
DISCLAIMER: This is not for everyone. It may not be for you. This is a statistical study of the Cowboys offense with lots of numbers that may make your head tired if you are not up to it. Read it only if it is something that is of interest to you.
Before Denver put the brakes on this juggernaut of an offense, the results were difficult to comprehend. In the first 3 weeks of football, the Cowboys offense had the ball for 175 offensive snaps, and rolled up 1280 yards. That is an astounding 7.31 yards per snap. High School powers brag about 7.31 yards per snap. This doesn’t happen in the National Football League. Despite the feeling that the offense was failing, the reality is the yardage they rolled up was a fabulous sign.
But, when the Cowboys offense dropped to 4.37 a snap on Sunday, was it more of just a market correction or a down week?
They ran the ball 25 times for 74 yards. Less than 3 yards a carry. The idea that they should have run the ball more seems like a stretch. The fact is, they did not run with any effectiveness. And, they also did not have Marion Barber in the 2nd half for much of anything. We must realize that while Tashard Chocie is a nice story, it is folly to compare him to Marion Barber or even Felix Jones in scaring opponents. He is nice as a change-up, but in games where he is counted on to be “the man” the Cowboys offense doesn’t seem to operate the same way. Think about it; who was their main RB in December of last year? And how did that December offense look last year?
They passed the ball for 241 net, which is affected by 3 big plays. 2 were screens in the first half, and the last big play was the long shot to Sam Hurd. If you subtract those 3 (which you obviously cannot), the mediocre 5.12 yards per pass play falls to an amazingly ineffective 3.06 yards per pass on the other 44 snaps.
In Denver, we also saw another big issue with the offense. Pass Protection. And I cannot stress this enough; every bad issue the offense ever has is a result of poor pass protection. Jason Garrett’s play selection is effected by poor pass protection (he gets very careful, and keeps Witten in which is like trying to run your offense with 1 arm behind your back). Tony Romo’s throw selection is certainly effected by the rush in his face. All of the bad days for this offense all start when the Cowboys cannot build and maintain a pocket. The Giants playoff game. Arizona. Pittsburgh. Baltimore. Philadelphia.
Which, as we look at the Cowboys from the proper perspective we must ask the question of how do you gameplan against Jason Garrett? If your answer is not, “Blitz, Blitz, Blitz” until Romo/Garrett can prove they have an answer for it, then you have not been paying attention.
To put it another way, think of it like this: If I blitz the Cowboys, they will be likely to leave Witten and Barber (or Choice) in to pick up the blitz. Now, if those players are in on protection schemes, then who is in route? Roy Williams (Romo and Williams connect on just 44% of their attempts), Patrick Crayton (46%), and Miles Austin (41%). This season, on Romo throws to WRs, the Cowboys are a mere 31-70 (44%).
If I blitz Jason Garrett’s offense, I make the Cowboys throw to WRs. And for whatever reasons, the Cowboys WRs are not making teams pay through 4 games. Also, if I blitz, I beat up Tony Romo, and he doesn’t perform well when he is hit (in fairness to Romo, almost no QBs do – how many times did Favre get hit on Monday night? 0 sacks).
Let’s look at the Cowboys use of Personnel in their 72 offensive snaps:
Totals by Personnel Groups:
| Package | Plays Run | Yards | Run | Pass |
| 12 | 22 | 61 | 13-36 | 9-25 |
| 13 | 1 | 26 | 0-0 | 1-26 |
| 21 | 5 | 14 | 2-8 | 3-6 |
| 22 | 10 | 61 | 8-29 | 2-32 |
| 23 | 1 | 1 | 1-1 | 0-0 |
| S01 | 1 | -2 | 0-0 | 1-(-2) |
| S02 | 1 | 9 | 0-0 | 1-9 |
| S11 | 24 | 117 | 2-(-2) | 22-119 |
| S12 | 7 | 28 | 0-0 | 7-28 |
| Totals | 72 | 315 | 25-74 | 47-241 |
Definition of the Personnel Groups, click here .
