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ducks
03-05-2009, 11:27 PM
Dropping Owens should improve ‘Boys offense

By Jason Cole, Yahoo! Sports 9 hours, 13 minutes ago

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Yahoo! Sports

The tipping point in the relationship between Terrell Owens and his reportedly former Dallas Cowboys teammates ultimately comes down to two essential letters in football.

X and O.

You can spend weeks trying to peel away the onion-layered complexities of Owens’ tenure with the Cowboys. However, the root of his inability to coexist with teammates such as quarterback Tony Romo and tight end Jason Witten had as much to do with basic football as anything else.

Photo The rocky marriage between Owens, left, and Romo is over.
(Jason Bridge/US Presswire)

This is why – even as they make the move to have Roy Williams as their No. 1 receiver, promoting talented youngster Miles Austin to Owens’ spot and leaving Patrick Crayton as the No. 3 – the Cowboys will likely benefit from subtracting Owens’ talent.

In Williams and Witten, the Cowboys have a solid 1-2 punch that could be great if Williams realizes his full potential. Austin is considered an emerging talent, blessed with great size (6-foot-3, 215 pounds) and speed. He flashed that ability with 13 catches for 278 yards and three touchdowns last season. Crayton is a solid No. 3 who knows how to work the middle of the field and has the guts to do it.

But while the passing game has garnered much of the attention, the foundation of the team will be the running game. Between tough-running Marion Barber, electric-but-recovering rookie Felix Jones, talented backup Tashard Choice and the brutish offensive line, the Cowboys have a terrific running game.

Even more important, they have guys who know and understand their roles.

With Owens, no matter how much people told him he was the No. 1 target and no matter how much the play-calling screamed it, he never really believed it. Blame that on whatever you want – perhaps starting with his childhood – but Owens trusts no one. He is a bottomless pit for unconditional love.

In football, trust among players is everything. As Romo and the Cowboys receivers gathered this week to begin some offseason throwing – working on building the essentials of that trust – franchise owner Jerry Jones had to make a decision. According to multiple sources and reports, everyone – from Jones’ son Stephen to Romo to Witten to head coach Wade Phillips to offensive coordinator Jason Garrett to veterans such as Flozell Adams – was telling Jones that Owens had to go. Thus, Jones was faced with no other choice if his team is ever to realize its talent.

Football is a game that is more about the sum of the parts than the value of the individuals. There is no arguing that Owens is a stunning combination of size and speed. At 6-3, 224 pounds, he can dominate in just about any part of the field. Short, intermediate and deep, Owens is a load as a player, even at age 35 and even as he struggles against bump coverage.

But when he refuses to talk to his quarterback and tight end, Owens is worthless. According to three sources, there were times at the end of last season when Romo didn’t know what Owens might do from play to play. When Romo tried to talk to Owens about it, he got no response.

Ultimately, this is about emotions and personality differences. This is about being able to function together. Any quarterback, regardless of whether he gets along with his receivers, needs to know what the guy is going to do.

There have been plenty of receivers who have had their problems with their quarterbacks. Reggie Wayne once shoved Peyton Manning. Mark Duper and Mark Clayton used to argue with Dan Marino all the time … in the huddle. Sterling Sharpe didn’t see eye to eye with Brett Favre. Randy Moss and Daunte Culpepper disagreed at times.

The key is that the bickering can’t get in the way of the bigger picture: execution and winning. And when the team’s play is affected or becomes a concern – as eventually became the case in Minnesota with Moss and Culpepper – someone must go.

The drama certainly escalated between Owens, Romo and other teammates last season, but the bickering is only part of the concern. Former Cowboys quarterback Drew Bledsoe told more than one person that dealing with Owens’ antics wasn’t the problem. Not knowing where Owens was going to be on a pass route was the problem.

Photo Williams, right, should benefit from Owens’ departure.
(Al Bello/Getty)

Theoretically, Dallas should be able to operate more crisply offensively with the subtraction of Owens. Witten and Romo are obvious friends, so that relationship is solid. Williams is a good-natured soul who just wants a chance to win after fleeing Detroit.

Austin, Crayton and fellow backup Sam Hurd don’t have the résumés to act out, even if they were tight with Owens. If they want to get paid, they better go along with the program. If not, they can follow Owens out the door.

In fact, the guy who stands to become the true leader of the Cowboys now that Owens is gone has the perfect personality to lead. Barber, armed with his reckless running style, figures to become the face of the Cowboys without Owens. He is the essence of what so many people love about football players: rough, selfless and quiet.

Barber rarely does interviews and almost never reveals what he’s thinking deep, down inside. He’s the son of a football player, raised on how to be a team player. Run hard and talk soft. Of course, that’s the antithesis of how the Cowboys act under Jones. But right now, that’s what the Cowboys need.

Evil Angel
03-05-2009, 11:31 PM
I was just going to post this. Excellent read on the real issues with TO, as in Thrown Out!

:toast:toast:toast

mffl89
03-06-2009, 03:23 AM
I think Marvin Harrison will help the Cowboys out if they were to sign him.

bigdog
03-06-2009, 03:41 AM
I think Marvin Harrison will help the Cowboys out if they were to sign him.

Sure he would help out, but if they signed him, that would not help the development of Miles Austin and Sam Hurd.

