Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Bag of Pucks: January 14

Every week after the end of Cowboys' season, we shift our focus on Tuesdays to the local hockey team and check in on what is going on with the Dallas Stars.  This "Bag of Pucks" column evolves over time, but generally attempts to give us a good place to meet up and discuss the progress or lack thereof as it pertains to the Stars each week.

Obviously, we are picking an odd time to jump in to the season, because the Stars are on their biggest slide in nearly 20 years with 6 consecutive losses without even gaining a point.  Symmetrically, they picked the perfect time to change their fortunes, as this all occurred exactly as the calendar shifted from 2013 to 2014.  In fact, on New Year's Eve, after the Stars beat the Los Angeles Kings for the 2nd time in 10 days, they momentarily rose to the 8th spot in the West and the optimism was as high as could be.  Later that evening, Phoenix pulled back ahead, and unfortunately as we sit now, the Stars are 8 points out of the 8th spot again as Minnesota has gone on a tear and blown past the Stars and the Coyotes who have both stalled in 2014.

But, there is no way to sugarcoat things as it pertains to Phoenix.  The Stars have 0 points in 6 games, and in a tight playoff race, it doesn't stay tight for long when you stop earning and the pack keeps rolling along.

The oddity of this great run to end 2013 and the poor start to 2014 is that the counterintuitive results have occurred with excellent results when all of the veteran defensemen were injured (Stephane Robidas, Trevor Daley, and Sergei Gonchar) and the poor form coincided with the returns of Daley and Gonchar who both have been in the lineup in the last 4 games, while the rookies Cameron Gaunce and Kevin Connauton have taken a back seat again.

There will be ebbs and flows to each season, and although being 8 points back at the halfway point is a very ominous point of discussion, we should not lose sight of the bigger picture.  The rebuild will be exciting at some points and frustrating at others.  They will beat heavyweights on some nights and lose 4 of 4 points to the Islanders on other nights.  It is the life of most of the league that is not prepared to contend for the Cup.

There are vast stretches of no offense beyond the Benn-Seguin-whoever line and then there are now stretches where even that line cannot put the puck away.  There are weeks where the Stars look like they are building a proper home-grown blue line, and then there are stretches where you feel like they might be 5 NHL defensemen away from having what it takes to compete with Chicago and St Louis.

The facts are simple: this team has not made the playoffs in 5 seasons and almost nobody out of this market expected this year to be different.  They have some useable parts for sure, but they also have just as many spots in their lineup where they would enjoy an upgrade.  They fixed plenty with a fantastic week of progress back in June with the acquisitions of Tyler Seguin and Valeri Nichushkin, but tonight's opponent in Edmonton demonstrates to us that having the very best in elite talent on your roster does not constitute a contending team in the best league in the world.  Like in just about every sport, having the best player means little.  The best team wins.  And right now, the Stars are climbing the hill with plenty of encouraging signs, but anyone that thought it would be a 6-month turnaround project was perhaps dipping their cup into the streams of optimism a bit too liberally.

The good news is that this is nothing that can't be turned around with a nice week of results, but the bad news is that it has to stop immediately and those of us who are with this team every time they play know that January has brought many dream-dashing slumps in the last several years so the benefit of the doubt is not easily given right now.

The biggest culprit for the uneven play?  It still has to be special teams.  A key power play goal changes the games in New Jersey, Madison Square Garden, and countless other times this season.  But, alas, through 45 games, the Stars have been given 161 power plays and have cashed in just 20 times.  That 12.4 rate is 29th in the league and puts too much stress on the 5 on 5 play.  They are much better than they have been at even strength (which to me is the true measure of a team's quality), but you can't finish 29th with the man advantage and get anywhere.  If you want a common theme in these 6 years in the post-playoffs, post-Zubov era, it is that the power play has consistently killed them.  And there we sit again, with a largely new cast, in largely the same spot.

The penalty kill is at 80%, which is not great, but it is much closer to league average in conceding 30 power play goals in 150 chances.  Again, a power play is a chance to feature your top end talent with an extra man, and the fact that the Stars are a -10 against their opponents in power play goals might be the story of the standings.  And, if you look at shot rates, the Stars are getting chances on the power play.  But, at this point, as you know, it is often more demoralizing than rewarding.

14 games until the Olympic break, with 9 in Dallas.  You would think the Stars would have to be within 4 points of 8th to seriously consider a "go for it" deal in March.  Otherwise, with this young of a roster, you begin looking at moves that help your rebuild in the macro-view.  So, every point is imperative in the next month of hockey.

And now, back by popular demand, your hockey emails!

Ottawa says they are dealing and seem to have a fair share of prospects. Any hint of the Stars dealing some of their veteran free-agents or soon to be free-agents to the Sens?

Todd W. White


Well, let's start with the UFA's to be.  There are 4 veterans who are on expiring deals right now, Ray Whitney, Vern Fiddler, Ryan Garbutt, and Stephane Robidas.  

There is another group of older vets who expire in the summer of 2015 who would also be candidates to be shopped in the right deal:  Shawn Horcoff, Gonchar, Erik Cole, Aaron Rome, and Rich Peverley.

For me, Peverley is not really in this group because he is just 31 and I would need quite a bit to want to move that useful piece.  The rest are a question of whether they have created a market for themselves, which, of course, is linked to their play.  Cole has been excellent in the last month and Fiddler is always useful for a number of reasons to a contender.  

Beyond that, Whitney, Gonchar, and Horcoff have not really ever resembled $5m players in a Dallas uniform this season.  So those players would either have no market for shoppers or a minimal return on expiring deals like Whitney.   In other words, I would be rather shocked to see Horcoff or Gonchar get you anything, except perhaps a chance for a buy-out this summer in their current form.

====


I feel like every opinion, thought, or observation with this team should have the postscript that this entire thing is a work-in-progress. The young players getting major ice time are still a ways away from becoming the players they will be for their primes. The cupboard wasn’t exactly bare when the regime change, but the parts that make up a championship contender were lacking. With that said, who can the team move forward with? Which pieces can be kept & which should be thought of as nothing more than shift fillers until better personnel comes along.

-B.P. (Denton, TX)

You sound like you have the proper helping of realism packed in with your optimism.  I think that is a good stance right now.  

Clear keepers as foundation for your next contender who are currently in Dallas: Jamie Benn, Seguin, Nichushkin, Eakin, Dillon, Lehtonen.  

Possibilities:  Chiasson, Connauton, Roussel, and the riddle of Goligoski.

The rest?  Useful parts that can fit in the right spot perhaps, or they are just guys who are rolling through town during their careers.  You can never tell and your opponents are going to ask for guys listed above in all deals, so to add to this stack without subtracting is not very common.   The good news is that there is still plenty of talent below this growing on the farm as well, so let's see.

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Why haven't the Stars traded Chiasson for a decent defenceman yet (half joking)?  I'm not gonna bang the "Trade Goligoski" drum, but this team needs to rely on him much, MUCH less.

-James
Mansfield, TX

Two great discussion points.  I never totally believed Chiasson was this sniper that he appeared to be in his first 10 games or so, and while he seems to have some very strong attributes for a goal scorer, he also seems to not really create too much on his own nor does he have much of a physical edge to me.  I am yet to be convinced he is a difference maker and I hope he is just going through a stretch and will emerge soon with clear signs of growth.  I don't know what his market would be, but if you can flip him for something proven, I would currently authorize that as I think his hype/numbers are better than his reality.

As for Goligoski, I really wish I could figure him out.  He plays really well some nights, and I might still contend that he has the highest ceiling of any defensemen that the Stars own, so when fans want him dumped in the trash, I think they are focusing on his meltdowns that occur way too often.  He isn't a kid, isn't being paid like one, and therefore has to be better.  But, he is also being overextended, and just because you paid him like an elite defenseman doesn't mean he is one.

His numbers are just nowhere near where they need to be and honestly, if you want to know how the power play could improve, it would likely be with better play from his spot in particular.  This is where Lindy Ruff and Jim Nill have to be smart.  He is under contract for a ton, so the best move is to figure out to have him perform here.  But, man, it is tough to keep a brave face with him on the scene too often when things go wrong in the defensive end.

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Does Galardi view this year as a must make playoff year because of the new playoff drought, new uniforms, new coach and new GM? 

Depending on answer do you think that need to make the playoffs will (or should) change how we approach trade deadline moves?

Fighting for an 8 seed always seems to cause that delima. To keep certain players if they contribute to helping make the playoffs or can we afford the patience to trade them and look longer term.

A couple players that come to mind... Fidds & Cole. Playing well (and I heard Fidds requested trade or more time) so I could see a team using them well in the playoffs. 

- Ryan 

Ryan, you hit on a very good topic.  Does the hockey side and the business side agree on the proper route to the team's objectives of a contender and a full arena?  A rebuild that takes time means too many crowds of 13,000 when the arena holds 18,000.  People don't want to pay to watch a 10 seed very often in a market like this, so where does that take us?  