As you can see, nothing was very effective. Of 39 plays from “under center”, they rolled up just 163 yards. Also, the 2 screen passes were part of that total, meaning, of the other 37 plays, the Cowboys could barely budge the ball – 110 yards (2.97 yards per snap).
Video Breakdowns:
Here, I want to look at 5 plays this week. I have simplified the video (with Brian’s help, of course) to just strip each one down to one play per video. I want to examine the 2 screen plays, the blitz that turned the game for Denver, and the last 2 shots into the endzone. Some good, and some bad.
Thanks, Brian at DC Fanatic.com who provides the videos (and the biting commentary) for this exercise. And Shawn for his work in compiling numbers.
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The Play: 1/20/21 – “13″ personnel – Screen to Barber for 26 yards
What Happened:This is a very straight-forward screen that is a wonderful remedy for an amped up defense. Use their aggressiveness against them. The Broncos have the Cowboys in a 1st and 20 hole, and now will rush 5 to make the Cowboys sweat. The Cowboys counter with a screen to Barber out of “13″, in which John Phillips is in a pass route and Martellus in in pass protect off RT. Watch the fine work of the interior line, with Kosier showing very impressive mobility to go get in a DB’s way. Andre Gurode is also demonstrating his ability to get down field with a full sprint looking for someone to hit. For a second, it doesn’t look like Barber can go faster than Gurode! I don’t think we often consider mobility a key attribute of the Cowboys’ OL, but here we see #63 and #65 can do some damage in screens to the left.
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The Play: 1Q – 1/10/39 – “22″ Personnel – Screen to Choice for 27 yards
What Happened: This play is interesting in we see how defense react to what they see in the pre snap. Just like the next play below (when Hill blitzes BECAUSE Choice went in motion) we see here that the Broncos notice that the Cowboys have “22″ personnel. This is their most impressive power offense, with Bennett and Witten run blocking, Deon Anderson leading for Choice. When the Cowboys load everyone up to the right by putting Bennett in motion, they are either running right or trying to convince the Broncos they are running right. The Broncos then run blitz #24 Bailey from that side, and he likely would have had a chance to blow that play up if it was a run right.
Instead, the Cowboys have a screen set up, that is timed pretty well. Kosier, Gurode, and Davis all get downfield, and notice again Kosier’s great job getting out and sealing the OLB to the sideline. Choice beats one Denver DL #90 Peterson to the corner. When he does, it is a big gainer.
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The Play: 2Q – 3/14/21 – “S12″ – Blitz and Fumble
What Happened: Here is what I wrote yesterday about this 3rd and long out of “S12″:
The play came with 10:19 to go in the 2nd Quarter, the Cowboys up 10-0, and facing a 3rd and 14; they decide that they will go shotgun, but with 2 Tight Ends lined up tight, and 2 WRs. Tashard Choice starts next to Romo, but motions to the left sideline to reveal whether the Broncos are in zone or man. What does that mean? That means nobody is back with Romo in the shotgun to pick up a blitz.
Denver studies this all week, and like many of us have discussed, when a team goes shotgun-empty, they decided that that will mean a blindside blitz from SS, Renaldo Hill. Yes, the Cowboys know the defense against the blitz, but they will only have a split second to get the ball out. Hill times his run brilliantly, and Romo is waiting for Roy Williams to get his route 14 yards down the field so they can move the chains. At the split second Roy is reaching the 1st down marker, Hill unloads on Romo’s blindside. Choice, who would have been right where Hill was blitzing, stands at the left sideline doing nothing but occupying Andre Goodman. Romo is sacked and fumbles. Denver returns it for an eventual 7 points (1 play later).
This is a sack that had nothing to do with anyone on the field. Every one of the 11 players on the field for the Cowboys is doing what their job asked on that play. But, the coaches of the Cowboys were out-smarted by the new coaches of the Denver Broncos. The game was never the same. From that point on, the Broncos realized the Cowboys don’t handle the blitzes and pressure well, and the Cowboys couldn’t do anything about it.
