Trying To Make Sense of the Latest Cowboys’ Playoff Loss

Jan 18, 2024
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5 mins read
Trying To Make Sense of the Latest Cowboys' Playoff Loss

Three days removed from the worst postseason performance I’ve ever seen in my lifetime of watching the Dallas Cowboys, it still doesn’t feel real.

Apparently, it wasn’t only the worst postseason loss of my lifetime, but the worst playoff loss in Cowboys history in regards to the 48 points allowed.

Watching the Green Bay Packers come into AT&T Stadium and do whatever they wanted to do to win 48-32 feels like a fever dream.

Jordan Love looked like Aaron Rodgers in his prime, completing 76% of his passes and throwing three touchdowns on his way to a near-perfect QB Rating (157.2).

Romeo Doubs looked like prime Davante Adams, hauling in six receptions for 151 yards and a touchdown, including three catches of 20+ yards.

Cowboys Nation is in a space of complete disbelief, not knowing how it’s even possible to play so poorly to end a season full of expectations.

I don’t have the answers either, but we can try to dissect just what went wrong, and what led to the shocking loss.

Cowboys DB DaRon Bland

Lack of Effort

If any of the players saw the heading above, they’d come for my head on social media for assuming they gave no effort.

My retort would be, “Is that what you call effort?”.

According to Merriam-Webster, effort is defined as “a vigorous or determined attempt”.

Did anyone see any vigor or determination out there?

I saw bad body language, arguing amongst themselves, no hustle on plays downfield, and dejected faces on the bench before the first quarter was even over.

That script should have been flipped on the Packers, not the other way around.

Dallas seemed to be playing the role of underdog, coming in with some hope, but quickly getting that hope squashed by the Packers scoring on their first drive followed by a quick 3 & out.

The Cowboys should have been the aggressor, putting their foot on the gas early to crush the Packers’ spirit that they were clinging to.

Instead, their poor effort gave the Packers life that they would use to cruise to a 27-0 lead before anyone noticed the Cowboys were on the field.

Cowboys QB Dak Prescott

Why Change What Got You Here?

Perhaps even more alarming than the lack of effort is the scheme changes we saw for this game.

The team that took the field on Sunday afternoon was nowhere near the team we saw throughout the year.

This goes for all three phases of the team.

Let’s start with the offense.

Don’t let the final stats fool you. Dak Prescott threw for over 400 yards, but that’s to be expected after falling into a 27-0 hole.

On the first two drives, Mike McCarthy called run plays on 2nd & 10, something we haven’t seen since before the sweeping changes in play-calling after Week 5.

What’s also puzzling is the disappearance of pre-snap motion from the offense.

Dallas lined up in a static formation most of the game, one of the main reasons they couldn’t move the football until it was too late.

On the defensive side, Dan Quinn inexplicably played most of the game in a zone scheme.

The Cowboys ranked as one of the teams who most lined up in man coverage while their defensive line wreaked havoc.

One of the plays that had me throwing my hands in the air asking “What the hell are you doing?” was a 3rd & short play where DaRon Bland was lined up 10 yards off the ball in coverage.

The Packers’ wide receiver ran a simple two-yard out pattern and caught the pass for a first down with no resistance from Bland.

Part of the problem of changing your scheme from what you usually run is the communication needed to make zone schemes work.

The players must talk to each other to pass off coverages in zone schemes.

Packers players running free with no one around them on the television screen tells you that communication wasn’t working.

Dallas, ranked with the most QB pressures in the NFL throughout the regular season, only managed to pressure Love four times.

On those four downs, Love was a perfect 4/4 for 113 yards and a touchdown.

To make matters worse, Micah Parsons was in coverage more than we’d like him to be, especially on a day when the defense was struggling to generate pressure.

Packers RB Aaron Jones takes a toss from QB Jordan Love

Old Demons

The Packers came into Arlington with a perfect gameplan on both sides of the ball.

Matt LaFleur and the offense must have studied the Cardinals, 49ers, and Bills games to see how much Dallas struggles with pre-snap motion.

On nearly every play, a wide receiver or tight end was sent sprinting across the formation prior to the snap, adding to the Cowboys’ confusion on defense.

The motion man was almost always utilized to kick out the defensive end or outside linebacker while a guard or tackle pulled in the opposite direction to create a seam for Aaron Jones.

This is the pin and pull technique that allowed the Cardinals, 49ers, and Bills to rack up a combined 658 yards in just those three games, a whopping 35% of the season total allowed.

For Prescott and the offense, “the blueprint” reared its ugly mug again, this time at the hands of Packers’ DC Joe Barry.

There was nothing about the Packers defense prior to the game that scared anyone, but boy did Barry and the players show us we were all wrong.

Barry ran simple zone concepts with only four down linemen rushing.

It completely stymied the Cowboys’ passing attack, as Prescott held the football at an abnormally longer rate, leading to a season-high six scrambles for 45 yards.

Sound familiar? It’s the same concept of defense ran by Arizona and San Francisco (on multiple occasions), and was first discovered by Broncos’ DC Vic Fangio in 2021.

For some reason, that defense gives the Cowboys’ offense fits, and nobody has figured out how to combat it.

That’s really the story of 2023 for the Dallas Cowboys.

Playing great when they are allowed to dictate the flow of the game, but unable to overcome adversity when faced with it.