Does Tom Gaglardi understand all of this?  Does he have the patience to cash in some more chips to keep building the under-25 portion of his franchise.  Given the trades of Steve Ott, Brenden Morrow, Jaromir Jagr, Mike Ribeiro, and Derek Roy in the last 2 seasons should tell us the answer, but everyone has a limit to their "wait for next year" mantra.  

With cap room and lots of kids, there comes a time where you start to look for guys who are ready now.  I was optimistic that Jay Bouwmeester's availability last spring might have been considered, but St Louis was willing to act right away because they are in a different spot.  Teams are looking to shed money and waiting to get studs via free agency is sometimes too pricey.  Sometimes, you help teams who need to move players and find value (like Seguin).  So, I might expect a slight move in objectives this time around.  

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In the frustration of the current losing streak, it's kinda easy to forget how exciting the year has been for the Stars who are definitely in a build/rebuild mode. But the Defense, which is obviously their point of greatest weakness, probably won't be fixed for another few years. Is there concern in the upper management about maintaining enthusiasm for the team which might still be a few years away from making the playoffs in the Western Conference?

Thanks,

Charles H.

Surely, there is concern, but for now, they can't rush this.  They need to give Jamie Oleksiak and Gaunce every chance to grow in the minors with other prospects of high regard, because they can't go acquire the entire unit.  Dillon is fantastic and I have great optimism for Connauton.  If you have 3 keepers in that group of 4, then the future can be very soon.  But, you still need that "ace" and they don't grow on trees for sure.  

====

Bob, 

Are there any top defenseman out there now that are available without leveraging our future? I heard rumors of Shea Weber being available, do we have anything reasonable that Nashville would want?

Jordan 


For those unaware, Shea is in year 2 of a 14-year, $110 million deal at the age of 28 in Nashville.  I think if you could add him to the Stars, they would be a Top 10 in the NHL that quickly.  He is fantastic and maybe the best at his position in the league.  That said, Nashville has paid him a king's ransom in the first 2 years of this deal and would be looking for the world to move him after all of that trouble.  If he was made available, the movers and shakers in the East would be fighting each other to overpay for him as he should be elite for years to come and his deal really has 4 cosmetic years tacked on to the end.

He is everything they need, and they actually have the financial capability of pulling it off, but like I said, you would likely have to give 3-5 wonderful pieces to make it happen (Wild Guess: Dillon, Jack Campbell, Nichushkin, and draft picks?) and I am not sure if that would get it done.  Trust me, I would be tempted because I think he is that great, but let's understand that this is an extreme long shot on all manner of levels and trading Dillon and Nichushkin should be considered insanity for a team in the Stars spot, anyway.

As for other top defensemen available?  Not many.  I wanted them to throw an offer on PK Subban after the lockout, but they were too busy getting Jamie Benn back under contract.  The #1 defensemen is out there, but they seldom come available if they don't have warts (or even if they do).

This is going to be the key for the next great team here as we simply look back to the Stars co-#1 defensemen in Derian Hatcher and Sergei Zubov that always gave the Stars an advantage against most opponents.  But, again, they are tough to find for sure.

Monday, January 13, 2014

The Morning After - 2013 NFC Divisional Round - Beat Down Football

Just 3 games remain in the 2013 NFL season, so get yourself prepared for something else to occupy your time (like the NFL Combine, NFL Free Agency, and the NFL Draft) because this thing is coming down to its conclusion quite quickly.  And as we continue our annual exercise of following the NFC side of the playoffs with a close eye of examination, the trends that are appearing before our eyes continue to explain the difference to many of us between teams that are still playing and teams that are already a few weeks into their time on Mexican beaches.

And to me, as we ponder the Seattle Seahawks hosting the San Francisco 49ers in one week to determine which one of these teams will represent the NFC - against either AFC team that will surely be favored to win because of a living-legend playing QB - the ties that bind these two teams is unmistakeable.

First, it suggests that the playoff format generally determines with reasonable clarity who the best two teams are.  I know there has been plenty of gnashing of teeth over the idea that the 12-win 49ers had to go play 8-win Green Bay at their place, but the contenders seemed to roll over the pretenders with relative clarity in these playoffs, and sometimes the two best teams may play in the same division.  At the same time, unless you want to easily fix this whole thing by dropping the divisions altogether, play a 16 game schedule that includes playing 15 games against the other 15 opponents in the conference and one extra "rival" game (Packers-Bears, Cowboys-Redskins, etc) or one special inter conference game (Jets-Giants, 49ers-Raiders, Cowboys-Texans), then I think you have to keep it how it is.  By the way, I would green light the balanced schedule and no divisions in a heart-beat, but I am sure that is the English Soccer fan in me speaking up.  The point is that if you are going to play schedules where the NFC West teams play a schedule that is not similar at all to NFC South teams, then I would not approve of giving Wildcard champs a better seed than divisional champs as a general rule.  If San Francisco is truly a better side, they can prove it on the field - Like they just did.

That is perhaps a lesson learned over the years by fans of the modern NFL.  Nobody disputes that given the choice, you would certainly rather be the home team in a playoff game, but the last several years show that there is no amount of crowd noise or funny signs or even Mom's home cooking that can overcome the superiority of an opponent.  Look at those home records since 2005.  Road teams that get on a roll can go all the way to the Super Bowl - sometimes because they are just the better team (back to the best wildcard team being better than several division winners).  Notice below how many times in the 1990s where the home teams were 8-2 in a playoff season.  Then, note how many times the playoff records are 5-5 or 6-4 these days.  Parity.

YearHome RecordAFC SeedsNFC Seeds
19908-21* vs 21 vs 2*
19918-21* vs 21* vs 2
19925-52 vs 4*1 vs 2*
19938-21* vs 31* vs 2
19948-21 vs 2*1* vs 2
19957-32* vs 51* vs 3
19968-22* vs 51* vs 2
19976-42 vs 4*1 vs 2*
19988-21* vs 21 vs 2*
19997-31 vs 4*1* vs 2
20008-22 vs 4*1* vs 2
20017-31 vs 2*1* vs 3
20028-21* vs 21 vs 2*
20036-41* vs 31 vs 3*
20046-41 vs 2*1* vs 2
20054-62 vs 6*1* vs 5
20068-23* vs 41* vs 2
20075-51* vs 32 vs 5*
20085-52* vs 64* vs 6
20097-31* vs 51* vs 2
20104-62* vs 62 vs 6*
20118-21* vs 22 vs 4*
20126-42 vs 4*1 vs 2*
20134-41 vs 21 vs 5

(* = Super Bowl Team)

But, that is merely a detail that historians might find interesting.  That doesn't discuss why the Seahawks and 49ers seem to have figured out how to deal with everyone in the NFC but each-other with relative ease if we look at 2012 and 2013 as a whole.  Since Nov 1, 2012, the Seattle Seahawks are 22-5 combined, while the 49ers have now been to 3 consecutive NFC Championship games and were obviously quite close to winning the Super Bowl last season.  Since the start of 2011 when they hired new coach Jim Harbaugh, San Francisco is an absurd 41-13-1.  He took over the franchise from Mike Singletary who was 18-22 in 40 games as the coach.

Pete Carroll took over the Seahawks before the 2010 season, when the team went 7-9, hosted a playoff game and got a win.  He is now 38-26 in the regular season as their coach and has a playoff win in 3 of his 4 years and will now host the NFC Championship game.  Before he got there, Mike Holmgren and Jim Mora, Jr were 9-23 in 2008-2009 running the same franchise.

Do Carroll and Harbaugh have some secret formula for reviving 2 franchises that were on the road to nowhere when they arrived?

No.  But, they seemed to agree when building a team.  Build with the toughest possible player you can find at every spot.  And then, over the course of 60 minutes, maul your opponent into submission.  Would they love to have the best QB in the league land in their laps?  Sure.  But, the fact that they both have built these franchises up (with plenty of help from the personnel departments) into unstoppable forces without the aid of Peyton Manning or some 40-TD QB is worth noting.  They had to build complete rosters with no weaknesses, and they seemed to have done it with shocking quickness through proper drafts and a philosophy that was consistent throughout the entire operations.

So, when you watched the Seahawks batter the Saints on Saturday, followed by the 49ers taking down a strong Carolina team on Sunday, I imagine, like me, you were struck by how strong and physical both of these franchises are, and how in all the playoff games they were in, their opponents could not stand up to that over 4 Quarters.

In fact, I might argue that while there are several elements to winning a football game, the most clear characteristic of these two teams is that they simply beat you up.  And while every team in the NFL has plenty of bullies on it who are not going to back down to a physical scrap, it sure looks like Seahawks GM John Schneider and 49ers GM Trent Baalke found coaches who fit their ideas, and then decided to load up players at all positions that are cut from the same cloth they so desire.