That is what I wrote yesterday. I think I got most of it right, but I would like to take issue with myself with another 24 hours to talk to others and review this play yet again. I think Romo deserves some blame here for A) locking into Roy and B) not seeing the field. If you are playing QB, you cannot lock onto one half of the field. We will see this again later on the final 2 plays of the game. He doesn’t even consider that there are options on the left. He just knows on this play that Williams is running to the marker, so he doesn’t look elsewhere, despite the Broncos having 3 DBs to that side of the field to defend 2 WRs. The numbers are not right for Tony.
Watch the play again. See Martellus Bennett off Left Tackle? See that he sees the blitz and looks like he might be trying to tell Romo in the pre snap (0:27 of video)? Regardless, Bennett breaks off his route as you should off a blitz, and if Romo throws to him, they do not get 14 yards – but they do at least get some more room before they punt. And they don’t surrender a sack.
This is called QB awareness. If Romo is aware of both sides of the field, then he can “take what he is given”. But, if he has tunnel vision as is determined to throw to Roy from the second he breaks the huddle, then he doesn’t see Hill blitzing or Bennett reacting to Hill’s blitz.
Blame Garrett for a poor concept to go “empty” out of the shotgun, but blame Romo for not seeing the play.
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The Play:4Q – 3/G/3 – “S11″ – Incomplete to Hurd
What Happened:These last two plays got plenty of my description yesterday, too:
Consider the final 2 plays of the game yesterday: 2 plays from the 3 yard line. No timeouts are left. So, you must throw into the endzone. Roy Williams and Marion Barber are not in the game, because neither is healthy enough to continue. So, as Offensive Coordinator, I must consider my options. The Cowboys are going to use “S11″, so I have Witten next to Colombo, Choice on Romo’s right side, Austin wide left, Crayton slot left, and Hurd split right. Denver is going to match-up man-to-man on the receivers, and blitz one more than you can protect. The Cowboys then make the incredible decision to keep Witten in to protect. If you read me regularly, you know there is nothing that makes me crazier that Jason Garrett does than to keep Witten in on a crucial play. We have gone on and on about how he is your #1 target, and he is your money receiver. But, like the final play of the NY Giants playoff game,Garrett leaves Witten in protection on 3rd and 4th down here. This is inexcusable, especially considering that Roy and MB3 are not in the game. What this means is with the game on the line, you have Romo trying to find 2 undrafted WRs (Austin and Hurd) and a 7th round WR (Crayton), who have made fewer big catches in all of their careers combined than Witten makes every few weeks. If you need an extra Tight End to pass protect, then get Martellus out there, and take out a WR for Witten in the slot. This should not be this complicated.
Then, Romo, who also deserves plenty of blame, decides to try to isolate Hurd against Champ Bailey for 2 consecutive slants in the endzone. Why he never looks to Miles Austin who is A) open, and B) working against Andre Goodman is beyond me. The throws weren’t bad, but Bailey recovered nicely. Since a slant is basically a physical battle to win the football, the question would be, “How many battles has Hurd in his career won that gave Romo such belief in him in that situation?” This isn’t Owens or Irvin out there. It is Sam Hurd!
My addition to those comments are simply this – in reviewing the game film, it appears that by this portion of the game that Romo has decided he has had enough of Miles Austin. Austin’s poor route in the 3Q cost the Cowboys the football (even Champ Bailey knew that play was for an “out” route), and then his failure to recognize a blitz in the early 4th Quarter cost the Cowboys another punt. Romo has decided that since Austin has not made a play, and Hurd just did, that he is going to Hurd. No matter what. Again, my QB cannot have his mind made up before the play. And if he does, I pray that he doesn’t convince himself to challenge one of the very best CBs in football with his 4th WR.
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The Play:4Q – 4/G/3 – “S11″ – Incomplete to Hurd, again.
What Happened:I should probably just write “see above” here. The last play and this one are very similar. The only difference is that Crayton runs a slant instead of the out. Otherwise, Austin slants from the left, Hurd from the right. Man to Man coverage. Everything is identical. It makes you wonder why the coaches aren’t in Romo’s ear between plays saying “Watch the left” if they saw what we saw on 3rd down.
