The Dallas Cowboys' Dumbsday Defense

Despite Dallas' 5-1 start, the Phillips 3-4 has been stupefying

Dear Reporters,

Because of the magnitude of yards and high volume of points surrendered by our defense this season, we will not be talking about our unit or the other unit. We will be taking all questions immediately following Sunday's game against the Minnesota Vikings and second-year quarterback Tarvaris Jackson, which gives us a good chance to restore our illusory reputation by again doing a respectable job against a sorely inferior opponent.

Sincerely,

The Dumbsday Defense

P.S. Getcha calculators ready.

Unlike Terrell Owens, the Dallas Cowboys' defense is not posting letters in their lockers at Valley Ranch. But we wouldn't blame them. It's humiliating to talk the talk and then get your ass run out of your own stadium trying to walk the walk.

"We thought we were an elite team," Cowboys head coach Wade Phillips said in the locker room following last Sunday's demoralizing 48-27 loss to the New England Patriots. "But obviously we're not."

In the most anticipated regular season game at Texas Stadium this millennium—attended by starlets Eva Longoria (overrated) and Kate Hudson (yowsa) and former Mexico President Vicente Fox (indifferent)—the Cowboys were administered a 21-point wedgie by the older, better Patriots. Dallas remains a feel-great story and a favorite to represent the NFC in Super Bowl XLII next February.

The defensive performance, however, is a startling failure.

Phillips, remember, arrived in Dallas promising to hone the team's 3-4 system. In training camp, he ca-cawed about being a defensive expert. He jokingly—sorta—referred to himself as "Mr. Fix-It," a back-patting salute to his ability to immediately squeeze improved results from a defense. His defensive coordinator, Brian Stewart, even promised back in San Antonio that his unit would be "the best in the league."

As of last Sunday they can't stop Greg Brady, much less Tom.

Examine the results and, obviously, disregard the four games against pathetic quarterbacks. The Chicago Bears (Rex Grossman has since been benched), St. Louis Rams (Marc Bulger played with broken ribs), Buffalo Bills (rookie Trent Edwards was making his second start) and Miami Dolphins (Trent Green generally sucks) will all finish the season with pass offenses ranked in the NFL's bottom 10.

The Cowboys have faced two legit quarterbacks, both at Texas Stadium, with alarming outcomes. Combined, the New York Giants' Eli Manning and Patriots' Brady have completed 68 percent of their passes (59 of 87) for 700 yards, nine touchdowns and only one interception. Against its only two opponents with winning records, Dallas' defense has surrendered an average of 41.5 points. Thanks to quarterback Tony Romo, the Cowboys are 1-1 against notarized foes. But unless the defense drastically improves, this season will be entertaining, yet hardly super.

"We've got a lot of work to do," Stewart grumbles. "We've just got to play better defense."

We properly canonize Roger Staubach and Michael Irvin and even Nick Folk, but football in Dallas has long been founded upon defense.

Bob Lilly herding and finally sacking Dolphins quarterback Bob Griese in a 24-3 win in Super Bowl VII. Harvey Martin and Randy White leading The Doomsday Defense and forcing eight turnovers in a 27-10 rout of the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl XII. In back-to-back championships, coach Jimmy Johnson's defense stifling the prolific Bills' Run-and-Shoot to a combined 30 points. And in the last Super Bowl victory in 1996, cornerback Larry Brown winning MVP on a team that limited the Pittsburgh Steelers to 17.

In its five Super Bowl wins, the Cowboys have allowed 60 points. In Sunday's reality-check loss to the Patriots: Forty. Eight. Thankfully Brady, who amassed 388 yards and five scores—imagine the carnage if the Patriots were still spying—overthrew a wide open Randy Moss on the game's first play and had two more scores negated by penalty and replay or else New England would've smashed the Philadelphia Eagles' record (49 in 2004) for points scored by a visitor at Texas Stadium.

"Brady is a good quarterback, but don't discredit us," says safety Roy Williams, who lost track of tight end Kyle Brady for one of the touchdowns.