Look up and down the rosters in each city.  First the Seahawks; when you look at players like Marshawn Lynch, Golden Tate, Earl Thomas, Kam Chancellor, and of course, Richard Sherman, you see players that are either physically imposing or guys who play with a cocky, physical edge that just won't give in an inch.  And those are their "little" guys.  Those are RBs, WRs, CBs, and Safeties.  Think about that for a second, if they are going to have guys who are looking for someone to unload on at those positions, then what are their LBs, DEs, and OTs like?  Exactly.  And before long, it seems like you are trying to deal with an army of brutes who are all marching in lockstep to this philosophy of beating you to submission.  They roll depth at defensive line and linebackers that allows them to pay at a frenzied pace and a pass rush that makes the Saints almost not even attempt to run their normal offense.

Instead, the instinct for Sean Payton was to run the ball and to try to match physicality with the Seahawks based on the weather and what he thought the game called for.  So, here are the Saints with runs on the 1st two plays of nearly every single 1st half possession.  They wanted to try to grind it out with the Seahawks?  How does that compute?  If Seattle does this every week and you are going to try to do it this once, how do you think that will work out?  It didn't.  And New Orleans went home rather meekly.  It was 16-0 at halftime and Jimmy Graham looked like he would rather be anywhere than running through a secondary that was yelling and bumping into him all day.  The Saints looked uncomfortable the whole afternoon which is the entire design trait of the Seattle roster.

Which leads us to the industry standard in that category, San Francisco.  It is tough to say who came up with and carried out this idea first (Seattle or San Fran), but with Baalke and Harbaugh, it almost worked immediately.  Unlike Seattle, San Francisco had some elite players already in the building when the new regime took over, so to start with Patrick Willis, Justin Smith, Vernon Davis, and Michael Crabtree is a nice trick, but Baalke's 2010 and 2011 drafts are right up there with the 2 best back to back drafts any team has had in this generation.

In 2010, Anthony Davis, Mike Iupati, and Navorro Bowman were the headliners, and then in 2011, it was Aldon Smith and Colin Kaepernick.  The roster is built so solidly, and then unlike some of the other teams in the league who are allergic to free agency and trades (Ted Thompson), the 49ers grab Donte Whitner and Anquan Boldin to further add to the pile as players who again fit that profile of what 49ers football is all about.

Which, like Seattle, is to put as many pit bulls in the same place as possible and grind you into a fine powder.  Remember the small players in Seattle who set the attitude?  How does Frank Gore, Boldin, and even Kaepernick strike you there?  Teams that don't play that style every week (Green Bay) faces them in a street fight and we see the familiar results as they have taken down a speed/finesse offense 4 times in 2 years.

It is not QB-based football.  Both teams have fine young QBs, but neither is hardly ever at or above 20 completions in a game.  They don't throw the ball first and they don't love having to rally.  They use physical football as their weapon and philosophy, and as their record indicates, it is working really well.

Jim Harbaugh is 4-2 against Seattle, but his last 2 trips into Seattle have been two blowout losses by a combined score of 71-29.  Both teams are loaded with bullies up and down the roster. and will not back down, even to each other.

I think as you look at your team, the Dallas Cowboys, you have to ask yourself if the team has a unified philosophy that tells the league what you are all about.  Can a clear pattern be seen if someone watches you from afar and does that philosophy scare anyone?

Because the NFC right now is chasing these 2 teams.  And from the results in the last 2 years, the gap doesn't really seem like it is shrinking.

The meek may inherit the earth, but it sure doesn't seem like they are getting to the Super Bowl in the NFC.  There is nothing meek about these two teams that are left standing.

Wednesday, January 08, 2014

Tony Romo's Back May Explain Everything

Let's start with an admission that I am not a doctor, have almost no knowledge of how the human back affects athletes performances, and certainly have no clear details about his surgery from the spring of 2013 that I originally considered nothing more than the cosmetic procedure that they told us it was.

However, for the benefit of this exercise, I was hoping I could receive a little latitude to link some pieces together in hopes of explaining some things (maybe, just to myself) about the odd season of Tony Romo.

Statistically, Romo's season was very solid.  In fact, when you look at a +21 TD/INT ratio, a completion percentage up in the range of his career best years, and a passer rating that was in the high 90s again, it would be difficult to say that the offense was not playing optimally because the QB play was poor.  And, that is not the intent of this column today.

But, before the season disappears too far into our memories, I want to make sure I put something on paper about what my eyes saw when watching Romo play this year that seemed very disconcerting at the time, but now is perhaps justified by his mental and physical approach that are all resulting in his play slipping a bit.  Moving forward, you can understand the entire trend causing questions about what level of play we should expect as he now starts his 6-year extension that he signed, ironically enough, last spring within spitting distance of the back procedure.

Romo is a special player because of his athleticism that allows him to make plays that don't appear to exist.  If there is a component of QB play that is vital to almost every player who rises above the pack of ordinary at this position to place them in a category where $100 million contracts are possible, it would have to be the improvisational skills.  Just this week, we saw it on full display in the playoffs where Colin Kaepernick and Aaron Rodgers put on a show in arctic temperatures that involved several plays on both sides where the play broke down and the QB figured something out on his own.  This, while coached to some extent and practiced to teach the receivers and linemen to respond properly to the "2nd part of a play" comes down to a precious balance of instincts, athleticism, wisdom, and yes, the willingness to risk your own well-being to move the chains.

When Romo is right, he is amongst the very best at making this all happen.  He can elude a man, break contain, and allow his receivers and tight ends to bust open in the middle of the field for big plays and touchdowns.  You cannot design your offense to count on this type of play too often, but it clearly is something that is being sought by personnel experts, and a reason nobody should assume Johnny Manziel is not a prime candidate to go in the top half of the the 1st Round this year despite his other warts.  QBs who can defy the Xs and Os of a play and simply find something in the chaos is one of the most sought-after characteristics in the sport today.  And as I said, take one look at the 1st half of the 2013 Denver game, or dozens and dozens of other moments in Romo's career, and even his harshest critic would have to concede that he is very good at this particular aspect of QB play.

That is why 2013 was dumbfounding for the entire year.  As people were lauding his play that was efficient and safe, many of us who study the film every week were noticing a similar trend.  He was playing differently than he ever had before.  He still very good and still throwing for over 2 touchdowns a start and less than 1 interception a start, so the final results were impressive statistically from that measure.  But, overall productivity was way down for Romo from a yards per attempt standpoint, which is a metric that is pretty universally accepted to show how a QB is moving an offense with his arm.

Romo's YPA for his career is 7.8 yards per attempt.  From 2006-2009, his YPA for his first 4 years of his career was a stunning 8.1.  I say stunning, because that ranks him #1 in the entire NFL for YPA during a 4 year span in front of the likes of Philip Rivers (7.8), Aaron Rodgers (7.8), Drew Brees, Peyton Manning, and Tom Brady (all 7.7).  It wasn't just good, it was elite.  This offense made the most of its passing attempts and while Romo was having a few more passes picked off than those on that list, he was still making the venture worthwhile with big yards, big plays, and of course, playoffs in 3 of those 4 seasons.

In the next 4 years, from 2010-2013, many of the QBs on that list have remained right where they were, as Brees, Manning, and Brady all remain at about 7.7 YPA.  Aaron Rodgers shot up to an absurd 8.5 YPA, Russell Wilson is at 8.1, with Rivers and Kaepernick at 7.9 before the usual suspects.  But, what happened to Romo?  Once #1, he has dropped down to #11 at 7.57 YPA.  That is a drop that is a bit bothersome, but still up in the top half of the league.  But, what if we slice it down to 2012-2013, then it is 7.38 for Romo.  And just 2013?  7.16.  And if we erase the results of the Denver game outlier where he averaged 14.1 YPA and simply focus on the rest of 2013?  Then it drops again to 6.65 YPA.

The difference from the 8.1 where he was before 2010 to the 6.6 where he spent much of 2013 is basically the difference in a passing game that features Aaron Rodgers to one that features Ryan Tannehill or Brandon Weeden.  In other words, a QB who you happily pay $20m a year versus one that Miami is wondering if they may need to keep shopping.

Now, these numbers are not cited in fantasy football much, because you would be nuts to ignore 31 TDs in 15 starts.  That is really the name of the game in fantasy or real football, but why is Romo's production that once exceeded the entire league for a 4 year span, seemingly falling every season since?

If you follow this blog, you know I have tried to identify what is going on in his game a number of times, and you can read my previous thoughts here after the San Diego game and here against Detroit and here against Chicago.  I have tried to figure out what they are doing differently and I have definitely looked at play calling and the "risk aversion" theories of Jason Garrett and Tony Romo where they seem to take a "play it safe" mentality into many games - especially on the road - in an effort to stay away from the untimely interception that we also have written about at great length.