This also reminds you of the stubborness to run virtually the exact same play two snaps in a row at the goal-line (Carolina’s back-to-back fades).
No Witten again. You know, if I am going to lose a game because I threw it to Witten and it didn’t work, well then I just have to take my medicine. But, do I really have to accept that this QB/OC dynamic duo want to put the game in Sam Hurd’s hands? A guy who is only on the field because Roy Williams cannot get out there?
To say I am perplexed at the decision making of the QB/OC tandem is an understatement.
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Target Distribution:
Targets – Week 4 vs Den
| Name | Targets | Catches | Yards | FD/TD/INT |
| Austin | 8 | 3 | 19 | 1/0/1 |
| Williams | 7 | 3 | 35 | 3/0 |
| Crayton | 7 | 3 | 16 | 0/0 |
| Choice | 6 | 5 | 47 | 2/0 |
| Hurd | 5 | 3 | 62 | 2/0 |
| Witten | 4 | 4 | 31 | 1/0 |
| Barber | 2 | 2 | 27 | 1/0 |
| Bennett | 1 | 1 | 13 | 1/0 |
| Anderson | 1 | 1 | 5 | 0/0 |
| Totals | 41 | 25 | 255 | 11/0/1 |
Season Target Distribution To Date:
| Name | Targets | Catches | % | Yards | FD/TD/INT |
| Witten | 27 | 23 | 85% | 212 | 9/1/1 |
| Williams | 25 | 11 | 44% | 214 | 8/1/0 |
| Crayton | 24 | 11 | 46% | 199 | 4/1/1 |
| Bennett | 10 | 4 | 40% | 40 | 3/0/0 |
| Choice | 16 | 12 | 75% | 92 | 5/0/0 |
| Austin | 12 | 5 | 41% | 81 | 2/1/1 |
| Hurd | 7 | 4 | 57% | 69 | 2/0/1 |
| Barber | 4 | 4 | 100% | 58 | 2/0/0 |
| Jones | 2 | 1 | 50% | 20 | 1/0/0 |
| Anderson | 2 | 1 | 50% | 5 | 0/0/0 |
| Totals | 129 | 76 | 59% | 990 | 36/4/4 |
3rd Down Target Distribution:
As you will see, 3rd downs are a mess right now. Ugly.
3RD Down Targets – Week 4 – Den
| Name | Targets | Catches | Yards | FD/TD |
| Austin | 4 | 1 | 2 | 0/0/1 |
| Hurd | 3 | 1 | 53 | 1/0 |
| Williams | 2 | 1 | 13 | 1/0 |
| Witten | 1 | 1 | 8 | 0/0 |
| Crayton | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0/0 |
| Totals | 11 | 4 | 76 | 2/0/1 |
3rd Down Targets – Season Totals
| Name | Targets | Catches | % | Yards | FD/TD/INT |
| Crayton | 7 | 3 | 43% | 35 | 2/0/1 |
| Witten | 6 | 6 | 100% | 69 | 3/1/0 |
| Williams | 6 | 2 | 33% | 29 | 2/0/0 |
| Choice | 5 | 4 | 80% | 20 | 2/0/0 |
| Austin | 4 | 1 | 25% | 2 | 0/0/0 |
| Hurd | 3 | 1 | 33% | 53 | 1/0/0 |
| Bennett | 3 | 0 | 0% | 0 | 0/0/0 |
| Totals | 34 | 17 | 50% | 208 | 10/1/2 |
SACKS
The first week where sacks and pass protect were an absolute sabotage to the offense. Look for the Chiefs to study and learn from what the Broncos did.
