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Showing posts with label Marion Barber. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marion Barber. Show all posts

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Down With Brett Favre and the Green Bay Packers! Chant it!!!!!!!!!

UPDATE: If you don't have the NFL Network, try this to watch the game. Good luck. I hope it works for all of you screwed over by the NFL and the cable companies.

OK Dallas Cowboys fans, here we go. We are less than 90 minutes away from kick off for what is the biggest game for the NFC so far this year.

Both teams are 10-1, a match-up made in heaven. The aging Brett Favre is having one of his best seasons, while Tony Romo is devouring the Cowboys record book.

How do I see this game playing out? I won't sway from my last post: I do think Dallas will win tonight, and I also think they can dominate this Packers team. Will they? I won't be surprised if they do, but I see the game close until the middle of the fourth quarter, when Dallas pulls away with a touchdown and wins by 10 points. I think rookie kicker Nick Folk will be faced with at least one 50-plus yard kick, which he will make to put the Cowboys ahead at half time.

As I said before, Favre will lose this game for the Packers. He will try too hard and turn over the ball at a key moment in this game. Not to mention, Dallas has a superior running game, and I expect the coaches will use the Julius Jones-Marion Barber duo possibly more than they have all season. Thirty carries total? Maybe.

Let's look at some statistics:
1. Green Bay has allowed a lot less points, nearly a touchdown a game less. But they have also played far worse offensive teams like Minnesota and Chicago, their only loss of the season.
2. Favre has a better completion rate, 300 more yards and five less interceptions than Romo, who threw five in one game. But Romo has a whopping seven more touchdowns than Favre, and he has already broken the single-season TD record for the Cowboys.
3. The Packer rushing game has nothing on Dallas.

Green Bay Rushing

CARYDSAVGTD
Grant1074944.62
Wynn502034.14
Dallas Rushing

CARYDSAVGTD
Barber1457154.97
Jones1244954.02

4. Jason Witten has almost as many catches and yards as Donald Driver, the top receiver for the packers. Get real. Witten is going to have a huge game. Terrell Owens is blowing them all out of the water, with already over 1000 yards and 13 touchdowns, tying what he had last year.

Green Bay Receiving

RECYDSAVGTD
Driver6383213.22
Jennin...3962516.09
Dallas Receiving

RECYDSAVGTD
Owens64109317.113
Witten5975012.76

Offensively, statistics show we are very close outside of rushing the ball, where the Cowboys hold a distinct edge. Again, I think we will run the ball very well today and more than 30 times. No reason to get into a passing battle with Favre. On defense, Dallas has given up slightly less yards per game. In fact, the defenses, statistically, are nearly identical until you get to one category: rushing. Dallas has shut down the running game for opposing teams, giving up less than 100 yards per game. Green Bay, however, is right at the century mark for opposing teams' rushing. That's good news for Dallas.

Here are the full statistics:
TEAM AVERAGES & NFL RANKS
TEAM OFFENSETEAMPER GAME AVERAGE
Total YardsGNB
380.0
DAL
389.0
Yards PassingGNB
298.5
DAL
265.9
Yards RushingGNB
81.8
DAL
122.9
TEAM DEFENSETEAMPER GAME AVERAGE
Yards AllowedGNB
315.4
DAL
299.1
Pass Yds AllowedGNB
215.3
DAL
217.0
Rush Yds AllowedGNB
100.1
DAL
82.1

The only concern I have is the secondary, and namely Roy Williams. Favre is doing a lot of dump passes and slants for 10-yard gains. This is where Roy has trouble. I think all Cowboys fans are concerned about this and the big pass play. However, Williams has to show up sooner or later, and this is the game to do it. I expect him to play well, possibly even intercept one of those slants if he watched the film this week.

I am so pumped up for this game I can barely breathe. I had to skip the gym today because I didn't eat anything and I was too overwhelmed. I finally ate, and now it's time to drink some beer.

For the first time this year, sadly, I won't be able to live blog. I have to watch this game at a friend's house because I don't get the NFL Network since Comcast took it off the basic cable lineup. I don't even want to get into it, but hey, I cannot complain too much: My friend has a big-screen HD television. Plus, he apparently bought the beer!!!

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Dallas Cowboys vs Green Bay Packers: Brett Favre is Going to be Tony ROMO-IZED

In case you are wondering, $330 will get you a ticket to the blockbuster matchup tomorrow night between America's Team, the Dallas Cowboys and the Cheesy Green Bay Packers.