In none of those did I actually suggest that he appears afraid to get hit, because that is an incredibly insulting thing to say about a guy who plays a position that requires more courage - even at its most basic level - than most of us have ever been asked or will be asked to exhibit (assuming most of us have never been in combat, etc).  He gets hit for a living, so nobody should ever consider terms of soft or wimpy or anything you can come up with for a person who plays QB for a living in the NFL.

But, if we can all agree that the more you get hit, the more it hurts; and the more it hurts, the less you want to get hit, then it would seem to me that there is a reason veteran QBs get rid of the ball quicker than the young guys do (in general).  Simply because they have learned the hard way to "pick your spots" to stand in there and take a beating.  Further, Romo has been the victim of extremely poor protection for a number of years that have resulted in a broken collarbone, broken ribs, and a punctured lung as well as who knows what else we have not had documented.  Doctors have a hard time quantifying what the wear and tear does to the body over the course of a decade of treating it like this, but they usually conclude with the statement that "the human body was not designed with this treatment in mind."

Too many times in 2013 (with the exception of the outlier against Denver where he seemed to step on the field and insist on doing everything to win that game even if it meant risking injury and health) it seems that Romo has changed his game to protect himself.  Now, that is not a bad thing sometimes.  Coaches demand that their QB be smart about their health because the team's success in a salary-capped world is linked the QB's health.  However, if your value is someone gained by your ability to keep plays alive and "defy the Xs and Os", then check downs and conservatism seems to be the enemy of that.

Playing QB is largely about allowing your weapons a chance to get open and buying them time.  You cannot run deep routes if you are unloading the ball in 2 seconds.  2 seconds goes fast when Dez Bryant is using the 1st second to get past press coverage and really is limited in the routes he can run if the ball is being unloaded too quickly.  This largely goes back to protection, but in the NFL, blitzes come constantly and a QB makes his money by performing under duress and making one guy miss on your own with a side step as you stand and deliver.  At the same time, if you miscalculate one time, you miss 8 weeks with a broken collarbone or a separated shoulder so we are really only talking about a few moments a game where this should apply.

What does this mean?  Sometimes it means checking down for a 2 yard play on 3rd and 10.  Sometimes it means hitting the ground before anyone touches you...


 Sometimes it means giving up on a 4th Down play and walking off the field instead of trying to improv...



Other times it simply means that if he would not give up on the play for just a moment longer, someone was coming open down the field.  It happened over and over again this year.  Again, there are times where he is making the right decision, but, if you do it too often, you cease to be the threat to defenses that you once were.

And honestly, it was troubling to all of us that want to see him do well.  Because at other times, like his final play this year against Washington, he showed that he still has it in him.

So, I guess in a very odd way, this is why I was happy to hear that he was hurt.  Not because I want my QB to ever have 2 back procedures within a year of each other before he even starts his new contract and right before his 34th birthday, but rather because I have some hope that he wasn't preserving his "after football life" by taking the easy way out and avoiding contact.  It is odd logic, but if he was only making these decisions because all season long he knew that one hit (like the one that did end his season) could end his year, then there is some hope for the future.

The trouble with this theory is that it seems that now, he is always going to have his back looming over his play.  This will invite more pressure if teams start thinking he is unloading the ball quickly to avoid taking a huge hit.  Defenses will not show mercy or compassion.  They attack the weak animal in the herd, and if you paid that QB what you paid him, you better hope opponents fear him, not that opponents cannot wait to scare him.

Again, I am not a doctor.  The procedure last May may not have been linked to his play.  And that play may not have been linked to the Washington injury.  But, if you are a fan of the Cowboys and their immediate future, then you may join me in actually hoping that this explains many moments this season where I said to myself that, "the old Romo tries to make a play right there."

Then, since hope may have to be our strategy here, we may have to also hope that he can erase back concerns the way Peyton Manning has in Denver.  Adjust your game accordingly, but still remain a QB that scares defenses, not one who might appear a bit scared of them.

It will be very interesting to see what Tony Romo appears in 2014.  Even if his back is fixed, will he trust it to hold up again when he is going to have to get smashed to make a play?  Or, is this downward trend going to continue?  They paid him as if he was going to remain the QB from 2006-2009.  But that Romo may not live here anymore.

Monday, January 06, 2014

The Morning After - Wildcard Weekend 2013



I think I would like to open this review of Wildcard Weekend with an overall point that in at least 3 media places last week, I saw/heard/read NFL media people pontificating about the idea that the NFL better look in the mirror regarding the potential for non-sellouts of their playoff games.  The media types, who it should be noted must come up with compelling content every day and sometimes miss their mark, were trying to make the point that this is a serious matter and that the league better beware of what might be its popularity plateauing before its very eyes.  If you can't sellout playoff games in a timely fashion, you better recognize that some are not thrilled with your product!

Ridiculous.

I said it then and I will say it now.  If you think there is anything remotely as compelling as a playoff weekend in the National Football League anywhere in sports today, then we will have to agree to disagree.  The lack of sellouts in a small way may speak to the idea that the league is going to have to adjust to the way its consumer enjoys its products (as in, slightly less gate revenue (especially in arctic conditions), and substantially more television revenue), but the idea that the league has done anything to affect the number of people who cannot wait until the next weekend's playoff games is just flat out ridiculous.

And I believe this point is easily substantiated by the gigantic television numbers and what appeared to be 4 stadiums that were rocking and rolling despite 3 of them in the outdoor winter north.

I know we get bored sometimes, NFL media, but you can save yourself from looking silly by scratching the "is the NFL losing popularity" topic off your list.  It seems to be doing just fine.  We can certainly ask if the blackout rule is silly and antiquated, but as far as how many humans are consuming the NFL product either in person or through their television, that number has never been higher and will surely only continue to go up.

Now, each playoff Monday, we want to examine the games a bit and look at it from a purely NFC point of view, as we continue to see where the Cowboys are and where they need to go.  You know, one major point from Jerry Jones over the last several seasons is that the Cowboys are really, really close.  This is proven to him by the idea that the team is playing for the NFC East division on the final week of the season in 2011, 2012, and 2013.  And, if that game goes slightly differently, his team - and not their opponent - will represent the division by hosting a playoff game in the tournament and then, "anything can happen!"

Of course, it resonates with the audience a bit better when the Giants then go on a Super Bowl run like they did in 2011.  However, the truth is that when a team that is 8-8 is playing for its division title on the final Sunday, chances are really good that the division lacks any sort of real power.  And, as Philadelphia was dismissed by New Orleans on Saturday - like Washington last season at home to Seattle - we see that there are no easy games in the playoffs even if they are at home and the Cinderella runs that some teams go on are the exception to the rule and not the rule itself.

The NFC East did look like it sent its best team to the playoffs this year, and the Eagles must be optimistic about the idea of Chip Kelly now having another offseason to further put together a roster that suits his overall vision.  I do continue to see that although the efficiency of Nick Foles is amongst the best single-season QBs of all time, he certainly has a ways to go with regards to playing the position at an elite level.  I realize we are stat driven in our analysis and I am in no position to leave that post, but  when I look at Foles and see his actual game action, I am left wanting in many categories.  Maybe the first thing he has to clean up is his inability to recognize game theory under fire and although he loathes throwing the ball where it can be intercepted, he simply cannot take sacks in certain scenarios.  He also is not great at adjusting when his first read is gone and the biggest point of all is that this offense is set up to protect the QB from having to do too much as Foles leads the league in screen pass yardage and low leverage throws that are both safe and able to reap big yards with runs after the catch.  However, there is a time in every game where you have to move the chains on 3rd and long, and that requires a QB who can see and attack the whole field, and I know he is young, but I don't see Foles as that now and am not high on him in the future.

I realize he is young and has all sorts of room for improvement, but I don't think NBC is doing him any favors by putting him on the screen with Tom Brady, Aaron Rodgers, and Peyton Manning for two weeks in a row and basically grouping them all together based on single-season QB Rating.  The truth is that I anticipate that Chip Kelly's QBs will always be over 100 in QB rating, but that might prove more of an issue with how QB rating is calculated than it does the excellence of a QB who accumulates most of his yardage by either horizontal throws or deep throws over the top (one of the safest throws in the sport) and never attacks the secondary where the elite QBs often do.  Nobody debates that he is a better QB than Michael Vick at this point, but I wouldn't be shocked if Chip Kelly keeps looking and by 2015 has a new starting QB in Philadelphia.

The Eagles lost the game mostly because they could never get their offense going like they were accustomed to doing.  They were out gained by nearly 200 yards by the Saints and despite having a giant +2 turnover advantage as Drew Brees was feeling generous, were not looking themselves offensively for the 2nd week in a row.  There is no question that Kelly's offense raised the bar in the league for standards of excellence, but you would feel a bit better if it didn't end the season with two offensive games that were rather unimpressive at the moment of truth.

