Scouting report: Cowboys vs. Giants (defense)
Here’s the second part of the scouting report focusing on the Giants defense from their recent playoff game with the Bucs. I’ll preface it by saying that as well as the Giants played I thought the Bucs did an awful job of play-calling in the game and started playing the game the Giants wanted.
Giants run defense
This is the part that baffled me most about the Bucs. Early on, they were having success running Earnest Graham up the gut of the Giants defense. Whether it was straight-ahead bull-runs or cutbacks at the line, the Bucs had success. Graham had 30 yards rushing in the first quarter. For whatever reason, over the next few series the Bucs started relying more on the pass and the Giants were able to generate pressure on Jeff Garcia. The Bucs offense never found a rhythm after that and they just didn’t have the weapons in the passing game to make the Giants pay, especially with Joey Galloway hobbled. Later, at the start of the second half they went back to Graham and were have a successful drive until Garcia hung a duck up in the air and the Giants intercepted it. After that, they never truly threatened the Giants again.
I’m hoping the Cowboys offensive staff took notice of this and will rely a little more on the run game than we have recently. Especially in the Eagles game, who run a very similar attacking defense to the Giants, we abandoned the run game much too early. With the Giants’ heavy reliance on their pass rush to disrupt the opposing offense and the chances they take in dialing up blitzes, a solid run game could do a lot to slow that down. It’s tempting to go after the Giants secondary even though they played well against the lackluster Bucs offense, but the Cowboys can’t fall in love with the passing game as they have recently and remember that Marion Barber can be a weapon on the ground.
In defense of the Bucs, the Giants didn’t respect their passing-game at all and were lining up 8-in-the-box frequently. But even when they did that the Bucs were able to run when they dedicated themselves to it. I doubt that the Giants will have that little respect for the Cowboys passing game and will play looser in the secondary and not crowd the line as much.
Giants pass defense
The Bucs offense just didn’t have the firepower to take advantage of a suspect Giants’ secondary. With Galloway hobbled, backup CB Corey Webster didn’t have a lot of problems shadowing him and taking him out of the game. The Bucs also had problems getting the pass rush blocked and as the game progressed the Giants started using the blitz more effectively and were bring players from different angles. Especially when the Bucs started passing often, the blitzes became more frequent and the Giants almost always brought pressure on 3rd down passing situations.
Where the Bucs did have some success was using their backs as receivers. Their running backs were giving the Giants LB’s problems in coverage and that’s another area they failed to exploit to maximum advantage. Dallas has two running backs that are very capable receivers and could really hurt the Giants defense. The Cowboys should get back to utilizing JJ and MB3 in the passing game. Another soft spot was the middle of the defense. The Bucs used slants and crossing routes to get open in the middle of the field. Dallas can exploit this weakness with stud-TE Jason Witten, and getting him locked up with a LB or safety during a blitz could be a big play.
The Giants pass rush did a very effective job of harassing and hitting Garcia and caused him to throw passes before he was ready. They didn’t blitz a lot early but dialed up the pressure as the game progressed. The front-four of the Giants was very aggressive getting upfield and collapsed the pocket from the edges. I wouldn’t mind seeing Tony Romo scramble up the middle some and take advantage of the pass rush scheme. If he put up 30 yards or so with his feet that could really help Dallas control the most imposing piece of the Giants defense.
Sumamry
Dallas needs to be conscious of not abandoning the run game. Take your shots at the gut of the Giants defense with the massive Leonard Davis and a returning Andre Gurode. I know we’re mainly a passing offense but against a formidable pass rush the run game is as effective weapon as there is. We’ll always return to the pass, but having a play-action pass game that actually needs to be respected is a bonus.
When passing the ball, utilize the checkdowns, screens and pass-patterns for the running backs. Don’t be impatient and feel you have to get it all at once. Jason Witten should also have a big day in the middle if T.O. is available to draw double-teams. Romo needs to use his feet to punish the pass rush on occasion and force them to slow down and respect the entire package of the Dallas offense.
