The Romo Friendly Offense: Week 16 @ Washington

Cowboys fans, we all got a very nice Christmas present from our ‘Boys in the form of a sweep of the Redskins, a shutout, and, most importantly, a playoff berth.  While we can’t be quite sure exactly where the Cowboys will eventually settle in the post-season picture, one thing is for certain: this series has been given an extra week of life!

All kidding aside, while a 17-0 score looks very nice, it was quite misleading.  After the game was over, I couldn’t help but feel like the offense played an awful game and the Cowboys were fortunate to cash in on an amazing defensive effort.

Was the cynical December Cowboys fan creeping up in me or do the numbers actually back up my initial reaction?  It’s time to break down the offense once again to find out.

…continue reading at DallasProSports.com

The “Romo Friendly” Offense: Week 15 @ New Orleans

I sure many Cowboys fans are asking what I have been ever since I saw the clock hit 0:00 Saturday night: “Where has THAT been all season?!”

This game was completely unlike any other we’ve seen all season.  The Cowboys not only scored on their first drive for the first time this season, but also their second drive as well as their opening drive of the second half.  Make no mistake about it, the offense put on one of their most dominate performances all season.

So what was different this time around and what has been missing the past couple of weeks?  It’s time to break this offensive performance down and find out why.

…continue reading at DallasProSports.com

Romo Friendly Offense: Week 14 vs San Diego

Cowboy fans, I hope every last one of you have braced yourselves and taken cover for the wonderful storm that has hit us all.  Another December game, another December loss and now the Cowboys can do no better than 2-2 this month, and that would mean knocking off undefeated New Orleans this Saturday.

Things do not look good.

Last week, the Cowboys feel victim to everything else besides the play by the offensive.  This game, however, the offense was most definitely a major culprit and there was simply no doubt about it.  While, yes, there were other things that went wrong in the game, it is my job to focus on what went wrong with the offense.  Sadly, I have a lot of bullets to spread around this week, so let’s get started.

…continue reading at DallasProSports.com

Wake for Weis

As Notre Dame is appears to be nearing the end of their search for a new head coach, it is time to take a look back on the Weis era.  While it is quite easy to point out the multitude of faults that Weis’ tenure was plagued with, it would be a complete disservice to the man to not point out what he has done for Notre Dame’s football program.  Make no mistake about it, without Weis, the football program could very well be where Kurt Herbstreit is convinced it already is: irrelevant.

Rewind back to 2004.  Ty has just been fired, Meyer snubbed Notre Dame for the Florida job, day by day it seemed another coach told us “thanks, but no thanks”, and ESPN, as well as other national talking heads, were attempting to nail Notre Dame to a cross, calling our firing of Ty unjust and borderline racist.  To say things looked bleak would be a gross understatement.

For me personally, this period of time was my first real chance at working football practices as a manager.  Up to this point, I had only worked one practice (under Ty), and only one football game (vs Pitt).  After Ty’s departure, working bowl practices was not too high on anyone’s list.  Finals were just around the corner, some students decided the manager program wasn’t for them and quit, and some folks in general were just apathetic about working a practice in general.

What I saw in those practices shouldn’t come as a shock to anyone.  The team was completely apathetic in general.  Practices were sloppy, players were undisciplined, and interim coach Kent Baer wasn’t exactly Mr. Intensity.

In midst of this darkness, Notre Dame hired Charlie Weis, former Notre Dame alum and offensive coordinator for the Patriots.  Weis took the podium, and, full of bravado, said the words all Notre Dame fans wanted to hear: the now infamous “6-5 is not good enough” speech.  It was a shot of life into a program that seemed to be hanging by a thread.

After a disappointing showing at the Insight Bowl, people were still wondering if Weis would be able to resurrect this program; however, Weis still managed to create a buzz around campus.