Meanwhile, the NFC North also had a rough year in producing a fantastic champion, and like the NFC East, the north now has nobody left in the tournament, either, as Green Bay lost at home to the mighty 49ers.  Now, a lot is being made about Green Bay losing at home and that they are the dominant home team that they once were, but for whatever reason, people are ignoring the fact that the 49ers were favored in this game, and only because of the NFL's playoff format granting a division champion a home game would a 8 win team ever host a playoff game in the first place.

I picked San Francisco to play Denver in the Super Bowl back in August, so that should speak of what I think of the 49ers, and I honestly don't think I am changing my mind now.  I am leery of Colin Kaepernick's consistency level throwing the ball, but that team is built as a team should be built.  Strong, physical, and just solid across their entire lineup.  It doesn't seem that they rely on any one player on either side of the ball, as SF has a roster that compliments itself wonderfully.

Kaepernick's ability to improvise on a key 3rd down blitz when he broke the contain of Jarrett Bush was the play that won the game and it is so difficult to defend.  But, overall, I think the physicality on both sides of the ball is what makes SF a legitimate contender again this year and what has sent the Packers home again in this entertaining rivalry.

Much like the Saints/Eagles game, the final score was determined by a kick in the final seconds.  Fox did not do a great job in describing what had happened so there are plenty of fans this morning that believe that the Packers almost saved themselves with this near block of the Phil Dawson field goal effort at the end.  The ball goes through the arms of Davon House and nearly hits him in the face.  How did he not block that?  And didn't the football gods smile on the 49ers.



Well, no.  Fox didn't tell you the important thing here is that House was offsides.  Even if he blocks it, the 49ers get another FG, even closer and they still win.

From the game book:

(:03) P.Dawson 33 yard field goal is GOOD, Center-K.McDermott, Holder-A.Lee.Penalty on GB-D.House, Defensive Offside, declined. 
Green Bay can look at injuries to so many key players as a valid excuse that their season has ended so early with one of the best QBs in the sport, but then again, they should likely blame themselves for too many points left on the field and plays unmade yesterday.  Just 2 passes of over 20 yards for that offense and both were to Randall Cobb as James Jones and Jordy Nelson had chances and were unable to come down with them, making some of us wonder if they are a fantastic dome team that has to play their home games at about 0 degrees in January.  It can be done, but if you look back to 2010 when they won the Super Bowl, they played 0 home games (although they did play outdoor games on grass in Chicago and Philadelphia) and were able to run their aerial game without any dispute from nature.  They might be the rare team that doesn't mind packing its bags in the postseason, but more than anything, they need to fix their defense once and for all.

The Saints move on to travel to Seattle and the 49ers head to Carolina.  What seemed obvious 3 months ago was that the Seahawks and 49ers were the 2 best teams in the NFC and that they would likely play for the NFC Championship game.  Now, here we are, and I don't really have any issue with that forecast at all, but I am sure the NFC South teams will and that is why we will tune in and be ready to roll next weekend for another great list of games.

Home teams won just once this weekend (1-3), as the Colts beat the Chiefs in a real classic that we shall talk about for years.  And the winner of the turnover battle also went 1-3, as the Chargers were the only team to turn the opponent's generosity into points.

Watching these games on the first 2 weekends of every playoff year always make me arrive at the same spot.  The games are so close and so competitive that you have a hard time with firm conclusions that are just cut and dried.  But there is one that is reached in my head.  And that is that as fans or media, we have an unrealistic view of our team compared to the guys who run those squads.

Sure, the ultimate goal is to win the Super Bowl, but I imagine the best organizations understand that in a 12 team tournament, it is just not realistic to plan very many parades.  For crying out loud, the Patriots have been shut out for a decade (2004 was last Super Bowl win) and Peyton Manning has only scaled the mountain one time.  It is really hard to win the Super Bowl.  Rather, if pressed, I imagine a NFL architect would have to concede that the real goal is to get into the playoffs every year and give yourself a chance.  Once in there, the ball can bounce oddly and it might be in your favor.  If you are always in the tournament, at some point, the dealer might smile upon you.

If you go to the postseason 7 years in a row, or 8 out of 10, odds are very good that you will have a magical run in there. But, that is the trick.  Not to make the playoffs twice a decade, but to build a team with depth and quality that can go every year and even though most of those runs will end in tears, once or twice, you might win a few games and get on a roll with the injuries avoiding you.

4 teams remain in the NFC and 8 in entire NFL.  That means good news and bad news.  The good news is that we have 7 more games remaining in the season of playoff gold.  The bad news is that we have just 7 games left in the NFL season before we have to do something else with our time.

Thursday, January 02, 2014

Kiffin Report: Week 17 - Philadelphia - Takeaways Dried Up In December

There are a number of reasons why I don't gamble, not the least of which being that I realize from simple tracking of old predictions that I wouldn't be very good at it.  Clearly, most gamblers don't run this simple self-experiment to authorize their own practices, but that is not my business.

Regardless, an easy prediction going into Sunday is that we were due for yet another game where the Cowboys concede over 400 yards (8 times this year) and over 30 points (7 times this year).  Injuries, fatigue, and opponent combined with past performance to say that they were likely to lose the Philadelphia game simply because nobody could forecast a scenario where the defense could hold firm enough for a backup QB like Kyle Orton to put them in a winnable position.

And yet, the defense did a fantastic job.  They surely did not duplicate the work of Week 7 in Philadelphia when they held the mighty Chip Kelly offense to 278 yards, 3 points, and 3 turnovers, but to keep the Eagles to 366 and 24 points said that this bruised and battered defense at least gave you all it had in the final 2 "must win" games of the season at Washington and home to Philadelphia.

They played admirably well as a unit and forced many punts and even had a heroic goal-line stand that almost won the division.  But, despite 5 sacks, and maybe because the offense did not pull its weight in the final drive of the season, the unit came up short.

One of the big issues of having the 2013 Cowboys defense (and there were many, was the simple reliance on takeaways.  This was a defense that did a fine job of taking the ball from its opponent for most of the year, despite lacking a dominant posture over its opponents (like Seattle or San Francisco often do), but it did fade as the season went to its ultimate climax.

COWBOYS TAKEAWAYS BY SEGMENTS OF SEASON:

Games 1-4 Games 5-8 Games 9-12 Games 13-16
8 11 6 3
16.6% blitz 17.1% blitz 23% blitz 27% blitz

As you can see, I added another column at the bottom to show the correlation (or lack, thereof) between blitzing and takeaways.  We spent a lot of time previously demonstrating that despite Jerry's belief, the Cowboys are horrendous at blitzing and actually force fewer takeaways by bringing more and weakening your coverage behind it.  And, as predicted, this wasn't going to have the effects he desired.

There are plenty of cliches in sports that would summarize statistical breakdowns, and I believe the one that is most fitting would have to be "live by the takeaway, die by the takeaway."  They were doing great all season with takeaways and at one point sat on top of the league with Seattle for having as 18 after 8 games and on pace for the highest total a Cowboys defense has seen in ages.  However, that pace did not sustain, and by the time December ended, what was once #2 in the NFC had dropped all the way to #10 and with 28 takeaways on the year.  And the average takeaway total for the 16 NFC teams?  27.1.

So, a team that was bottom of the league in yards allowed per game (32nd), in explosive plays allowed (tied for 31st), and points allowed (26th), also ended up middle of the pack in takeaways and thus left the defense without anything to hang their hats on.

Here are the last 12 seasons by Takeaways and Differential:

YearTakeawaysTurnover +/-
200230-4
2003 ***25-4
200422-15
200526-1
2006 ***30+4
2007 ***29+5
200822-11
2009 ***21+2
201030Even
201125+4
201216-13
201328+10
*** = Denotes Years Dallas Made the Playoffs

As you can see, +10 almost always gets you in the playoffs, but 28 takeaways - while better than 2012 by quite a bit - was not by any stretch a huge number by even Cowboys standards of the last decade.

Here is the record over the last 6 seasons for how important the turnover battle remains - so much so that they are able to overcome a number of other obvious weaknesses and still win games.

2008-2013Win-LossWin %
When Cowboys win Turnovers 30-878.9%
When Cowboys lose Turnovers10-3223.8%
Winner of Turnover Battle in Dallas Games 62-1877.5%

The Cowboys only lost the turnover battle in 4 games all season.  Unfortunately, aside from Kansas City, the other 3 games were games #14, #15, and #16.  That is not ideal timing.