We will continue to update this chart as the season goes on:
| Week | Opponent | Sack | Blame |
| Wk 1 | Tampa | Barber | Romo awareness |
| Wk 3 | Carolina | Davis | Adams? |
| Wk 3 | Carolina | Beason | Felix/Colombo |
| Wk 4 | Denver | Dumervil | Adams |
| Wk 4 | Denver | Hill | Garrett? |
| Wk 4 | Denver | Williams | Romo |
| Wk 4 | Denver | Dumervil | Anderson |
| Wk 4 | Denver | Holiday | Adams |
Past Episodes:
Week 3 – Carolina
Week 2 – New York Giants
Week 1 – Tampa Bay Buccaneers
I hate to be realistic about the Cowboys when the sky is falling. But this team was basically considered a 10-6 team and it has lost to two 4-0 teams by very narrow margins.
For all the problems with Romo, Phillips, the WRs and the defense, it is still in position to go 10-6. To do so, they will need to win their next three games which is pretty doable.
Good work Bobbo, now get your shine box at the ready. Oh Yeah, Green Bay couldn’t use that old guy that’s way past his prime eh? Dang, Favre looks great with a dominant RB and O-line….who’d thunk it
Good job, as usual, Bob.
The goal line calls are simply inexcusable. Yes, I’m just a fan with a keyboard, but I can’t think of a good football decision that has your top receiver in pass blocking while your 4th option gets targeted twice. (As you’ve pointed out).
Where’s Marty B? There’s another big target that can catch (although his production isn’t stellar according to your numbers). But he’s also the TE that should be in blocking while Witten goes out.
You’re also right to point out that when it’s time to win the game, Romo needs to be able to see the whole field and hopefully ignoring one of his receivers is not a tendency. (insert T.O. comment here)
Sturminator, you are very good at this. Thanks.
M Lombardi explained on the musers this morning that the reason Romo only looked to his right is because he knew that’s where the rush was coming from. They were outmanned on this side both times because of the blocking scheme that was called to protect the blitz coming from the left. Romo obviously wanted to be aware of what’s coming at him from his “unprotected” side.
Not saying it’s right but it may explain why Romo was so focused on 1 half of the field for those last two plays.
So, is Jerry spending a 1st or 2nd on a real wide receiver in April? These clowns they roll out after Williams are seriously ineffective.
It’d be nice to know why Romo didn’t bother to motion another WR to that side of the field to at least give himself another option. A choice between fade to Martellus or slant to Hurd would be a lot easier than cramming it into a non-existent window twice in a row.
@RS
Interesting explanation. Far be it from me to question Lombardi, I’m probably missing something, but:
Denver blitzes from both sides on the 4th down play and Romo has his TB on his right side.
Perhaps it’s the benefit of seeing the film but the push comes from the left on that play.
Bob, any breakdown of the video at the end of the game where it looked like Romo may have thought it was 3rd down instead of 4th (per Norm’s shown)?
I mean show.
As hard as it is to look back at that game, this is amazing. The integration of video is genius.
Witten’s block on the screen to Choice was…choice. Hasn’t it been about a decade since the Cowboys have run a successful screen pass like this. Will need to file that play and have ready for the Philly game.
I’m convinced Champ Bailey should be thrown to no more than once a game, and that one early in the game to just keep him honest.
Tony Romo should have his hat turned around and over his eyes as the team goes over film of those last 2 plays.
The only time the Cowboys should use an empty backfield shotgun is for WR screen or quick slant routes.
Demarcus Ware hasn’t sacked a QB since 5 days before Christmas 2008. Panic!
Great work as always. One question for you…on the 4th down play why would Crayton be running a slant? All he did was bring in another defender to Hurd…I don’t think he catches that pass even if Baiiley doesn’t knock it down with the hit that was coming from from the guy covering Crayton.
If Romo froze out Austin then Miles should be demoted to the 4th WR…no sense having him on the field if the QB doesn’t/can’t trust him.
Hey Bob, just wanted to say good job. It’s starting to get to the point where I’m expecting a high level of analysis from you now, so I don’t know how much longer you’ll keep getting pats on the back from us.
As a Cowboys fan, I often relive the games for the next day or two. But I usually think about it from a GM’s perspective…maybe this is because I’ve never played football competitively. So here’s the question, if you are Jerry Jones, what would you have done differently this offseason? Do you have different plans for the coming offseason than you did 4 weeks ago?