He did all of the right things before a single practice ever started.  He visited several dorms to have a personal Q&A session with the students.  He spoke to Notre Dame fans at a women’s basketball game, and soon after spoke directly to the student section at a men’s basketball game.  This was a refreshing change from Ty, whom we would only hear speak at pep rallies.  Weis “got it”.  He was one of us, part of the ND family, and he was determined to let us know things would be different this time around.

Spring practices really weren’t all too intense much to my surprise; however, in hindsight it makes more sense.  Weis was still trying to get to know the team, figure out what he had, and then figure out where to go in the 2005 season.  Still knowing though that he needed to continue to get the fan base excited for next season, Weis decided to bring in a cavalcade of Irish football legends to the Blue/Gold game.  Tim Brown, Joe Montana, and Joe Theismann were just a few of those big names.

Despite some of the worst weather I’ve ever seen for a spring exhibition, I was taken aback by just how many people were in Notre Dame Stadium.  At best, I had only seen a little left than half the lower bowl of the stadium full.  This time around, the lower bowl was packed, and there was a decent showing in the second tier as well.  The buzz had definitely taken hold.

Once Fall Camp came for the team, the tone completely changed.  The intensity shot through the roof.  The mentality of the team completely changed from a team that didn’t care to a team ready to start kicking ass and taking names.

Then the 2005 season started.  ND destroyed Pitt in their opener, upset Michigan at the Big House, were a Bush Push away from beating USC, and landed a Fiesta Bowl bid.  While the BCS game against Ohio State resulted in a loss, it was hard to be disappointed with this turnaround.  We went from near obscurity, to preseason top 5 media darlings in no time flat.

Weis continued his drive for more, placing a sign of “9-3 is not good enough” on the locker room at the Gug.  Fans, as well as the media, were not counting out the chance that ND could very well play for the National Title.  While title dreams were quickly crushed after a Michigan loss at home, the Irish still managed to finish the season 10-3 with a Sugar Bowl loss.  Again, despite the BCS bowl loss, hopes were still high for the team, and recruiting was picking up in supreme fashion as we claimed the prize of the top QB recruit in all the nation away from USC: Jimmy Clausen.

We were back–or so we thought…2007 happened.

3-9 was a shock to the system that no one, not even the biggest ND pessimist, would’ve ever expected.  Knowledgeable fans knew that this would likely be a down year thanks to recruiting holes left by Ty, but the end result of the season was simply sickening.  Despite the God-awful season though, Weis was still able to bring in top recruits once again, most notably Michael Floyd.

2008 didn’t exactly give us anything to write home about either.  6-6, plus some embarrassing losses to the likes of Syracuse put Weis on the hot seat.  However, yet another top recruiting class, that included yanking away Hawaiian stud Mantei Te’o away from USC, and ending ND’s bowl losing streak (in blowout fashion no less), still gave Irish fans some hope.

2009, however, ended all of that.

After a fantastic start, the Irish feel to Navy for the second time in the Weis era and started a free fall that gave us our second straight 6-6 season.  After the Pitt game, everyone, including the players knew Weis’ fate was likely sealed.

The UCONN game started Weis’ funeral procession–literally.  With tears on his face, and walking out arm in arm with the seniors, it was clear Weis knew this was it for him.  As the game progressed, there was no more talk of “can Weis save his job”, but rather “who’s going to replace him?”

As if our season, and now a lame duck coach, wasn’t enough to depress ND fans, all hell broke loose.  Jimmy was punched in the face outside of C.J.’s Pub.  Weis cut off all media access to the team.  Jimmy was dubbed “Darth Vader” in practice as he donned the same dark tinted visors Weis called “too Hollywood” for ND.  And oh yeah, there was a game to prepare for against Stanford.  However, the Stanford game ended in what was a perfect picture of the entire season: powerful offense, coupled with a piss-poor defensive effort.

The Weis era then ended in the exact opposite fashion as it started.  Weis’ initial bravado was replaced by radio silence as he declined to meet with the media.  Nothing more was heard from Weis still, even after Jack Swarbrick officially announced his firing the following Monday.