WEEK 17 Against Philadelphia

First, a reminder of what a splash play is: 

What is a splash play? Well, for purposes of this blog I believe a splash play will include the following: A sack, a pressure that forces a bad throw, and big hit on the QB, and a batted ball that may lead to an interception opportunity. Again, you can see how this leads to subjectivity, but a subjective breakdown is better than no breakdown at all, I have decided. In addition, a splash play will include tackles for loss, a big hit for a short gain, or a stop which is an open field tackle where a player is pulled down on 3rd down short of the marker because of an exceptional effort from a defender. An interception is clearly a splash play, but so is a defended pass that required a great effort. A major hit in the secondary could be a splash play, but I believe that the outcome of the play will determine that. Sorry, defensive backs, but standing over a guy who just caught a 15 yard pass because you think you hit him hard will not generally pass the test on this blog. So, stop doing it. 
I am trying to be careful about handing out too many splash plays per game. I am trying to be picky, but too extreme in either direction. When I log a splash play, I will put time of the game on the chart so that if you want to review the same game and challenge my ruling, you are welcome to do so. Also, if multiple players deserve recognition on a single play, we will try to see that as well. 
Basically, we are trying to assign a value to making plays on the defense. We don't want to just see sacks and interceptions. We want to see broader definitions of splash plays to assign credit to those who help the Cowboys get off the field in important situations. These rankings will not deduct for negative plays at this point. There are simply too many occasions where we are guessing, and for now, I want to avoid that for this particular idea.  
A splash play is a play that makes a major difference in the game. And by keeping it all season long, we will see which defenders are play makers and which are simply warm bodies. We already have our thoughts on both categories, but let's see if we can dig a bit deeper and actually have numbers to back up our claims.
SPLASHES vs Philadelphia

What a year and what a game for George Selvie.  He certainly had weeks where he faded out of sight, but to finish as strong as he did really has to make people feel reasonably strong about his future here.

Q-TimeD/D/YdPlayerPlay
1-9:211/10/D36Selvie/WareQB Stop
1-8:452/10/D36SelvieHolding Drawn
1-3:191/10/O29SelvieTackle For Loss
1-0:451/10/D36Carter/WynnGrounding Drawn
2-12:202/4/O24Wynn/WareTackle For Loss
2-11:353/5/O23HatcherQB Sack
2-8:161/10/O20ScandrickTackle For Loss
2-6:251/10/O39HaydenBig QB Pressure
2-5:481/10/D45WynnQB Sack
3-15:001/10/O20HollomanQB Sack
3-14:083/3/O27HaydenBig QB Pressure
3-8:301/10/O34Hatcher/WareTackle For Loss
3-7:523/11/O33Hatcher (2)QB Sack and Strip
3-7:523/11/O33WareFumble Recovery
3-5:381/10/O20HollomanRun Stuff
3-5:113/10/O20HatcherBig QB Pressure
3-1:063/G/D6ScandrickBig Stop
3-0:384/G/D1Hayden/CarterGoal-line Stop
4-11:461/10/O40HollomanRun Stuff
4-10:082/2/D33HaydenRun Stuff
4-2:193/4/O22HollomanQB Sack


2013 SEASON TOTALS

Here are the final results for 2011 and here are the final results for 2012.


PlayerSplashes
DE George Selvie28
DT Jason Hatcher26
LB Sean Lee      22.5
CB Brandon Carr20.5
S Barry Church19.5
DE DeMarcus Ware19
CB Orlando Scandrick18
LB Bruce Carter16
DT Nick Hayden14.5
DE Kyle Wilber11
S Jeff Heath8
DT Drake Nevis7.5
CB Morris Claiborne7
DE Jarius Wynn7
LB Justin Durant 5.5
LB Davonte Holloman4
S Will Allen3.5
DE Everette Brown3
CB Sterling Moore3
DE Edgar Jones3
S JJ Wilcox2         
CB BW Webb1.5          
LB Ernie Sims       1.5          
DE Caesar Rayford 1
DT Marvin Austin1
Team Totals                       253.5
===========

Pass Rush/Blitzing REPORT

This segment of the defensive study is simply to find out how well the Cowboys are doing at getting pressure on the opposing QB.  We have spent a good part of the offseason talking about Monte Kiffin's philosophy that, like so many of the great 4-3 schemes, is based on using blitz as a weapon, not a necessity.  If you use the blitz as an ambush weapon that is always threatened but only used at the perfect times, you can often get free runs at the QB.  If, on the other hand, you must use the blitz because your normal pressure is not getting it done, then the offense usually is waiting for you and prepared - so even 6 rushers don't accomplish much.

What happened in the final game was much less about having blitzes burned rather than just having coverage confusion and mismatches that were exploited by a scheme that tries to focus on that exact strategy.

EXPLOSIVE PLAYS ALLOWED


Q-TimeD/D/YdPlayRushers
1-10:023/3/O30Foles to Polk, +344
1-1:221/10/O44McCoy Run, +203
1-0:372/20/D46Foles to Jackson, +204
2-15:002/9/D25Foles to Avant, +225
2-1:531/10/D49Foles to Celek, +353
3-1:51  1/10/D28Foles to Celek, +22  5            

SACKS AND INTERCEPTIONS


Q-TimeD/D/YdPlayRushers
2-11:353/5/O23Hatcher Sack5
2-5:481/10/D45Wynn Sack4
3-15:001/10/O20Holloman Sack5
3-7:52  3/11/O33Hatcher Sack    4           
4-2:193/4/O22Holloman Sack4       

PASSING CHART

Red (Incomplete), Black (Interception), Blue (Complete), and Yellow (Touchdown)




Pass Rushers Against Philadelphia - 29 pass rush/blitz situations:




Pass Rushers3 Rush4 Rush5 Rush6 Rush
Short (0-5 Yds To Go)0000
Second Level (5-10 Yds To Go)0560
Open Field (10+ Yds To Go)0000
Totals0560




Pass Rushers3 Rush4 Rush5 Rush6 Rush
Short (0-5 Yds To Go)0000
Second Level (5-10 Yds To Go)0210
Open Field (10+ Yds To Go)0310
Totals0520




Pass Rushers3 Rush4 Rush5 Rush6 Rush
Short (0-5 Yds To Go)0300
Second Level (5-10 Yds To Go)0111
Open Field (10+ Yds To Go)0310
Totals0721

7 Rush (1) - Second Level


And, here are the full season numbers to date:



Pass Rushers3 Rush4 Rush5 Rush6 Rush7
Rush
1st Down10 - 3%216 - 78%40 - 14%10 - 3%0
2nd Down7 - 3%171 - 84%22 - 10%3 -
1%
0
3rd Down11 - 6%110 - 61%29 - 16%25 - 14%3 - 1%
4th Down1 - 7% 9 - 69%2 -
15%
01 -
7%
Totals29 - 4%506 - 75%93 - 13%38 - 5%
4 - 1%

The game by game pressure numbers sent by the Cowboys:

Wk 1 - NYG: 7/49 - 14%
Wk 2 - KC:   10/43 - 23%
Wk 3 - STL: 11/57 - 19%
Wk 4 - SD:  4/43 - 9%
Wk 5 - DEN: 6/42 - 14%
Wk 6 - WAS: 8/45 - 18%
Wk 7 - PHI:  10/51 - 19%
Wk 8 - DET: 8/49 - 16%
Wk 9 - MIN: 11/41 - 27%
Wk10- NO: 8/43 - 19%
Wk12 - NY: 6/33 - 18%
Wk13 - OAK: 11/29 - 38%
Wk14 - CHI 6/39 - 15%
Wk15 - GB 10/41 - 24%
Wk16 - WASH 12/39 - 31%
Wk17 - PHI 12/29 - 41%

2013 Totals:  140/673 - 20.8%
2012 Totals:  134/551 - 24.3%

SUMMARY:  Well, that settles it.  The defense, which has not been a strength of this team since 2009, might have bottomed out in many respects in 2013.  To blame injuries as a whole is absurd, given that this defense - even at full strength - was ill-conceived from jump as we said back in April, May, June, and July in this very space.  They did not fortify their scheme change with personnel additions and were dangerously old and thin at too many key spots.  

Then, the injuries came and made a bad situation worse.  The final analysis will likely lay all of this at the ideas and scheme of Monte Kiffin, but I wouldn't be in that camp at all.  They tried, as Jerry Jones does year after year, to fix problems with smoke and mirrors, and yet again, a silly idea to change schemes but not add significant personnel was doomed from the start and while some might actually buy that it was simply the bad luck of the medical room, that would not be doing this story justice.  To blame Kiffin, who a year ago today wasn't even here, for a problem that existed long before his arrival is falling for the ridiculous shell game that is perpetrated on a fan base annually from the highest offices at Valley Ranch.  


Regardless, the Cowboys defense brought as much to the table as they could in Game #15 at Washington and Game #16 at Philadelphia and did exactly what you had hoped, which was at least offer some resistance (unlike New Orleans, Chicago, and the 2nd half of Green Bay) and give the offense a chance to keep up.

Perhaps everything is different if Kyle Orton can string a drive together late or if Tony Romo's back holds up, but we all know that overall the defense of 2012 - which was bad - was actually made worse with the schematic changes and personnel adjustments of 2013.  