I really think Austin can step up and be the #2 WR on the team. He has great size and speed, and has improved every year. He passed Crayton on the depth chart at one point last season, but got injured. Hurd isn't as flashy, isn't as speedy, but he should be a solid WR. I think Crayton is better suited to work in the slot, so Austin opposite Williams should be an option for the Cowboys to seriously consider.

I don't think the Cowboys need Harrison right now.

Whisky Dog
03-06-2009, 01:32 PM
I think the Cowboys should not use a draft pick on a WR unless there is a burner available with a late round pick as pure speed to stretch the field is what this core lacks.

BacktoBasics
03-06-2009, 01:40 PM
I don't trust Garrett to utilize the run properly. That blocking scheme worries me way more than losing or needing another WR.

dirk4mvp
03-06-2009, 03:08 PM
Too bad it won't.

florige
03-06-2009, 04:56 PM
Don't be surprised if the Cowboys make the SuperBowl next season. The same thing happened with Eli Manning after they got rid of Shockey. Manning's int's dropped due to the fact he wasn't trying to force the ball into Shockey all the time. I'm confident if the Giants had Plax in the lineup during the playoffs they would had went to the SuperBowl again.

Spawn
03-06-2009, 06:20 PM
There is also the fact that the Cowboys have O cordinator sucks. You had opposing players publicly stating that their gameplan was extremly simple. But hey, Owens is out so everything is gonna be alright. They may even make the superbowl. They just have to win a playoff game first and when was the last time they did that? But Owens is off the team so that should be no problem.

jack sommerset
03-06-2009, 06:30 PM
Cowboys need alot. Another WR now,Safety, a couple of CB,some d line and a linebacker

redskinfan
03-06-2009, 09:19 PM
As much as i dont like the cowboy's and Terrible Owens I think having him around actually helped the other guy's by drawing double and triple teams, now who on this team is gonna scare people into double teams? I am just saying..

Spursfan092120
03-06-2009, 11:21 PM
Don't be surprised if the Cowboys make the SuperBowl next season. The same thing happened with Eli Manning after they got rid of Shockey. Manning's int's dropped due to the fact he wasn't trying to force the ball into Shockey all the time. I'm confident if the Giants had Plax in the lineup during the playoffs they would had went to the SuperBowl again.

Interesting theory. Very possible.

Jmoney
03-07-2009, 01:57 AM
I hate the cowboys. I wished they had kept T.O he made them worse. While he does have big play ability. I think in the last 5 years nobody has dropped more passes than T.O. combined with his negative attitude and his give me the dam ball more so I don't whine like a baby made the Boys worse. When you have 3 pro bowl qb's all having the same problem with this WR you have to stop and think wtf this guy's problem is. He had problems with Garcia and Mcnabb then Tony. Yeah some team will take a chance on him cause they are desperate for something but what QB wants to have this guy yelling at him every time it doesnt go his way? I think if you polled the starting qb's in the league they would all say yeah hes a great WR but no I don't want him. The only person you MIGHT get saying hell yes bring him on is somebody like Warner or Brees who throw so many dam passes in a game anyhow that T.O is sure to get more than his fair share. If the Cards elect to trade Boldin I think they take a shot. Or if even Culter goes to the bronco's and says look bring me this guy he at least stays out of jail he might get signed by the Bronco's. People saying Singletary was kind of interested. I can't see this one having any logical sense. You have questions at QB you've stated time and time again you will be run first. Now you want to stick TO back on the 9'ers with Vernon Davis. Hell that would not even last half a season with those 2 nut balls. If Seattle had not signed Houz and still had its HC I could of seen him going to Seattle but not now. T.O if he had just shut up and stayed with one team probally would be up in the Top3 WR's in terms of numbers across the board. He should take a cue from Moss find a winning team shut his mouth and do his job.

dirk4mvp
03-07-2009, 11:29 AM
Don't be surprised if the Cowboys make the SuperBowl next season. The same thing happened with Eli Manning after they got rid of Shockey. Manning's int's dropped due to the fact he wasn't trying to force the ball into Shockey all the time. I'm confident if the Giants had Plax in the lineup during the playoffs they would had went to the SuperBowl again.


Was Shockey ever putting up TO numbers?

jack sommerset
03-07-2009, 12:22 PM
Was Shockey ever putting up TO numbers?

No shit and the Giants D that year was freaken AWESOME.Plus no Tike Barber allowed Jacobs and Ward to run loose plus they had their on T.O in Burress.

IronMexican
03-07-2009, 12:40 PM
Umenyiora(SP) and Strahan are why.

florige
03-09-2009, 07:55 AM
Was Shockey ever putting up TO numbers?



Nobody said that he put up TO numbers. I said that after Shockey got hurt Eli's int's dropped because he wasn't steadily trying to force the ball into double coverage to a bitching Shockey. It doesn't matter if Shockey had 2 yards and T.O had 2000 yards, he was still trying to force the ball to him regardless. The fact of the matter is his play dramatically improved once Shockey got hurt. And yeah, the defense was all world during the playoffs, but if that same Manning who threw 6 picks in that game against Minnesota, took 25 a yard sack against Minnesota, was still playing that same way during the playoffs, you can bet the Giants wouldn't had won crap. I don't give a shit how great the defense was playing. Now how Romo reponds is dependent upon Romo. But imo that is a hell of a lot of pressure off his shoulders when you take into consideration that he still has two all-pro receiving options on offense.