Cowboys vs. Lions: What they're saying
Let’s start with Tony Romo. Why? Because for this Dallas team everything starts with Tony Romo. This team has that magical air about it, it’s got the right mojo, it’s got the good juju, and it has that certain it. Whatever supernatural connotations we put on it, it really comes down to a very human thing. Tony Romo excels under pressure. Tony Freaking Romo. How clutch is he when the chips are down? The kid keeps coming up aces and then smirks like he knew it all along.
But it’s just in a days work for TFR:
"I try to learn from things I’ve done previously, mistakes I’ve made in the past," {Romo} said. "My brain says, ‘Don’t do that again.’ I’m being patient. I’m taking what the defense gives us."
Coach Wade Phillips gives a little more credit.
"That is where a quarterback shows up ... in pressure situations," Phillips said. "What he does in pressure situations defines him, not just passing yardage. I thought he was Elway-esque."
Even after what could have been a game-killer fumble by Romo that was miraculously recovered by Dallas, Romo had to convert a 4th and 5.
"Fortunately, I didn’t have time to think about {the fumble}," Romo said. "It’s fourth down coming up. You’ve just got to go. You don’t have time to worry about what just happened."
He’s James Dean cool.
But he also got a big assist from one of our linemen on that fumble. Why the Lions player didn’t just fall on the ball will haunt that team the rest of the year. On the other hand, Kyle Kosier was Johnny-on-the-spot and fell on a ball that was moving with some velocity, he showed great hands.
"All I did was, I saw the ball and I fell on it," Kosier said. "I didn't know if it was an incomplete pass or what. I just fell on it. Just doing my job. No big deal."
Spoken like a true lineman. Let’s not forget that Andre Gurode also hustled to fall on the fumble by Marion Barber earlier in the game on a drive that eventually became a TD. Great hustle by the big uglies.
The guy who was on the other side of most of the passes on the day was super-stud TE Jason Witten. He tied the record for pass catches by a TE in a game and broke the Dallas Cowboys single-game receiving record with 15 catches on the day. But it was the one he fumbled at the goal line that almost defined the day.
"I felt like the goat right there," Witten said. "But the defense got the ball back for us."
That could have been the end, but thanks to a Dallas defense that was awful for most of the day but redeemed itself with a stop at the end, the Cowboys got one more shot. Because of decoy Terrell Owens, the Cowboys carved up the Detroit defense for the winning score.
"They were just playing that Cover Two [where two safeties split the field] and a lot of that [attention] goes to Terrell," Witten said. "That's when your quarterback's got to be smart."
Romo was smart. Throughout the game he had two main weapons, Witten and Marion Barber and he made sure to ride them to the victory. Tim Cowlishaw reminds us that besides a pass to Sam Hurd, that final drive went like this. Barber catch for 6. Witten catch for 13. Witten catch for 4. Barber catch for 13. Witten catch for 11. Barber catch for 4. Witten catch for 16 and a TD.
While we’re heaping praise and adulation on Romo, Witten and Barber for helping us to become NFC East Champs and moving our record to a stellar 12-1, we can’t forget that our defense took a huge step back in the game. It’s hard to say exactly what went wrong, but the Cowboys couldn’t stop the run, stop the pass or pressure the QB. Or as JJT put it:
The Cowboys didn't force a turnover. Didn't record a sack against the NFL's worst offensive line until the game's last play. And didn't stop the run against the NFL's worst rushing attack.
Just this week Wade Phillips had told us that the pass rush looked very good in practice. Over the past month, the Cowboys have been collecting sacks on a regular basis. Jon Kitna was the most-sacked QB in the league. It should have meant a very uncomfortable day for the Lions offense, instead Kitna was buoyed by excellent protection and a running game that kept the Cowboys guessing. The most the defense could say is that we won.
"The goal is to win," [Terence] Newman said. "We're not happy with the way we played, but you always take the win."
You do take the win, but after all the talk this week, we expected a little more.
"We refused to lose. We didn't play our best ball," [Bradie] James said, "but we found a way to win.