We assume the return to full health of Sean Lee, Tyrone Crawford, Ben Bass, and perhaps a few more longshot names like Matt Johnson could factor back into the mix in 2014, but we must also assume we have seen the last of Jason Hatcher and Anthony Spencer and the contract of DeMarcus Ware is a discussion worth having.  

These discussions and many more will continue to happen starting next week and throughout the off-season.  However, for now, expect changes to be announced soon and this 2013 to finally be put to bed.  


Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Decoding Callahan: Week 17 - Philadelphia - Trying To Deal With More Blitzes

There are a number of components about the Cowboys offense as we reach the end of 2013 that can be examined as it pertains to a Week 17 winner-take-all matchup with Philadelphia (without their starting QB Tony Romo) that actually falls in line with the 2013 Cowboys that played 15 games before this (that all included their starting QB).

For instance, as we look carefully at how this offense functioned and accumulated points and yards, it is interesting to note that on 1st Down, the Cowboys ranked #2 in the entire league for efficiency.  This means, that on 1st Downs, they had what are called "successful plays" (4 yards or more) over 53% of the time.  Only New Orleans (53.6%) was slightly better and the rest of the league was worse.  The league averaged 46% and playoff teams for 2013 averaged 48%.  1st Down - a down which we would argue is easily the Cowboys most balanced (which might be arguing the tallest dwarf) - is a down they were quite successful at, even more so than Denver.

On 2nd down, you might be surprised to learn that the Cowboys are again ranked #2 in the entire NFL.  This time, the Denver Broncos were the one team in all of football that ranked higher, as Peyton Manning's offense converted 2nd downs into new 1st downs on 41.2% of occasions.  The Cowboys were right there, though, with 36.7, where a league average is 31.2% and a team like the Baltimore Ravens sits 32nd at a pitiful 23%.

So, let's think about this for a moment.  In a season where the Cowboys were 2nd in the entire NFL on 1st down and 2nd in the entire NFL on 2nd Downs, they still were near the bottom of the league in 10-play drives (29th), plays per scoring drive (29th), rushes + completions (29th), and maybe most notably, finished below league average in yards per game with just 341 yards per contest (the league averages 348 and playoff teams are at 377).  How can this make sense?  How can they do so well in early downs and distances, and yet underperform as an offense overall?

Well, you likely already know.  Behold, 3rd Downs.

We have spent a lot of time on 3rd Downs this season, but, since it is commonly referred to as the "money" down in this sport, we must focus yet again.  Because no matter how much time the Cowboys spent on it, they never really seemed to figure it out.

3rd Down is where you see the primary blitz looks.  Yes, teams mix it up, but on early downs it is an ambush.  On 3rd Down, it is telegraphed.  There is no ambush.  They break the defensive huddle and then line 7 across the line of scrimmage right in the QBs face.  According to our numbers, here is how blitzing broke down across the 3 downs:

1st Down: Cowboys faced 29% blitzes
2nd Down: Cowboys faced 31% blitzes
3rd Down: Cowboys faced 44% blitzes

As you might expect, once you break it down by down and distance, it shoots up again.  3rd and long is now facing blitzes over 60% of the time.  And as the season went along, they increased.

For the season, the Cowboys faced blitzes on 34% of all occasions, but in December, it shot up to 43%, including Green Bay and Philadelphia both bringing 20+ different blitzes.  You could say the Eagles were blitzing Kyle Orton more because he is the backup, until you see that they blitzed Romo almost the same amount in Philadelphia in Week 7.

So, even though I figure you know the answers already, how did the Cowboys handle all of this pressure?  Yet another 3-11 day on 3rd Downs.  This locks their season performance in at 35% and ranked 25th in the NFL, tied with the juggernaut offensive attacks in Cleveland, Oakland, and Miami.  That means there are actually 6 offenses in football who do worse on 3rd Down, but stop me when you see a great offense on this list:  Kansas City, St Louis, Buffalo, New York Giants, Tampa Bay, and Jacksonville.  Of the teams on this list of 10, you can see that only Kansas City figured out a way to fail at this metric and still continue their season into January.

Before we assume that there is more to this than blitz handling by the Cowboys, we should make sure it isn't 3rd and short that is hurting them.  But on 3rd and less than 5, the Cowboys are up in the top half of the league on pretty much each distance.  There is nothing abnormal about their ability to pick up 3rd and short or even 3rd and manageable.

But, 3rd and 6-9 to go?  The Cowboys are 27th at 29.8% in a league where 35.7 is average and 38% is playoff average.  And then 3rd and 10+ Dallas is at 17% where the league is at 19% and the playoff teams are at 20%.

These are small margins, but as you think about it, consider that you won't see full-out blitzing on 3rd and 3.  But, 3rd and 8?  Yes, sir.  Dial it up again.

This was the theme constantly on Sunday night.  Get the Cowboys into 3rd and 6+, unleash the hounds, and know that Orton is going to get the ball out to avoid a crucial sack.  But, this smart, conservative approach is what beat the Cowboys on Sunday.  They were not able to put enough drives together because they couldn't stay out of 3rd and long.  When the blitz is coming, Orton hits the safe outlet.  No trouble, yes.  But, also, not success.  And when Witten or Murray are 7 yards short of the sticks, on comes the punt team or Dan Bailey again.

In many ways, it is the story of the season, and perhaps the Cowboys offense in this era with Tony Romo and Jason Garrett at the helm.  And this is also why judging your pass protection on sacks conceded can be very dangerous and misleading.  The object of the game for an offense is not to avoid sacks, it is to score points.  But, you can see the issues here.  Beating the blitz is only done if you make them pay by punishing them with yards and points.  If you are going to throw a 1-yard horizontal pass to avoid a blitz and thus concede to a punt, you are only encouraging them to do it again and again.  Which the Eagles were happy to accommodate.

Let's look at some examples here - Warning: these may all look like the same play - they are not.


Here is the one right before halftime.  3rd and 10 and the Eagles blitz 7.  The idea is that Beasley will be open because the single-high safety is actually responsible for him and will have to make a tackle before the sticks if Orton finds him, but Orton is just avoiding the sack and playing for a field goal.  Safety first were his orders and he wasn't going to lose points at this critical juncture.  


This is the one shot that had a chance.  Early 3rd, 3rd and 8, and Orton is ready for the blitz and will try to give Dez a chance.  He does, but young Boykin does a nice job of challenging an off-balance Bryant for the ball.  This is exactly the way to beat the blitz, but you wonder if Orton could have thrown a more direct back shoulder fade (which would have required a better stance to throw before the free rusher gets to him) might have been the throw here.  Eagles blitz 6.


This was after the turnover and the Cowboys had the ball at the 20.  They simply must get 7 here and on 3rd and 9, here comes a 5-man fire zone blitz with the opposite edge rusher (98-Barwin) falling back into the flat to deal with Murray.  Orton thought Barwin was coming and then Murray had a chance.  But, with Barwin watching DeMarco, this never had a chance.  Another demoralizing Field Goal.


And then this one.  6 man blitz, man to man everywhere.  But, Orton sees the safety coming through the A-gap untouched (23-Chung) and unloads quickly to Witten who just never had much of a chance to lose his tackler, Brandon Graham.  The Eagles have learned that if you run at Orton, he seldom will look to the sticks, but quickly check down and get the ball out.  This is likely how you want a QB to play conservatively in a situation like this, but it certainly encourages the defense to turn the heat up even hotter.

They did burn the blitz later on the 4th down to Dez, but as you can see, this was a real theme in the game and frankly, for the season.

STATS FOR WEEK 17 against PHILADELPHIA


Run-Pass18-46
Starting Field PositionD30
1st Down Run-Pass9-22
2nd Down Avg Distance to Go7.60
2nd Down Run-Pass7-13
3rd Down Avg Distance to Go6.81
3rd/4th Down Run-Pass2-11
3rd Down Conversions3-11, 27%


PASSING CHARTS:

Here are the passing charts to see what was being accomplished on Sunday.  Intern Tim has made some pleasing to the eye charts for us to see.

Blue is a completion. Red is incomplete. Yellow is a touchdown, and Black is an interception. The passes are lines from where Romo released the pass to where the pass was caught. This shows you his release point and where he likes to throw when he slides in the pocket.


1ST HALF PASSING CHART -  (Red incomplete, Blue Completion, Yellow TD, Black INT)


Orton took a few shots, but mostly down to his right (his frontside).  This is pretty common.


2ND HALF PASSING CHART -  (Red incomplete, Blue Completion, Yellow TD, Black INT)



Orton's 2nd half tells a story of the completions all being very short and mostly painless to the Eagles.  30 completions for the game, but in the 2nd half, only 1 beyond 10 yards down the field.  

Jason Witten Passing Chart -  (Red incomplete, Blue Completion, Yellow TD, Black INT)



On passes just to Witten, here are the results.  You can see those short and to the right leak-outs against pressure.