A few notes about the game: WR Patrick Crayton is expected to start, but it's not going to be a game breaker if he doesn't get a lot of catches. As expected, Terry Glenn is not playing. I believe this is a game in which Jason Witten can shine. I also believe Marion Barber can expose the Packer defense for big, punishing runs into the endzone.

The Packers will have Nick Collins back at free safety, and corner Charles Woodson will play even though he is listed as questionable.

This is how I see this game transpiring tomorrow night. Favre is going to cost this game for the Packers. He is going to force throws, get sacked and fumble the ball once. He will try too hard to create plays because they won't have an ounce of life in the running game. The Dallas Defense is aware that Favre likes to dump the ball off in slants and to his running backs, for short gains. Although Roy Williams has hurt us in this capacity at times, tomorrow night he will show up, and put some heavy hits on these guys. A turnover is surely to occur. The only scary statistic is Favre is 0-8 against Dallas at Texas Stadium. That's scary because it's hard to believe he'll go 0-9. But believe it. He will.

This doesn't mean Dallas will blow them out, even though I think they can. I do think Dallas will run the ball a lot. Tony Romo is in no hurry to show off against his hero, Favre.

I'm excited for this game. Because of the cable scandal, I have to watch this game at a friend's house. I may not be around to provide regular commentary and posts. But I will come home that night and write something about the game. Go COWBOYS!

Finally, the NFL.com has a cool video of the Dallas-GB rivalry here.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Free Agent Chatter

When this season ends, the Cowboys will be faced with 15 players who could end up gone for the next season. Of those players, several are very important to the future success of this team. As I review the players on this list, we will see how the Dallas Cowboys could change quite a bit next season.

Some may be expendable. Some are certainly not!

Let's look at unrestricted free agents first: Offensive Tackle Flozell Adams, WR Patrick Crayton, Free Safety Ken Hamlin, Running Back Julius Jones, CB Jacques Reeves, DB Keith Davis and DB Nate Jones.

I think Ken Hamlin, Flozell Adams and Patrick Crayton need to be resigned and not because they are great for betting online. If anyone could have been used as trade bait this year it was Adams. But it would have impacted out offensive line too much, and he is playing great this year despite his common false start penalties. Hamlin is in his first year as a Cowboy and has proven to be a valuable free safety, an actual surprise. Crayton has been a terrific fill in for the injured Terry Glenn. Reeves, Davis and Jones may be too valuable only because we are so weak at corner backs.

Other recognizable restricted free agents are Jay Ratliff. He deserves a contract, but he may be expendable if we keep Tank Johnson. It's also mentionable that Chris Canty may be on the restricted free agency list, too, because of his contract clauses.

Which brings us to Julius Jones. Do we sign him or let some other team bid on him? Frankly, I don't know what team would want him. Packers? Texans? Broncos? Who knows. Julius, in my opinion, hasn't become the back I expected him to be. After the Emmitt Smith years, any back we pick in the first two rounds better wear the Star with pride. JJ doesn't bring it every game.

But the decision to lose him could be a huge factor for 2009 because that means we will either look for a new running back in the draft or make Marion Barber the sole runner for this offense.

But hold on. MB3 is a restricted free agent. This means teams can bid on MB3 but the Cowboys have seven days to match any offers. This could make for a crazy offseason, unless we sign him now. It is possible that MB3 may be used as trade bait for this offseason to collect additional picks.

Our backfield could be completely changed this offseason. Could we really lose Marion the Barbarian? I hope not.

Monday, November 12, 2007

Marion Barber is religious

Anyone catch the small piece in the most recent Sports Illustrated called the "Pop Culture Grid?"

Marion Barber was asked five questions.

1. My childhood hero was?
Barber said Jesus Christ was his childhood hero. A very intriguing answer.

2. Vegetable I just won't eat?
Spinach. Another unlikely answer considering Popeye equates strength with spinach. Marion is the Barbarian!

3. Exercise I hate the most?
Long distance running. A running back dislikes long distance running. Makes sense for someone like MB3. But how ironic that MB3 also has the two longest runs this year for the Cowboys.

4. Last thing you bought from an infomercial?
A religious cd. This one got me. He's vague. What religious cd was it? Who the heck buys religious cds anyway?

5. Who should run for president?
Barber didn't answer. Well he did, sort of. "I am not political" he wrote. Gee. I hate to see an adult who isn't active in voting.

6. Last thing you saw on YouTube?
Barber said G. Craige Lewis. I figured this must be a religious figure. I was right.
Here's a snippet from the gospel of Mr. Lewis, aka The Messenger:

Our Christian music is being attacked by godless artists that promote themselves instead of promoting Jesus Christ. Our Christian television is being attacked by artists and ministers that would rather quote their own books and songs rather than quote the Word of God.