"No one cares how many yards we gave up – we don't. When people pick up the paper on Monday, all they want to know is if we won."
In the short term all we care about is the win. But when thinking long term, there are some things to worry about on defense. Where were all the pressure plays? Where were the turnovers, and what happened to the tackling? The Cowboys were beaten physically at the line of scrimmage and the linebackers and secondary did a poor job of tackling.
But yes, we did win. That led to the really big news of the day, we claimed the NFC East for the first time in a while. This team is running through its goals’ checklist and making progress.
''It's important for us to win our division so that we can play at home,'' said coach Wade Phillips, sporting a white championship hat and T-shirt. ''We're going to play at least one game at home. We're now going to try and get a bye and also get home field.''
Let’s give the last word T.O., since we really didn’t hear form him all day. After the game he was sporting a new NFC East champions hat.
"The only thing this matters is this hat on my head," T.O. said with a megawatt smile. "We won. Nothing else matters."
For those that didn’t see the game, here’s a video of highlights.
Update [2007-12-10 11:57:51 by Dave Halprin (Grizz)]: Better highlights, hat tip to scottmaui for the links. Romo highlights, general highlights, and Witten highlights.
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another owens quote
I know my role on this team," Owens said. "I'm going to run to get open, and if I draw a lot of double teams and a lot of coverage my way, then I know somebody's going to be open, either Patrick [Crayton], Sam [Hurd] or Jason [Witten]. You saw it today."
He gets it.
by ab03 @ Blogging The Boys on Dec 10, 2007 12:17 AM CST reply actions
Nice quote
If I had found it I would have posted it. That says a lot about the pod-person this year.
by Dave Halprin on Dec 10, 2007 12:22 AM CST up reply actions
sorry
meant to post the link:
http://www.bloggingtheboys.com/story...
by ab03 @ Blogging The Boys on Dec 10, 2007 12:25 AM CST reply actions
ok
wrong link
here is the right one:
by ab03 @ Blogging The Boys on Dec 10, 2007 12:25 AM CST up reply actions
Grizz go easy on the defense
they only gave up 7 points in the second half. I just think the Lions run game caught them by surprise in the first half.
by Burt D @ Blogging The Boys on Dec 10, 2007 12:37 AM CST reply actions
i agree...
there were some big holes in thet d-line, but we got the win...
I am concerned about Run D last 2 wks...
Don't get me wrong. The bottom line is the win -- I don't care how, and I'm just relieved that we pulled it out.
HOWEVER, what's happened with our once killer defense against the run. I'm worried about this going into the playoffs. I hope we get this fixed real soon.
Week 15 is home against Brian Westbrook and the Eagles, so we better repair this pronto.
I WANT TOTAL HOME FIELD THROUGHOUT THE PLAYOFFS AND NO SERIOUS INJURIES THE REST OF THE WAY!!!
So glad we won, though. Killer game.
NFL Replay on NFL Network this Tuesday, December 11, 2007 @ 8 PM...
The Packers had a Barry Sanders game...
One big run surrounded by a bunch of two yard gains. That doesn't concern me.
The Lions were much more consistent, and that's the problem.
by Big D Bam Bam on Dec 10, 2007 9:56 AM CST up reply actions
"Highlights"...
Not that I don't appreciate the link, Grizz, but that nfl.com video only shows the last TD of the game. I've seen that about 9 times on ESPN so far.
Any place to see a more overall highlight package of the whole game?
by Pete on Dec 10, 2007 6:52 AM CST reply actions
If you get the NFL channel, there should be a
compacted version of the entire game shown several times during the week.
NFL network?
AHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHA...
oh wait, you were serious? ;-)
by Pete on Dec 10, 2007 9:28 AM CST up reply actions
Pete
U could try looking on youtube for different highlights
by jls2223 on Dec 10, 2007 8:35 AM CST up reply actions
Game highlights
If you go to www.nfl.com/videos, then click on the bottom right so you're displaying videos 13-24, you'll see "Cowboys 28, Lions 27" with 05:04 length.
and more
And if you click on "Week 14: Tony Romo highlights" in the first 12 videos, they have a lot of the passes other than the TDs that aren't included in the main highlight video. They also have Jason Witten highlights in the second 12 videos.
here's the direct links
Week 14: Jason Witten highlights
THANKS all.