Drive Starters - The 1st play of each drive can often reveal the intent of a coach to establish his game plan. How committed is he to the run or pass when the team comes off the sideline? We track it each week here -

Wk 1 - New York Giants: 5 Run/7 Pass - 42% Run
Wk 2 - Kansas City Chiefs: 3 Run/9 Pass - 25% Run
Wk 3 - St. Louis Rams: 8 Run/2 Pass - 80% Run
Wk 4 - San Diego Chargers: 6 Run/4 Pass - 60% Run
Wk 5 - Denver Broncos: 3 Run/8 Pass - 37% Run
Wk 6 - Washington Redskins: 5 Run/4 Pass - 55% Run
Wk 7 - Philadelphia Eagles: 5 Run/9 Pass - 35% Run
Wk 8 - Detroit Lions: 9 Run/5 Pass - 64% Run
Wk 9 - Minnesota Vikings: 2 Run/8 Pass - 20% Run
Wk 10 - New Orleans Saints: 6 Run/5 Pass - 54% Run
Wk 12 - New York Giants: 6 Run/5 Pass - 54% Run
Wk 13 - Oakland Raiders: 7 Run/3 Pass - 70% Run
Wk 14 - Chicago Bears: 5 Run/3 Pass - 62% Run
Wk 15 - Green Bay Packers: 4 Run/8 Pass - 33.3% Run
Wk 16 - Washington Redskins: 6 Run/4 Pass - 60% Run
Wk 17 - Philadelphia Eagles: 4 Run/8 Pass - 33% Run

2013 Totals: 176 Drives - 84 Run/92 Pass - 47% Run
* This statistic doesn't count the 1-play kneel down drives.

2011 Total: 181 Drives - 79 Run/102 Pass - 44% Run
2012 Total: 173 Drives - 76 Run/97 Pass - 44% Run


SHOTGUN SNAPS-

Shotgun snaps are fine on 3rd Down and in the 2 minute drill. But, we track this stat from week to week to make sure the Cowboys aren't getting too lazy in using it. They are not efficient enough to run it as their base, and with a 15%/85% run/pass split across the league, there is no way the defense respects your running game. When shotgun totals are high, the Cowboys are generally behind, scared of their offensive line, or frustrated.

Interesting number, 566 shotgun snaps eclipses the 2012 mark of 565, but in 93 fewer plays!  Under center?  Shrinking every year, to my dismay.

Wk 1 - NYG: 44 Shotgun/71 Total Plays - 61.9%
Wk 2 - at KC: 46 Shotgun/60 Total Plays - 76.6%
Wk 3 - STL: 28 Shotgun/59 Total Plays - 47.4%
Wk 4 - at SD: 33 Shotgun/56 Total Plays - 58.9%
Wk 5 - DEN: 39 Shotgun/54 Total Plays - 72.2%
Wk 6 - WASH: 23 Shotgun/50 Total Plays - 46%
Wk 7 - at PHI: 53 Shotgun/73 Total Plays - 72.6%
Wk 8 - at DET: 33 Shotgun/55 Total Plays - 60%
Wk 9 - MIN: 50 Shotgun/63 Total Plays - 79.3%
Wk 10 - at NO: 27 Shotgun/43 Total Plays - 62.3%
Wk 12 - at NYG: 32 Shotgun/60 Total Plays - 53.3%
Wk 13 - OAK: 33 Shotgun/63 Total Plays - 52.3%
Wk 14 - at CHI: 22 Shotgun/54 Total Plays - 40.7%
Wk 15 - GB: 35 Shotgun/69 Total Plays - 50.7%
Wk 16 - at WASH: 25 Shotgun/51 Total Plays - 49.1%
Wk 17 - PHI: 43 Shotgun/64 Total Plays - 67.1%

Season Total - 566 Shotgun/945 Total Plays - 59.8%

2011 Total - 445/1012 43.9%
2012 Total - 565/1038 54%

Here is the breakdown by groupings:

And now, a look at the efficiency of each personnel grouping.

Before you study the data below, I would recommend that if the numbers for the groupings are unfamiliar, that you spend some time reading a more expanded definition of the Personnel Groupings here.

Totals by Personnel Groups:


PackagePlays RunYardsRunPass
118237-201-3
127405-162-24
13231-31-0
21332-31-0
22100-01-0
23000-00-0
S01000-00-0
S023350-03-35
S11312603-1428-246
S129500-09-50
S13000-00-0
Other000-00-0
Totals6441418-5646-358

* - Knee Plays are not counted in play calls.


Totals by Personnel Groups on 3rd/4th Down:



PackagePlaysYardsRunPassFD/TD
11282-80-01/0
12000-00-00/0
13100-01-00/0
21000-00-00/0
22000-00-00/0
23000-00-00/0
S01000-00-00/0
S02100-01-00/0
S118800-08-802/1
S12000-00-00/0
Other110-01-10/0
Totals13892-811-813/1



Pass Rushers Against Dallas - 46 Pass Situations vs Philadephia

Wk 1: NY Blitzed 13/49: 26%
Wk 2: KC Blitzed 19/46: 41%
Wk 3: STL Blitzed 10/25: 40%
Wk 4: SD Blitzed 8/41: 19%
Wk 5: DEN Blitzed 10/40 25%
Wk 6: WAS Blitzed 17/31 55%
Wk 7: PHI Blitzed  22/48 46%
Wk 8: DET Blitzed 9/31  29%
Wk 9: MIN Blitzed 9/54  17%
Wk 10: NO Blitzed 3/27  11%
Wk 12: NYG Blitzed 10/43 23%
Wk 13: OAK Blitzed 16/33 48%
Wk 14: CHI Blitzed 11/27 41%
Wk 15: GB Blitzed 20/51 39%
Wk 16: WASH Blitzed 9/24 41%
Wk 17: PHI Blitzed 24/46 52%

Season Blitz rate vs Dallas 210/616: 34%


Pass Rushers3 Rush4 Rush5 Rush6 Rush
Short (0-5 Yds To Go)0000
Second Level (5-10 Yds To Go)2991
Open Field (10+ Yds To Go)0010
Totals29101




Pass Rushers3 Rush4 Rush5 Rush6 Rush
Short (0-5 Yds To Go)0320
Second Level (5-10 Yds To Go)0530
Open Field (10+ Yds To Go)0001
Totals0851




Pass Rushers3 Rush4 Rush5 Rush6 Rush
Short (0-5 Yds To Go)0200
Second Level (5-10 Yds To Go)0032
Open Field (10+ Yds To Go)0010
Totals0242

7 Rush (1) - Second Level


Pass Rushers3 Rush4 Rush5 Rush6 Rush
Short (0-5 Yds To Go)0100
Second Level (5-10 Yds To Go)0000
Open Field (10+ Yds To Go)0000
Totals0100

7 Rush (1) - Second Level

SEASON TO DATE



Pass
Rushers
3
Rush
4
Rush
5
Rush
6
Rush
7
Rush
1st
Down
15 -
5%
164 -
65%
64 -
25%
8 -
3%
1 -
1%
2nd
Down
11 -
5%
132 -
62%
56 -
26%
12 -
5%
0
3rd
Down
10 -
6%
75 -
50%
54 -
36%
9 -
6%
2 -
1%
4th
Down
02 -
40%
1 -
20% 
1 -
20%
1 -
20%
Totals36 -
5%
373 -
60%
175 -
28%
30 -
4%
4 -
1%

Thanks to John Daigle and Tim Krajewski for their work on the charts and graphs.

=====

SUMMARY:  Next week, we will begin to sort through the season numbers by personnel groupings. But, surely, the objective going forward if we assume that the offense will stay the same is combining the things this offense is good at - and yes, I believe that the numbers continue to show that this offense is good at balanced offense.  They did very well this season at running the football from under center and mixing pass and runs.

They must combine those attributes with things that must be improved upon from the category of "things they are not so good at" which to me, starts and stops with 3rd Downs.  If we are to judge elite QBs with who can make their team move the chains the most, then the Cowboys need to figure out ways to put Tony Romo up in the class of the elite in this situation.

In many cases, the blitz is a self-fulfilling prophecy, in that the teams that face them the most are teams that do not deal with them well.  The more you fail, the more it comes - conversely, the more you burn it - Peyton Manning, Drew Brees, Aaron Rodgers, and Tom Brady (when he had Wes Welker, Rob Gronkowski) face far fewer blitzes - the less you see.

The real question now turns to Romo's health.  If I was playing the Cowboys, I would be considering a QB who has shown that he is attempting to avoid contact to preserve his aching body.  This is not a compassionate league that sympathizes with a situation like this. Instead, it targets it.  And therefore, a Romo who is trying to preserve his health may be making the wise decision for the big picture, but inviting even more pressure when he returns.

And that is why that this should be objective #1 moving forward.  Even though this team did a nice job this season on 1st and 2nd down of staying out of 3rd and long, every team is going to have several a game they have to convert.  How is that going to change in 2014?

No rocks should be left unturned on this topic.