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24 comments
Comments
Good points Grizzle
I think Parcells' philosophy would serve us well early. Run the ball, run the ball and then run the ball some more.
The Giants D Line must respect our running game just like you mentioned.
by goodjobtimmyheresabluestar on Jan 8, 2008 3:56 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
I agree, however
I don't want to see us get off to the slow starts we did early in the season by doing that. As we all know we had some very slow starts early in the season partially due to a conscious decision to "run the ball, run the ball, and run the ball some more" We need to set a tempo of running it hard, but we need not to start of slowly in this one. Score early and we gain the confidence that we cannot be stopped.
by sduncan24 on Jan 8, 2008 4:50 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Yes, "balance is the key."
If Red Ball stays creative -- without overdoing it with the pass (maybe 60-40 run-pass) -- it would keep Spagnuolo's D honest.
It all begins up front with the Big Uglies. Our O-line has to win the battle in the trenches.
And I agree with Grizz, we do have to run more than we did in the loss to Philly.
by kcbrett5 on Jan 8, 2008 5:02 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Agreed...
silverblue, I posted the below message in the wrong section (oops, sorry guys) on the cowboys v. giants defense...
Aside from Terrell Owens coming back at 100%, offensively, I want to see our line come back out and impose their will from the first play of the game...I truly believe that if we come out and play PHYSICAL football on the O-line, and show them that we don't have to wait until the late third/fourth quarter to RUN the ball effectively...if we do that, you will see this "confident" Giants team deflate like a balloon. This will open up the deep ball to Glenn and Owens... additionally, when they realize they have to put up over 34 points to win, Manning will have to play matador with D-Ware, and we will see the Manning face shortly thereafter.
Flozell, Gurode, Big Leonard, Marc, Kosier, get out there and make us proud. Blood makes the grass grow.
by nspirals on Jan 8, 2008 6:21 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Slow starts -- I'll tell you why
From the very first offensive possession, JuJo is an automatic 2nd-and-9. Bam! Enter pass-whacky gameplan.
by goodjobtimmyheresabluestar on Jan 8, 2008 5:25 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
the key will be T.O.
if he's ready to go and is close to 100%, I say let 'er fly Tony, early and often. After getting a nice lead, then run MB3 right down their throats for the kill!
by Terry on Jan 8, 2008 5:30 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
Any update on T.O.
by Mullin on Jan 8, 2008 6:01 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
The key is
Austin believe it or not. If I recall he smoked the Giants CB's twice in that game, one of them for a PI. I think with his speed he can stretch the field, especially if TO is not 100 percent. I like the way they used him that game and against the Giants secondary he should be able to do some good things.
by Cowboys81 on Jan 8, 2008 6:11 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
I think you're thinking of the Packers game
by Terry on Jan 8, 2008 6:42 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Maybe
I still think Austin would be key. He is the other that can stretch a defense. We don't know how Glenn will perform.
by Cowboys81 on Jan 8, 2008 7:00 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Austin can get deep
His route running looks good, but his hand fail him too often. He's still a year of work with the jugs machine away. (and I'm not talking about Jessica either)
by APerfectStar on Jan 8, 2008 8:18 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
austin won't see the field
with terry glenn coming back.trust me glenn is the original field stretcher!
by TrueBlue24 on Jan 9, 2008 9:52 AM CST up reply actions 0 recs
perhaps but
I don't care what game it was.. If the only way you can gain yards is to draw a PI call, that's not cool. I actually like Austin and hope he elevates his game. I still have faith in him.
by sublimezg on Jan 8, 2008 9:41 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
the good thing about it
is that you don't have to catch the ball! if you get yourself in position to draw the PI call, that is a threat in itself, and the yards are still good.