Duck, discredit forthcoming.

Dallas' sloth-slow secondary futilely chasing Patriots 5-foot-9, 185-pound receiver Wes Welker looked like nursing home residents trying to catch a greased pig. Whether it's schematic, psychological or speed-related, the Cowboys have a fatally flawed secondary. Terence Newman is nagged by an injured heel. Williams remains a liability in coverage. Free-agent safety Ken Hamlin is better against the run. Hobbled Anthony Henry was in street clothes last Sunday. And backups Jacques Reeves, Nate Jones and Patrick Watkins looked like SMU talent in over their heads against Ohio State.

Against the Patriots the Cowboys played some conservative Cover 2. They tried zone blitzes, max blitzes and even a customized package that had Greg Ellis and DeMarcus Ware rushing from the same position. That play resulted in an Ellis sack, a fumble and a scoop-and-score by Jason Hatcher. But more often than not Dallas' defense was the punching bag, not the glove.

"We tried everything we had," Phillips said during his moribund autopsy. "But nothing worked."

In all, the Patriot Act resulted in New England violating Dallas' personal space to the tune of 448 yards with points on their last five possessions that punctuated a 27-3 game-ending surge.

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  • Lori Thompson 10/18/2007 6:48:00 PM

    As someone who attended the New England game last Sunday - there's one thing I'd like to address: our LAME ASS FANS....when you see a stadium like BUFFALO where they rocked the stands for 3 hours on a Monday night when the game meant nothing to that team - and places like Green Bay where the "12th man" comes into play - this crowd at Texas Stadium is LAME !!! When your defense is on the field for so long (as ours was on Sunday) and they are asking the fans for help - and I see Mr. & Ms. Prissy in their Tony Romo jerseys sitting on their hands and watching - it makes me want to say "HEY - GIVE UP YOUR SEASON TICKETS TO SOME REAL FANS".....I'm not saying this would have made the DIFFERENCE in the game - but it sure as hell could have - but, I guess we'll never know here in Dallas what its like to have the FANS cause a turnover - or contribute to a win - mainly because our FANS are at home or at a bar watching the game & not able to be at the stadium.....too many season ticket holders have them only to be "keeping up w/the Jones's" (literally).....these NON FANS make me sick !!!! Get off your asses & yell - support your Cowboys - or get the hell outta Dodge (or Texas Stadium as is this case)and go home or to the bar - where its REALLY loud !!! I just hope this week - more FANS than NON FANS show up and .......MAKE SOME NOISE PEOPLE.....support our DEFENSE for a change......MAKE SOMETHING HAPPEN !!!!!

  • Fraggy 10/18/2007 6:04:00 PM

    what an idiot! are you serious? eva longoria is NOT overrated! as for the dallas defense, you're right on. fortunately, there is over half a season to improve, both health and level of play. if newman, ellis and henry can get all the way back and the rest of the defense can continue to improve their mastery of the phillips 3-4, the sky is the limit.

  • Owen 10/18/2007 5:22:00 PM

    Right on target. While everybody else in the newspapers and on televisino is bemoaning our offense's slow starts or Wade Phillips' bad decisions, you nailed the real problem. Our pass defense. Or lack there of. If it doesn't get fixed this season is going nowhere. Kudos for your perspective.

  • Mike Serviente 10/18/2007 12:08:00 PM

    Amen Brother Whitt, finally the Cowgirls soft defensive underbelly has been exposed. I like the offense, with the notable exceptions of TO's weekly clutch drops, and Romo's first-half panic attacks. However we have not played anybody until last Sunday, and watching the the next NFC Champion Giants the past four weeks, we can expect a loss to them our next trip to the Meadowlands. The sad truth is, our secondary is swiss cheese, and outside of Demarcus Ware, we have zero pass rush from our defensive line. We will not be going to the Super Bowl anytime in this decade with this defense.

  • s. Richards 10/18/2007 5:22:00 AM

    Great column.......except for the "....carnage, except for Patrots cheating..." Cheap shot de meaned its author.

 

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