Good stuff - this is definitely more than ESPN or ESPN News was showing.
I was actually screaming at the TV last night when they felt it necessary to spend literally 25 minutes on the NE post-game press conference talking to Brady and Moss.
OK, WE GET IT. THE PATRIOTS ARE GOOD.
Let's move on to a more exciting game now, shall we?
by Pete on Dec 10, 2007 10:53 AM CST up reply actions
and this was one very exciting game
nail-biting, especially the last drive
BTW
anyone got any video (I'll even take audio) of Dallas' post game conference?
by Pete on Dec 10, 2007 12:06 PM CST up reply actions
more highlights
I don't think there are any plays in this one that aren't in the other ones, but it has different commentary...
NFL GameDay: Cowboys vs. Lions highlights
Post-game Press Conference
Go to dallascowboys.com and click on Multimedia, and at the moment it starts playing his press conference from today, but on the right there's a link for "Wade Phillips Postgame 12/09"
defense's biggest need
This defense still needs its Jamal Williams / Vince Wilfork / Casey Hampton. Ratliff has done an admirable job at NT but he really belongs at LDE. Getting Ferg back healthy next year would surely help, but he's not getting any younger. I'm not sure if Frank Okam's the guy, but a young prospect in that physical mold just has to be brought in next year.
I haven't felt this good since...
Staubach was at the reigns.
He’s James Dean cool.
-Grizz
I luv this quote.
We've got lightening in a bottle with Romo. He's as accurate as Aikman, as elusive as Staubach, as cool as Montana... and he's barely more than a Rookie.
My Cuz
has dubbed Romo Cool Hand Luke, I dont know if I've ever seen someone besides maybe Tom Brady develope this kind of, will not be denied attitude, faster than what TR has. NFC East Champions, man I'm still in disbelief, its been a long time coming.
by jls2223 on Dec 10, 2007 8:47 AM CST reply actions
Romo is the man
and hopefully the defense laid an egg due to a "trap game" mentality.
Over the past month, the Cowboys have been collecting sacks on a regular basis. Jon Kitna was the most-sacked QB in the league. It should have meant a very uncomfortable day for the Lions offense, instead Kitna was buoyed by excellent protection and a running game that kept the Cowboys guessing
This was surely their mindset and they didn't get up enough for a spunky Lions team. If they can rebound and crush the philly offense next week, I'll feel a lot better.
Crayton...
I'm just acting like this game never happened...
More important, Crayton is in a walking boot!
Oh yeah, the damn Defense has 3 more weeks to get it's act together, or this magical season is all for naught!
by Dale in Atlanta on Dec 10, 2007 8:57 AM CST reply actions
I'm pretty worried...
About the defense, but I'm willing to wait and see. The front seven seemed to be the main culprits, but I've seen enough from them to think that this could be a one-game aberration. They've been so dominant against the run all season that it's hard to believe they didn't just have a bad game.
I still would have liked to see Wade bring the CBs up once he realized that the pass rush wasn't getting there, though. Those 8-10 yard cushions they gave were killing us. The soft coverages are something that has bothered me all year about this Phillips 34.
Lets put this in perspective
Here is a stat:
The first 25 minutes the Lions scored 20 points, and in the last 35 minutes they scored 7. Lets give the defense some credit for making adjustments.
by Burt D @ Blogging The Boys on Dec 10, 2007 9:08 AM CST reply actions
Let's put this in greater perspective...
For the entire 60 minutes, they gave up 27.
That's never good. And it took a minor miracle for them not to give up 30.
I recognize that the defense stepped up a little more in the second half and only gave up 123 yards after being roasted in the first for 255, but the defense I saw yesterday looked far too much like the one I saw last December for comfort. Soft coverages, no pressure, and worse of all, no run defense.
