Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Decoding Linehan - Week 14 - Tampa Bay

http://sportsday.dallasnews.com/dallas-cowboys/cowboys/2016/12/21/decoding-linehan-cowboys-offense-finds-production-still-many-mistakes

Sunday night was a pleasant return to form for the Cowboys' offense in certain categories we deem to be pretty important. In fact, based on the conversations the Cowboys' fandom are having right now, it appears nobody actually is aware that this was the highest yards-production game of the season for a matchup that did not go to overtime -- these 449 yards were exceeded only by the 460 produced against the Eagles, which were aided by a 75-yard overtime drive.
The issue you would properly raise is where were all of the points that should come with those yards, because let's not forget that the effort was made much easier by the defense, which was able to give the offense two very short fields after turnovers. Surely, 26 points has to be the floor for any performance of that level.
And that is where we see problems that have been creeping into the Cowboys' game in December, which have very little to do with the quarterback play that everyone wants to talk about all day, every day.
I hope nobody minds me pointing a finger at the offensive line for a moment. As they all go to another Pro Bowl (it seems), I think we should also suggest that they need to clean a few things up. I would argue that it starts with this team allowing more sacks in the past three games than it had during any other stretch of the season. The nine sacks allowed in December mean that, in the NFC, only the Rams allow their quarterback to get sacked as much, and that Dallas already has allowed more sacks this month than it did in any other month all season.
This needs to be cleaned up quickly, of course. But the other issue has been linked to their lack of offensive success quite a bit recently -- penalties. Now, again, it is too simplistic to just say they are committing penalties and that they should just choose to not commit penalties.
Players generally commit penalties because they are losing a battle and are trying to prevent a disaster from happening. So, they hold; they fall back into desperation mode a bit. It happens when you ask someone to block someone they cannot block. This could go back to the injury of a blocking tight end, or that right tackle Doug Free is wearing down, or that left guard Ron Leary is not quite to the level of his colleagues, or that left tackle Tyron Smith is playing hurt. There are many possibilities here, but the facts are pretty clear: Only Baltimore and Oakland have been called for holding on offense more than the Cowboys have. The 28 holding penalties this year put them atop the NFC and at No. 3 in the NFL in a category you do not wish to lead.
Look at what happens to drives that encounter O-line penalties -- they die:
To prove this is no fluke, they had a similar effect on the Vikings game earlier this month:
With the talent on hand around here, clean drives mean touchdowns. But drive-killers are penalties and sacks allowed. They both are creeping into the game quite a bit and almost none of them have to do with the quarterback in question. Except for the reality that if Tony Romo gets sacked nine times in three games, you likely are trying to get a new quarterback out there to replace him because of an injury.
Penalties and sacks allowed. They are disconcerting problems because you begin to see that they don't just destroy every opponent. You allow sacks because they overpower you. You hold because you are losing your blocks. I think it is worth considering that this offensive line is great, but not invincible right now. They need to find another gear for January.

WEEKLY DATA - vs. TAMPA BAY

Lots of time of possession. Lots of yards. Third-down conversions were at 38 percent, which I believe is a tick below the league average for the season (39 percent). That is not going to raise your December average much, but it gets you back to where you are not embarrassed.
A better job mixing up the concepts and predictability on offense, and a better job from the quarterback of finding the right matchups and zeroing in on them.
Speaking of quarterbacks, have you ever in your life heard more noise around a 12-2 quarterback? Most quarterbacks who lead teams that are this successful are being thrust into the MVP conversation by their markets. In this city, I am bombarded by people who want their quarterback replaced by the old quarterback who many wanted replaced five years ago -- before he had enough injuries and surgeries to slow any career down to a crawl.
I think it is important to say a few things about Dak Prescott versus Romo from the perspective of having covered them both and finding them both to be quarterbacks I enjoy.
I have written a thousand pieces about Romo being an exceptional quarterback. I have been accused as a Romo cheerleader and homer. By the way, it is true. He is the only NFL quarterback of substance from my homeland ever, and I have a photo with him and my other favorite quarterback, Brett Favre, hanging on my wall as they shared a moment before their first meeting in 2007.
I have written glowing things about him and I have written critical things about him. You should read them both if you have time.
But I am here to suggest that this Romo absurdity from the fan base is craziness. He hasn't played well and healthy in nearly two years, and you want him to replace a perfectly healthy quarterback who is fourth in the NFL in YPA, third in passer rating and second in QBR? I must have lost my mind, because there is no way everyone else has collectively lost theirs, right?