Monday, September 10, 2007

The Marion Barber III argument

When you look at the numbers from last night's game, one could say that Marion Barber and Julius Jones are equal. Jones rushed 16 times for 66 yards, with a longest run of 21 yards.

Barber ran 11 times for 65 yards, and scored one touchdown. His longest run was 19 yards.

But stats don't show heart. Stats don't show effort. And stats certainly don't tell strength. Barber was the stronger back last night. His acrobatic touchdown run was amazing. He broke tackles. He ran over the opposing defense. He ran aggressively and pumped up the team.

Julius Jones, on the other hand, fell down too easily. He didn't break away from tacklers. While trying to run the clock out, he takes an up-the-middle run and turns it outside to avoid tacklers, but then runs out of bounds, which stopped the clock. Fans on message boards starting calling him "Julia." His runs seemed mediocre, at best. That might be overstated. He looked poor. But I am comparing him to Barber, who in my opinion, is the better runner.

The two-back system in Dallas should be scrapped now. Marion Barber should become the full-time back for the Dallas Cowboys immediately. Barber has carried the ball 273 times in the last two seasons for 1192 yards and an amazing 19 touchdowns. That is what we could expect from Barber running full-time for the Dallas Cowboys. We'd probably get more from him if he knew he was our sole back, or should I say "soul" back. Just for comparison, Larry Johnson ran the ball 416 times last year and 336 times in 2005, far more carries than Barber has had in just two seasons.

Julius Jones ran the ball last year almost as much as Barber has in his entire career. Jones ran 267 times, for 1084 yards and 4 touchdowns. Hardly an elite back. Hardly comparable to those of Barber.

But stats don't show effort, right? Stats don't show heart?

Well, playing on the field and performance does show effort and heart. We, the fans, can see it. And I'd love to have one person argue to me that Julius Jones deserves to start for the Dallas Cowboys, how he deserves a majority of the runs, and how he deserves to start the game and run the ball during the most important part of the game: when Dallas is down. Barber has shown time and time again that he's a stronger back, has more heart, and plays harder than his counterpart.

When will the coaches in Dallas recognize this? Hopefully by Sunday.

Saturday, August 18, 2007

We've got a kicker!!!


I cannot remember the last time a Dallas kicker hit a 52 yard field goal. Even in the preseason, it sure has been a rarity for the Cowboys to win games with the foot. But our first-half crushing on the Broncos tonight provided a 52 yarder from our prized rookie kicker Nick Folk. I can't tell you how excited I am about this. If this kid can consistently kick 50-plus yarders, this keeps Dallas in many games this year. No longer do we have to try a 3rd and 12 so we can get within 45 yards if this kid keeps it up!

Meanwhile, two touchdowns for Marion Barber tonight.

Friday, August 17, 2007

Betters Beware: Bet on Wade Phillips

It seems the folks at BetUS.com don't have much faith in new coach Wade Phillips. They have betting odds listed for NFL Coach of the Year and Phillips is on the long-shot list, along with coaches on some of the NFL's worst football teams.

Does this make any sense? What does it really mean? Considering he's tied with Falcons' new coach Bobby Petrino and Raiders' new coach Lane Kiffin, could this mean BetUS believes Dallas will not compete this year?

You've got to be kidding me. However, I think what this really means is they don't think Dallas will improve enough over last year to get him the award. I wonder if an NFC Championship game will even get him in contention.

On a side note, at my regular job--I'm a journalist for those who didn't know--the Sports Department did a poll for fantasy sports players on who would be a surprise star for fantasy football this year. Guess who lead the pack?

Marion Barber.

Finally, I apologize for the absence. This may have been one of my busiest weeks of the year and I survived, even after a night of heavy drinking. I am recovering now on the couch.

Dallas plays Denver tomorrow. Let's hope for a Romo TD pass tomorrow.

Thursday, August 9, 2007

Marion Barber series

I won't do the play by play anymore because we're getting into the second and third stringers. But now is a good time to highlight good, or bad, plays from the future of Dallas.

Nothing happened on our third offensive series. Brad Johnson couldn't get much movement.

Marion Barber is heating up! A draw play got 16 yards and he's caught a few passes for good yardage. Man, he is a juke machine. He's really trying to make a big play.

For some reason the center is high snapping and Brad Johnson just fumbled one, losing a ton of yards. No chance to score after a promising drive.

Half is over.

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

Happy 4th. Boring Day in the NFL?