Unless changes are made, the 2024 season will be the same result.

Mario Herrera Jr.

Mario Herrera Jr.

Mario Herrera Jr. is a sports analyst specializing in statistical analysis and Dallas Cowboys coverage. At InsideTheStar.com, he has published 692 articles reaching over 1.1 million readers. His work integrates metrics with strategy in the context of Cowboys football, providing evidence-based analysis of roster decisions, player performance, and game planning.

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Danny
Danny
Jan 18, 2024 10:18 AM

first off you have to be mentally and physically tougher. But more than that you have to be ready from whistle to whistle. If you say oh well they did this and we did not expect it, then that is on you. Landry and Johnson prepared for multiple contingencies. When landry had smaller linemen he change how they blocked when jimmy had his guys get bigger and faster…..and better with hands and feet landry did too. You have to not only be prepared for different styles of play from opponents but adjust quickly to match it. But you always want to set tempo and physicality whether on offense or defense for the game. otherwise you get beat down and wonder “well don’t they know who we are?” Guess what good teams don’t care. when it is time to play you are either ready or you are not if you are not then you did not train or prepare properly and wasted everyone’s time and money. If you want to be a superstar you have to train and do all the right things to be a superstar. Cool jewelry doesn’t do it on the field.

Nivek Halfdan
Nivek Halfdan
Jan 18, 2024 1:15 PM

As a 50+ year fan, the thing that surprised me the most was that the Cowboys didn’t finish 10 – 7.

Before the games were played, I expected a sweep by the Eggles and a loss to the Lions. The loss at Buffalo was expected, Miami was a toss up. Nonetheless, I’ve become rather sick, after the LVE injury, of watching a 5-1-5 defense. And when you play 5 D-lineman, and Parsons IS a DE/Edge, 1 LB and 5 DBs, you’d better get some sacks and INTs or you’re gonna get your ass handed to you by good rushing attacks.Like, ah-hum, San Frans.

To be honest, I’m happier about this mystery slaying than I would be after another 49ers slaughter~!

If you can’t draft any better than Smith in the 1st and Schoonmaker in the 2nd, vs maybe Brian Bresee who was available at the Mazi-Taco pick, Devon Achane available at the Schoonmaker pick, or a run-stuffing LB at either??? But what they needed most was a solid DT, and that didn’t happen. DQ, or Dairy Queen, hasn’t figured out that your base defense can’t be dependent on a Nose Tackle you Do Not Have. I’m optimistic about Overshown returning next year; but at what position. Plenty of hybrid LB/DBs on the team already in the Dairy Queen defense. Overshown ain’t gonna replace Damone Clark, barring injury, while they Don’t have a replacement for LVE, who already had too much responsibility in the PASSING GAME. Regardless of what some, including DQ, believe, running backs are not yet obsolete~!

Spend the $ you have to in free agency, and quit trying to buy a Rolex at a garage sale. But more importantly, Draft Better~! And spend the $ for DQ’s first class airfare to Seattle~!

Nivek Halfdan
Nivek Halfdan
Jan 18, 2024 2:07 PM

And, BTW, I have nothing against Dairy Queen. I’ve eaten lots of good burgers from them all over Texas, just like Whataburger. I just don’t think I want them as a constant diet~! I’ve seen enough of the Dairy Queen defense. Eggs or grain for breakfast, burgers for lunch, steak and fish for supper . . . hey, that’s 3 levels of diet. Also works for NFL defenses~!

Chuck
Chuck
Jan 19, 2024 10:24 AM

Coaching, coaching, coaching, coaching! The Cowboys are a team without a leader. It’s obvious to everyone but Jerry Jones, as evidenced by his ridiculous decision to bring back the problem for another year. Why should we be surprised? It is these kinds of decisions that have insured the Cowboy failures for the past 28 years. We are now destined to repeat the past for at least another year. Want to make a change, stop going to the games and stop buying Cowboy merchandise. Maybe Jerry will wake up.

Danny
Danny
Jan 20, 2024 12:05 PM

Here is the thing. I too have been a fan since 1960 when team franchise was announced. They were football players then. Sometimes good and sometimes bad but football players. That was their job. When jerry bought the team he turned it into a circus. The under the lights all the time. It is very very lucrative not only for the jones but most of dallas and surrounding areas. What is confusing to the players is are they dancers in the jones ballet or are they football players. The first one takes up lots of their time but it is great for the community themselves and the organization. That is what playing here is. The players and coaches have to be able to turn all that other stuff off and concentrate on being tough skilled winning football players. You have to be able to focus on game day. You have to supply more will, more intensity, more skill, and better scheme than the other team. On that day it is not about jerry show or how many yeas it has been since the organization has won a super bowl. None of that is your jobs. Your jobs is to show up every game and win by being better, tougher and smarter than the opponent. It has been done in the past but those were great players. They were molded to be greater and taught what to focus on and what not to focus on. On game day they played their tails off. Heck Tony romo didn’t win one but he had more fight than I saw any of you play with against green bay. You have the talent or very close to it but you do not have the will. You have excuses.

Edward Carmichael
Edward Carmichael
Feb 8, 2024 5:36 PM

ever since Jerry Jones fired Jimmy Johnson and all the sports media groups keep saying the the Cowboys are going to win the super bowl and Jerry Jones is still the Cowboys owner the Cowboys will never ever win another super bowl because of Jerry Jones

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