field. So the hate was as much a sign of respect as anything. But when something like this happens, it really exposes how cheap and shallow those football-rivalry feelings are, an event like this strips away the fun and games and makes you hurt for a guy and his family who was just getting started in life. I feel for his family and for the Redskins organization as whole, something like this isn’t covered in the playbook, this is something more than football. RIP Sean Taylor, and my heart goes out to all those mourning his loss. You can read more here, or you can drop by Hogs Haven and leave a condolence message.
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Romo imitating Favre
I wish someone would get Romo on camera doing a Favre imitation. That would be pretty funny.
by scottmaui on Nov 27, 2007 11:47 AM CST 0 recs
I believe they showed that last year
during one of the primetime games.
by Deke on
Nov 27, 2007 11:59 AM CST
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if they have it on tape
I'm sure we'll be seeing it Thursday
by scottmaui on
Nov 27, 2007 12:03 PM CST
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Taylor news incredibly sad
you're right, all the sports rivalry stuff is meaningless in the light of this. What a terrible shame. I just hope they catch the bastard who did it.
by scottmaui on Nov 27, 2007 12:02 PM CST 0 recs
I was always a James supporter
even before the season when most bloggers here were throwing him under the bus and wanting Carpenter to start.
I knew his failures last season were due to him having to bulk up and take on 300 lbs O linemen every play which didn't suit his style of play.
Phillips scheme is just what the doctor ordered and now he's back to being a great player.
by Terry on Nov 27, 2007 12:23 PM CST 0 recs
Uh
I would say that was a very small minority of people here who wanted Carpenter to start in place of James. I would also say that the year before last year, when we signed him to a contract extension, he played very well in Parcells' scheme.
by Dave Halprin (Grizz) on
Nov 27, 2007 12:33 PM CST
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I don't know Grizz
I remember a lot of "Carpenter should start" bloggers wailing away how James was too fat and slow.
While its true James played well in 2005 when Parcells went from the 4-3 to 3-4, that year was more of a transition year for the scheme and Zimmer was still employing a lot of 4-3 alignments, however, 2006 was the first year Parcells went exclusively to the 3-4 which reguired the LBs to bulk up.
by Terry on
Nov 27, 2007 12:56 PM CST
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I thought Carpenter would push James
for the starting job going into training camp, but James worked hard in the offseason to lose some weight makinh him quicker and really worked on his technique within the scheme and has really took a huge stride in becoming a leader on and off the field and a very good linebacker in the NFC.
With regards to carpenter, I think Bills handling of ths player has really hurt his developement, moving him outside and then back inside, the player has little confidence and looks to be playing not to make a mistake istead of playing on instinct to make plays. I wouldn't trade him as other are inclined to do, he'll develop into a good linebacker, and with the 3-4 defense, you never can have enough linebackers, its not about whether he's starting or not, its just that the starters are playing so well, thats more of the reason why he isn't starting, not that he's no good. Last year against the Seahawks, he was the second best player on the field after Ware.
by Deke on
Nov 27, 2007 1:14 PM CST
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Carpenter is a bust
I too think he's a good player and worth having as a backup, however, the reality is that a 1st rd pick should be pushing for a starting job by at least his 3rd year and even though he's just in his 2nd year,Carp isn't even close to pushing any of the starting LBs.
Actually, I rarely see him make many special team plays. The guy was drafted as an OLB, not an ILB, his speciality at OSU was rushing the QB off the edge. We saw some of that in the playoff game last year, but he hasn't flashed anything since then.
He probably could start on some less talented teams, but he'll never smell the starting lineup in Big D so long as our current starters are here. Good, solid player, but a 1st rd bust nonetheless.
by Terry on
Nov 27, 2007 1:47 PM CST
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cant judge a player in his second year
a player that doesn't even get a chance to play. It takes time, he'd be further along in his development if he wasn't moved from outside to inside than back outside and the inside. Thats has more to do with inability to get on the field. In our linebacking core, which starter are you taking out to get Carpenter on the field. NO ONE!!! Because you wouldn't take any of our linebackers off the field, because as a unit, they're playing great. That doesn't make Carpenter a bust. He's one injury away from being that starter.
by Deke on
Nov 27, 2007 2:05 PM CST
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Good point re: the Seattle game
Carpenter did show some promise there. As a person with one foot in the "trade Carp" pool, I don't doubt that the guy is a good player, I'm just not sure that having him strictly for depth is the best use of resources at this point, and if he doesn't get PT he'll bolt as a free agent.
Count me in as someone who would like to see what he can do, but I'm not sure he's going to get that chance in Dallas.
by grapejoos on
Nov 27, 2007 2:24 PM CST
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