I couldn't sleep right now if I wanted to. The bangs and booms have been consistent since 6 p.m. Oh well, it is Fourth of July, but I am sure the din of fireworks will continue for the rest of the week and probably into next week.

I scoured the Dallas Cowboys blogs all day searching for something to write about. It was a dull day today. The Larry Johnson chatter is probably the hottest of the bits. A few forums discussed it and it appeared many Dallas fans approve of a trade for Larry Johnson. I don't. He's just got too much wear and tear. The Chiefs overused him because the rest of the offense was pitiful and the result is Larry Johnson's career can be measured more in dog years. The guy has three years or less left in him as a top back. And that's with the chiefs. Keep him there.

There is also talk about Dallas getting Arkansas' Darren McFadden next year. We have Cleveland's first round pick in 2008. The guy rushed for 1600 yards, 14 TDs last year, with an incredible 5.8 yards per carry. In other words, this guy gets first downs every two runs.

I doubt Cleveland will be a top 3 pick, I just doubt it. But you never know. I think the Browns can win at least six games and that will probably make them a 6th pick. McFadden won't be there. Why would any of us even think about this right now? McFadden very well could be the top pick in the draft next year.

I won't hold my breath. But if we have a chance to get McFadden, I say do it. Although I like Julius Jones, he's disappointed us more than he has blown us away. His brother is better. But with Barber, it was a decent one-two punch that helped us win games. If we got McFadden, we'd go back to a one back system and probably lose both Jones and Barber by 2009.

Is that what we want?

Tuesday, July 3, 2007

Does the two-back system work?

I read a fantasy report from ESPN's Neil Ravitz today that sort of led me to question whether the two-back system in Dallas works. You can read the piece here.

I personally thought that the Jones-Barber duo worked. There were times I was really annoyed at the short gains but I put most of the blame on the offensive line. Of course Ravitz takes a fantasy football spin to his synopsis and it doesn't work. Fantasy sports is a whole lot different than reality. In Fantasy NFL, Barber was a steal. Most people probably snagged him from the free agent wire in the first or second week. But, he was a role player, getting the ball often in red-zone situations. Parcells tried to use Jones as a finesse back and it didn't work all the time. I thought Jones heated up near the end of the season and he had a great game against the Seahawks.

Ravitz says:

"Last season, Jones averaged 4.1 yards per carry, while Barber's YPC was 4.8. That's a glaring difference, and not just for the obvious reasons. Barber actually had a handicap in this category because he received more carries in short-yardage situations. In fact, if you remove just the touchdowns from three yards out and in, Barber's YPC swells to 5.1, and Jones' ... well, he didn't score any short-yardage touchdowns."

The yards per carry is a significant stat to review. A 4.1 average isn't bad. But Ravitz argues that Barber is a better, more complete running back than Jones. I don't know about this. I think Barber and Jones compliment each other. They never seemed to be performing at high levels at the same time. I wouldn't be shocked if one were traded at some point. I'd have a hard time watching either go to another team. I do like them both and Barber is a favorite of mine.
I just think we need both to win this year and future years.

Thursday, June 28, 2007

A balanced offense wins games; Tank Johnson talks make me sick

It's been said that a balanced offense--running and passing an equal amount during a game--helps win ball games because your offense is less predictable to defenses. There's a reason Detroit can't win games and that's because the offense passed 66 percent of the time. Defenses knew that two out of three plays were going to passes. And because their running offense was horrible, we can figure out why Detroit blew it once again.

But Dallas is different. The offense passed 52 percent of the time and ran 48 percent of the time. Julius Jones and Marion Barber were effective, running for 120 yard total each game and averaged 4 yards per carry. The offense ranked third with 21 rushing touchdowns. Not bad.

A balanced offense doesn't guarantee wins, as Washington proved. But that team was so woeful last year that I am not sure anyone could have helped them win. Just bad chemistry and a horrible owner, one of the worst in the NFL.

I see Dallas' offense improving. Tony Romo will be more settled and I think Julius Jones will have a 1,000-plus yard season.

On a separate note, there is a lot of talk about Tank Johnson becoming a Cowboy. Of course, all of the Cowboy haters are licking their chops about this, making the same old bogus comments about how Dallas chooses talent over character. I don't think character is much of a factor for any team in the NFL until a player goes off the deep end, ala Tank Johnson and PacMan Jones. And the result of these bad character players is they got dropped or suspended. But everyone deserves a second chance.

With that said, I am not sure I want Tank Johnson or his drama. Sure, the guy could come in and immediately help our team and never get in trouble again. But history says something different and I prefer to keep our chemistry intact.