For me, I was on board with the ‘put your faith in Romo and eventually promote Garret from within’ train of thought. Now I’m not sure I wouldn’t rather have a head coach with more skins on the wall, though one with 3-4 experience. Hello Bill Cowher.
While other, better, options were available in free agency at certain defensive spots, I’m not sure if the Cowboys could afford it. Plus Brooking’s play has been good value compared to the cost of Ray Lewis. Darren Sharper would have been interesting…
The O-line was set, same for RB, QB, and TE. They wanted to see what they had at WR. I think that’s the main area of upgrade (right now at least) heading in to the offseason. I’m just not sure this offense has the vertical threat that Garret and Romo insist on forcing into being with Crayton as the No. 2 WR and Williams as the only deep threat.
Great work Bob. I especially agree with your analysis of opposing defenses attacking with the Blitz. If you can take Witten out of the pattern then there is no one else to worry about. Garrett has got to adjust to this. Even if has to play Witten in the slot(which he has done plenty in other sets) it’s a better option. No excuse to not have him as an option for Romo. Keep the sports nerd stuff coming.
Bob, I look forward to this article every week now. Great stuff!
Love this segment.
Bob you are right about Romo having his mind made up pre snap on the last two plays. You aren’t considering why. It a “one read” situation. A sack ends the game. The “one read” is predetermined by the play called and the Bronco defense.
As RS mentioned, Michael Lombardi gave a good explanation of the situation when on with the Musers. Romo’s mental mistake was making the short throw to Crayton on first down.
A second read on the 4th down play would have given Dumervil his 9th sack of the season. He beat Flozell immeadiately.
Love this series of articles
It’s the wrong play, wrong read, wrong side of the field to throw to, no matter how you slice it: it was wrong.
Jim
Agreed but it wasn’t Romo’s decision to make. Once Hurd crossed Champ’s face he is technically open. Romo has to make that throw.
Credit Nolan, or blame Garrett, for the calls that forced Romo into that poor position on two plays in a row.
Again, it was not possible on the 4th down play to go to a second reciever due to poor pass protection. Hurd was “open” as defined by the play called. Not Romo’s choice.
Denver didn’t accidentally funnel the passing lanes to Champ. Nolan beat Garrett on 3rd and 4th down.
Great breakdown once again Sturm. I get the feeling that we will look back on the Boys not drafting Phil Loadholt and shake our heads. The o-line is good, but they continue to show they are weak vs lines with speed rushers.
Bob….you gotta see the espn Wayne Gretzky documentary….45 minutes in to it and it is a greeeeeat sports documentary
Was kind of in and out of the game, but it seemed like they abandoned the screen in the second half…why?
Blitz, blitz blitz.
Something goes not gel with that argument (although I find it very enticing). Romo over four games has a 102.2 rating when facing the blitz (18-34-317-3-1). In non-blitz situations, he has a 71.4 rating (58-92-673-1-3).
RE:The Play:4Q – 3/G/3 – “S11″ – Incomplete to Hurd
Our receivers coach needs to be fired for this play alone. Hurd should look left, see NO ONE in the endzone at the snap, and do everything to work separation. Sometimes you clear a guy to extend the field, but here there is no field to extend. It is ALL about gaining space. Instead, Hurd begins his route by running AT Bailey, taking his one advantage away from himself. Terrible. You don’t have to have blazing speed to gain separation in the NFL, but you MUST run good, smart routes.
RE:The Play:4Q – 4/G/3 – “S11″ – Incomplete to Hurd, again.
Good gosh, just watched THIS video. What a sorry route, even worse than before. All the receivers need to go to the Galleria, make their way to the 3rd floor, camp out in front of the big-screen in the Dallas Cowboys Pro Shop and watch the old game videos of Irvin running slants. GET YOUR ARSE INSIDE ACROSS THE FACE OF THE DB!!!! Establish position EARLY. Sheesh, this isn’t hard. Go play some basketball and listen to your point guard.
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