I love the guy. He is not the best quarterback for this situation. In fact, his stock has never been higher -- precisely because he isn't playing. If he did play and revealed any signs of diminished ability because of health or age, the stock would fall. But on the sideline, we can claim anything we want. We can claim that he never had a roster this talented -- although the 2014 roster had a healthy and dominant Dez Bryant and a running back who hit historical highs across the board, too. We can claim that he would be better in the playoffs -- although his signature win is a wild-card defeat of the most hapless franchise in the NFC. We can claim that the injuries are all behind him and that they were not in any way connected, or related -- although after three of the past five times he has been hit, in live play, he has missed a minimum of two months. We can claim anything.
Then we can minimize what Prescott is doing. We can say his yards are cheap -- even if the stats suggest that is insane. We can say he is driving a bus -- even though his yards per attempt this season are higher than Romo's career average. We can say that he won't go downfield -- even though his "air yards" rank fourth among NFL starters.
And we do it in the name of loyalty to our guy. I get that. But I believe in loyalty to the team. It was here before any of these players were born, and it will be here after they are all gone. And this team is doing something special.
Which, while I am off on a rant, leads me to this ... this looming situation, when January is going to be unbearable. The noise has been so loud from within that when the Cowboys are eliminated from the playoffs, the noise from Romo loyalists is going to be louder than ever. They know it is disingenuous to claim that Romo guarantees playoff success, but they won't care. They will offer the false claim that Romo could handle the playoffs better (don't worry about the decade of facts that suggest that is stretching the truth a bit) and that the Prescott decision led to this disaster.
By the way, it may. Prescott may be a disaster in the playoffs. I will just tell you now, 12 teams make the playoffs every year and 11 of them go home in tears. And each of the 11 teams need someone to blame. A coach, a quarterback, a fumble, a call by the refs -- something. And even though the odds are stacked high against the Cowboys to win a Super Bowl, even if they have the No. 1 seed, the noise will come. And it will come for the rookie quarterback who has done great things that have never really been done by a rookie quarterback. So we must tear him down, I guess. This is a weird business.
No rookie has ever won a Super Bowl. No quarterback over the age of 35 who has never been to the conference championship round has ever gone on to win a Super Bowl, either. I guess they should just pack it in.
Who gives you the best chance to win right now? The quarterback who they are winning with. They have conformed to this new "high probability" style. They are not gunslinging their way to wins.
Who gives them the best chance to win a Super Bowl? The odds are long for both. Remember this. But again, the one who is helping them get the No. 1 seed and home-field advantage throughout the postseason seems to have a pretty good case for that one, too.

DAK PRESCOTT THROW CHART vs. TAMPA BAY

I put this on Twitter yesterday and everyone lost their minds over how many shallow passes he throws. I assume if this makes you lose your mind, you don't study these every week because this is modern NFL offense. At least, this is modern NFL offense that doesn't want the quarterback getting silly with the ball. Here is Tom Brady's visit to Dallas in 2015:
Aside from John's design from year to year, you may notice a similar high volume under five yards and an identical number of passes beyond 10 yards. Brady has a similar chart every week, but I guess (in our heads) we see him throwing bomb after bomb, or something.

PERSONNEL GROUPINGS - TAMPA BAY

As you can see, most of the production is coming from 11 personnel these days -- under center and shotgun. This was pretty predictable, and it shows that the Cowboys are seeing what we are seeing and starting to use what they do have instead of trying to force fixes for what they don't have. In other words, Joe Looney is never going to be a good blocking tight end. And neither will Gavin Escobar. So let's stop.
Let's look at some video and call it a day:
Big early run here out of shotgun-11, where they get a pulling Leary and Jason Witten into the hole with everyone blocked up well. Ezekiel Elliott is on the safety in no time and tries to jump him (because he can) and the Cowboys get a quick 13 yards. Notice the step Elliott takes left to set the timing and keep the linebackers honest.
A nice first-quarter third-down conversion here, where they bring Cole Beasley in motion to the left and Witten clears out the spot where Beasley can run an easy slant against a zone corner and pick up a big chunk down the middle. Again, high-percentage opportunity with low degree of difficulty. I guess you are supposed to apologize for taking these because there are no car chases or explosions -- just repeatable and sustainable offense.
Here, the defense crashes down on Elliott on the play-action fake, allowing Prescott to roll out and fire a dart to Brice Butler against Cover 1. Once Butler crosses his man's face, you take the sideline route. A difficult throw, but one that's into high-percentage parts of the field.
The end-zone view shows the nice job done by Prescott at the mesh point and a fine job by Butler in getting his feet down. Russell Wilson has made a fine career out of this sort of play, so I guess it shouldn't surprise me that people don't think Wilson is a star quarterback, either. Despite him being a sliver from two Super Bowl rings in four seasons.
Here is another shot to disprove this "bus driver" nonsense. If he is taking the easy throw, it is Witten. The throw to Bryant requires some zip and accuracy into a zone window in the middle of the field. This play didn't happen, given the feedback I have received about Prescott.
Look at Dak's eyes going to Witten. Pulling defenders to his eyes and then knowing he has Dez behind them. He then resets and zips a confident throw to the next spot. Back into his comfort zone and back to doing what he has shown all year.
Two more plays to look at here, where the Cowboys have been struggling to find their second tight end. Here, Scott Linehan rolls out Terrance Williams to do it. First on that tight end drag off the roll-out we have seen so many times. This is to start the third quarter. He seems faster than Geoff Swaim.
And then here is a play with Williams in motion and filling the role of blocking tight end (sort of) on the edge on this big Elliott run. This is an interesting modification that won't always work against all matchups, but it is a new wrinkle to consider if you are playing Dallas.
But that big run above does not happen if Prescott and the passing game don't get them off their goal line. This is a critical throw at a critical point in the game, midway through the fourth quarter.
This shows a confident coaching staff and a confident quarterback, realizing the game is hanging in the balance here and that they need to move the ball. He has to trust his offense and his receiver to get to that window as he risks standing in the end zone too long.
That was big. And like I said, the big Zeke run was on the next play.

SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS

All in all, a pretty decent day from the offense and it can feel good about getting everything swung back in its favor. I cannot stress the need to clean up the penalties and continue focusing on details, but this was a fine step forward.
I recognize I wandered off the path here a bit, but I think Prescott deserves some credit for this season. Evidently, the NFL thought so by sending him to the Pro Bowl. Now if only his own fan base can learn to appreciate what they are looking at.
Like I said, this has been an odd and unexpected season.

No comments: