Irked 'Boys missing key ingredient ... backbone
By Tom E. Curran
NBCSports.com
If you tried for a week to imagine the most inane compliment Cowboys coach Wade Phillips could lob to his team, you still wouldn't come up with anything more precious than this, uttered by Phillips during his Monday press conference at Valley Ranch.
"We have the best walkthrough team I've ever been around."
Thank God and Jerry Jones for the 2008 Dallas Cowboys, the perfect confluence of sports and entertainment.
On Sunday – one week after a home loss to the Redskins brought on the first drama of the season – Dallas allowed the winless Cincinnati Bengals to climb back from a 17-0 deficit to make it 17-16 early in the fourth at Texas Stadium.
That the Cowboys ultimately won 31-22 took a backseat to the fact that the most talented team in the NFL had a chance to pound the Bengals so badly their team plane would be curled into the fetal position on the flight home. And they didn't do it.
But that story has now taken a backseat to the fact that Phillips is constitutionally incapable of seeing his team as anything less than 53 perfect little football players.
He opened his Monday press conference with more than two minutes worth of compliments to every facet of the team. A single cloud passed briefly through his remarks when he mentioned the secondary had problems with "bunch routes" then Phillips resumed the team-wide praise festival.
Over the next 30 minutes, the assembled Cowboys media prodded and cajoled Phillips in an effort to figure out why he believes it necessary to blow sunshine up his team's posterior on a round-the-clock basis.
Phillips said that he does speak to players when they aren't performing well (whoa, easy there General Patton!). But he also burped out quotes like these.
"It was good enough to win and that's what we're here to do."
"It's important that you feel good about yourself no matter what. To the press and the media I defend the team."
"The mistakes don't need to be public. I don't single out any guy any time as far as who did this or who did that."
"Some of it bothers me that your play is not good enough if you win. That does bother me a little bit."
"If you play well enough to win, you deserve some credit."
"I'm not any harder on them than they are on themselves."
That last one hit me because on Sunday, quarterback Tony Romo – a player whose overall brilliance is frequently dulled by asinine and risky decisions – said: "I am pretty sure we won the game. It's not always the prettiest win. But we did win. I am sorry that I am not sorry that we won."
It's astounding to me that these Cowboys can so badly miss the point. Nobody’s asking Phillips to publicly pull down the pants of players who had mistakes in games (leave that for the Cowboys to do to Phillips’ assistant coaches like Dave Campo). But instead of devoting 120 seconds at the start of a Monday press conference to affixing gold stars to everybody’s paper, maybe a little, "We had about 20 minutes of football that was unacceptable," would go a long way.
But that's not Phillips. Last year, the Cowboys limped through December, staggering around in a fashion that foretold playoff doom.
Yet after the Cowboys got creamed in Washington in the season's final regular season game, Phillips actually said: "The last three years, the team that won the NFC had a poor game in the last game of the season."
Leading up to that game, he countered talk of his winless record in the playoffs by saying the fact that Dallas had a first-round bye was just like a playoff win to him.
Well, when the real playoffs actually started, Dallas didn't stick around for long, losing to the Giants in the NFC Divisional playoffs.
The problem these Cowboys have is that they don’t have a backbone to go along with all that talent. Wide receiver Patrick Crayton, the most self-impressed No. 3 receiver in NFL history, last week lamented that the Cowboys needed a more formidable opponent than the Bengals after their loss to Washington. Crayton didn't make a catch for the first 58:08 of Sunday’s game before coming up with a 15-yard insurance touchdown.
Dallas can swagger and bow-up with the best of them but they don't do adversity very well. And that's because their swagger isn’t rooted in accomplishment; their confidence is rooted in what they believe they have the POTENTIAL to do.
And since Wade Phillips isn’t going to make them walk across hot coals to get them to play to their potential, they aren’t going to hold themselves or each other to it.
High standards work.
In 2005, the New England Patriots lost a preseason game to the New Orleans Saints 37-27. The Patriots blew a five-point fourth quarter lead with their rookies and backups on the field. Afterwards, safety Rodney Harrison seethed about the performance, lashing out when asked about an interception he made by saying, "It doesn't matter. We lost the game."
New England had won three Super Bowls in four years heading into that season. Last year, they got to 18-0 before getting their heart ripped out in another Super Bowl.
But believe this: When it came to walkthroughs, NONE of those teams could do it like the 2008 Cowboys.
NBCSports.com
If you tried for a week to imagine the most inane compliment Cowboys coach Wade Phillips could lob to his team, you still wouldn't come up with anything more precious than this, uttered by Phillips during his Monday press conference at Valley Ranch.
"We have the best walkthrough team I've ever been around."
Thank God and Jerry Jones for the 2008 Dallas Cowboys, the perfect confluence of sports and entertainment.
On Sunday – one week after a home loss to the Redskins brought on the first drama of the season – Dallas allowed the winless Cincinnati Bengals to climb back from a 17-0 deficit to make it 17-16 early in the fourth at Texas Stadium.
That the Cowboys ultimately won 31-22 took a backseat to the fact that the most talented team in the NFL had a chance to pound the Bengals so badly their team plane would be curled into the fetal position on the flight home. And they didn't do it.
But that story has now taken a backseat to the fact that Phillips is constitutionally incapable of seeing his team as anything less than 53 perfect little football players.
He opened his Monday press conference with more than two minutes worth of compliments to every facet of the team. A single cloud passed briefly through his remarks when he mentioned the secondary had problems with "bunch routes" then Phillips resumed the team-wide praise festival.
Over the next 30 minutes, the assembled Cowboys media prodded and cajoled Phillips in an effort to figure out why he believes it necessary to blow sunshine up his team's posterior on a round-the-clock basis.
Phillips said that he does speak to players when they aren't performing well (whoa, easy there General Patton!). But he also burped out quotes like these.
"It was good enough to win and that's what we're here to do."
"It's important that you feel good about yourself no matter what. To the press and the media I defend the team."
"The mistakes don't need to be public. I don't single out any guy any time as far as who did this or who did that."
"Some of it bothers me that your play is not good enough if you win. That does bother me a little bit."
"If you play well enough to win, you deserve some credit."
"I'm not any harder on them than they are on themselves."
That last one hit me because on Sunday, quarterback Tony Romo – a player whose overall brilliance is frequently dulled by asinine and risky decisions – said: "I am pretty sure we won the game. It's not always the prettiest win. But we did win. I am sorry that I am not sorry that we won."
It's astounding to me that these Cowboys can so badly miss the point. Nobody’s asking Phillips to publicly pull down the pants of players who had mistakes in games (leave that for the Cowboys to do to Phillips’ assistant coaches like Dave Campo). But instead of devoting 120 seconds at the start of a Monday press conference to affixing gold stars to everybody’s paper, maybe a little, "We had about 20 minutes of football that was unacceptable," would go a long way.
But that's not Phillips. Last year, the Cowboys limped through December, staggering around in a fashion that foretold playoff doom.
Yet after the Cowboys got creamed in Washington in the season's final regular season game, Phillips actually said: "The last three years, the team that won the NFC had a poor game in the last game of the season."
Leading up to that game, he countered talk of his winless record in the playoffs by saying the fact that Dallas had a first-round bye was just like a playoff win to him.
Well, when the real playoffs actually started, Dallas didn't stick around for long, losing to the Giants in the NFC Divisional playoffs.
The problem these Cowboys have is that they don’t have a backbone to go along with all that talent. Wide receiver Patrick Crayton, the most self-impressed No. 3 receiver in NFL history, last week lamented that the Cowboys needed a more formidable opponent than the Bengals after their loss to Washington. Crayton didn't make a catch for the first 58:08 of Sunday’s game before coming up with a 15-yard insurance touchdown.
Dallas can swagger and bow-up with the best of them but they don't do adversity very well. And that's because their swagger isn’t rooted in accomplishment; their confidence is rooted in what they believe they have the POTENTIAL to do.
And since Wade Phillips isn’t going to make them walk across hot coals to get them to play to their potential, they aren’t going to hold themselves or each other to it.
High standards work.
In 2005, the New England Patriots lost a preseason game to the New Orleans Saints 37-27. The Patriots blew a five-point fourth quarter lead with their rookies and backups on the field. Afterwards, safety Rodney Harrison seethed about the performance, lashing out when asked about an interception he made by saying, "It doesn't matter. We lost the game."
New England had won three Super Bowls in four years heading into that season. Last year, they got to 18-0 before getting their heart ripped out in another Super Bowl.
But believe this: When it came to walkthroughs, NONE of those teams could do it like the 2008 Cowboys.
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