I'm not too worried yet, but they're going to have to show me something against Philly and Westbrook.
by Big D Bam Bam on Dec 10, 2007 9:28 AM CST up reply actions
I think what happened was
they came out running and threw us off balance, so we had to alter our game plan. Plus we have a hobbled Anthony Henry starting for us. Point is there is no reason for "the sky is falling" attitude.
by Burt D @ Blogging The Boys on Dec 10, 2007 9:34 AM CST up reply actions
The sky's not falling...
And I never said it was. I just said I was worried, and I am. Couple of points.
-I know it's Mike Martz, but you should never be surprised when an NFL team runs the ball.
-If Anthony Henry's ankle is that bad, he shouldn't be starting. Reeves was doing just fine. If he was out there, it's because the coaches were satisfied that he was healthy.
by Big D Bam Bam on Dec 10, 2007 9:40 AM CST up reply actions
Baltimore ran all over NE last week
It happens - these ar professional football teams too. They get paid a salary.
Credit your team for makingthe proper adjustments.
They didn't make any adjustments...
At least not schematically. The only thing they did in the second half was tackle a little better, which was only possible because the tackling couldn't have been any worse than it was in the first half.
The holes were still there in the middle, the coverage was still too soft, and the pass rush was still nonexistent, aside from one play by Ware. They didn't adjust to fix any of their problems, they just tried a little harder. I'm fine with commending them for that effort, but it doesn't take away from the fact that, in general, they looked a lot like they did at the end of last year.
And Baltimore didn't run on NE by accident, they ran on them because the Pats are soft up the middle on the second and third levels. That's why the Steelers were also able to run on them. And the Colts. And the Cowboys. It wasn't a one game problem for them, it's something that they've been able to hide by running up the score on people.
The problem for me is that the strength of the Dallas defense this year has been up the middle, so when someone attacks them there and succeeds, it worries me. I'll repeat--the sky is not falling, and I'm very far from the nearest ledge, but I'd like to see a better job from the D-Line against Philly.
by Big D Bam Bam on Dec 10, 2007 11:19 AM CST up reply actions
NE misses Colvin, especially against the run.
by DerekSTheRed on Dec 10, 2007 11:26 AM CST up reply actions
I'll Say It Again
But Dallas usually falls to pieces when we play in Detroit. It's been happening for three decades, ever since they moved indoors, and frankly I'm surprised we were able to get close, much less win. We normally get blown to smithereens there. Dallas has historically played poorly in domed stadiums in general; Detroit is the most extreme example.
The defense gave up 255 yards in the first half, but only 126 in the second. Historically, when we fall behind Detroit, the games just spin wildly out of control, like a snowball going downhill. That we were able to improve on our performance as the game wore on is actually pretty encouraging
We won in our Temple of Doom for only the fourth time in three decades. I'm not going to overreact to the performance of one game, especially in a venue where we have historically had major, major disasters.
Now, if this happens next week against the Eagles, I'll be more concerned. But not so much right now.
I don't by that whole "they came out running"
crap...
It should NOT surprise a team, when the other team RUNS the damn ball!
End of discussion on that one!
Second, I think that Ryan Grant's 62yrd burst up the middle last weeks, showed Detroit, and other teams paying attention, that for some reason, the middle of the Dallas D is suddenly suspect.
It seems to me, they're just leaving it open most of the time, for some reason.
It was the middle that the Lions exploited, repeatedly!
That's where most of their rushes, and yards, came from, and it just seemed that the gap was totally unfilled by the LB's!
But, as I said, this game it over, we can whine all we want, it doesn't matter a squat.
It's Wade's Problem to figure out and fix; his, not ours, his; and if he does, then the team is fine; if he doesn't then they're in trouble.
From post-game remarks, I think Henry is fine; he'll get better.
Again, it's Crayton I'm worried about; he was in a walking boot after the game.
It appears that TG is a game or two away from coming back; but this team needs at least Three, and really Four good receivers, to compete into and thru the playoffs!
They are NOT going to go far, with TO being shut down, and waiting for Whitten to win every game!
So, they need Crayton healthy, and TG back, and TO and Whitten!
by Dale in Atlanta on Dec 10, 2007 10:17 AM CST reply actions

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