but seriously, he has to hold onto the ball. he dropped two ridiculously easy catches against the skins, both of them touchdowns. and that wasn't the first time. i think austin has good potential because of his speed, and shows the great depth of this team's receiving unit, but of course the single most important skill of a receiver is to catch the ball. his potential is limited unless he can do that well.
by scottmaui on Jan 9, 2008 12:26 AM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Those drops
were game changers too. He got the yips and he'll need to bring better than that if he is going to see the field nextyear...
by dunkman on Jan 9, 2008 5:28 AM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Austin, when mature, will be a great, all-purpose
asset to this team. Didn't he also play some defense in college?
by Wharter on Jan 8, 2008 8:15 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
Remeber the second game
between the two of them, Dallas was running the ball a lot on their first drive and were having success up the middle. I believe they scored on their first drive. But they had a lot of success running early forcing the gints to adjust.
by cowboy78 on Jan 8, 2008 8:36 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
Delusional?
First of all, in the interests of disclosure I am a Giants fan and Giants season ticket holder. My question is, why do you fear the Giants at all? You handled them handily twice already. What has changed? Is it because:
1. Owens is hurt, and a high ankle sprain is one of the more debilitating and nagging injuries.
2. Tony Romo is P-whipped, plain and simple. Most of us have been there. This may be your biggest worry. I can't back out of the garage without damage when I'm in his condition.
3. The Giants are playing their best ball. This doesn't say much, as they sucked all season. REALLY sucked. Good to know that a reined in Eli can still lead a team to victory, but I think he'll be allowed more rope this week.
4. Don't downplay the win against Tampa. Galloway wasn't "hobbled", (as stated in the scouting report here) as he had a bad shoulder,not legs. The Giants defense is peaking right now.
Lot of burden on your shoulders. A Giants team playing with house money is a dangerous thing...
by Jinks on Jan 9, 2008 12:07 AM CST reply actions 0 recs
I for one don't fear the Giants
- Don't worry about T.O., I'm not. His history is to perform at his best when it seems least likely. Reference his Super Bowl appearance when the Docs wouldn't even clear him to play from a MUCH more serious injury.
- Hmmm...Jessica was there for the Packers game and the Jets game, seems Tony did okay on those occasions. I hope you don't have a job requiring the use of heavy equipment if you are so easily distracted by a pretty girl.
- When is the last time Eli had 3 consecutive good games? I rest my case on this one.
- Why wouldn't we downplay the win against Tampa? You realize they are a VERY mediocre team who lucked into being in the worst division in the NFC this year, right? They were 5-1 against the NFC South, 4-7 against everyone else. The Cowboys and their 12 pro bowlers ain't the Bucs with their zero. I predicted the Giants to beat them by 17.
The Giants haven't "sucked all year" as you claim. They are a step above the 'Skins, Bucs, and Seahawks...but a step behind the Packers and two behind the Cowboys who are clearly the class of the NFC this year. The Giants stand no chance against a healthy Cowboys team, and it appears they will be as healthy as they've been all year.
by FunCowboysFan on Jan 9, 2008 1:47 AM CST up reply actions 0 recs
I forgot to mention
The first time the Giants came to Dallas, Terrance Newman and Greg Ellis didn't play. Eli can expect a stronger pass rush and better coverage than in his last visit. Not gonna be quite so easy to sit back and wait on Plaxico to get open...
by FunCowboysFan on Jan 9, 2008 1:52 AM CST up reply actions 0 recs
You woul have been OK
without the Romo comment. You should know better than to buy into all the media crap about Romo. Does anyone track how many times guys go off for a weekend with their wives or GFs? So now you're into wishful thinking, which doesn't say much for your confidfence. If Romo has a problem, it will be his thumb, not his, well, you know. And yeah, Galloway was hurt and not up to speed for that game.
The Giants are playing well right now, and they have a great shot at winning, but it'll be about execution, not all the other nonsense.
by dunkman on Jan 9, 2008 5:33 AM CST up reply actions 0 recs

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