Weis finally broke his silence this past Saturday in a small sit down interview with five members of the media.  I highly suggest you read the entire thing as it does show that Weis is now, and forever will be a Notre Dame man.

You can say whatever you want to about Weis and his shortcomings on Saturdays, but there is no doubt that he has handled the whole situation with class and did the best he could to try to minimize the circus atmosphere that erupted around the team.  He could’ve easily run off and burn every last bridge connecting himself to ND, but he didn’t.  Instead, Weis spoke to the team at the football banquet, contacted recruits and encouraged them to stay committed to ND, and even sat in support for Jimmy Clausen and Golden Tate as they announced their departure to the NFL.

While his win-loss recorded lacked something to be desired, Weis left the program in better shape than he found it.  He destroyed the notion that Notre Dame simply couldn’t recruit with the big boys in college football anymore with several top-flight recruiting classes.  He proved that Notre Dame could indeed stay competitive in the BCS picture.  He ignited a fire and buzz into Notre Dame Nation that had been sorely missing.  And, most importantly, he was able to do all of this while not compromising the academic and moral integrity of the University.

The keys to success are in the ignition and now Notre Dame just needs to find the proper driver.

Coach Weis, I want to personally thank you for all of your hard work.  You gave me not only amazing memories and stories from the 2005 in which I was able to work for you and the team, but you’ve also restored my faith that this program can succeed and will do so once again.  Thanks for adding legendary stories like “Pass Right” that will forever stay in ND lore.  Thank you for laying down the foundation and framework that, without a doubt in my mind, saved our football program.

“Romo Friendly” Offense Catch Up, and a Quick Thanks

I haven’t been doing a very good job on updating the blog for when my articles have been going up on DallasProSports.com.  Apologies for that.  However, if you feel like reviewing the last few weeks, feel free:

Week 9 @ Philly

Week 10 @ Green Bay

Week 11 vs Washington

Week 12 (Thanksgiving) vs Oakland

However, if you’d like to skip straight to the most current article, here is a preview and link for that as well:

Grading the Romo Friendly Offense – Week 13 Loss Against the G-Men

Sunday’s game is easily the most confusing and frustrating game that I have broken down all season.  Throughout the year, it has been fairly easy to point out the offensive shortcomings that have caused this team to fail in their losses.  However, as we all will soon see in this week’s breakdown, the story is not so clear at all.  The theories, axioms, and recipes for success that I have hung my hat on all season have been shaken to the core.

Continue reading at DallasProSports.com

Also, I want to take the time to thank everyone that has been reading both my work at DallasProSports.com and here.

This month, I have had more visitors come across my site than ever before…and the number isn’t even close to previous months.  The majority of visits this month have come from Liverpool fans across the Globe checking out my Open Letter to Tom Hicks.  However, visits to my regular work have also spiked beyond my wildest expectations as well.

As far as my work at DallasProSports.com goes, that also has surpassed any expectations of visitors.  Today I saw a tweet from Daniel, who runs the site, saying that quite a lot of people were visiting my bio page that was just recently posted.  He then later informed me that my page was in fact the 7th most visited page on the entire site in the past 30 days.

Both of those pieces of news have made my eyes pop out of my head, and I still can’t believe it.  So thanks to everyone that regularly visits here, drops by here from my links on Facebook and/or Twitter, and also to those that spread my work around via email/forums/retweets/word of mouth.  Y’all rock and I appreciate all of the support and hope you continue to enjoy my work.

The BCS Does It Again…

I think Tostitos needs to step down from their sponsorship of the Fiesta Bowl this season as it clearly doesn’t reflect the atmosphere of this year’s selection.  The Chik-fil-a Chickenshit Bowl (or Pilgrim’s Pride can step in, since Chik-fil-a has the Peach Bowl), U.S.D.A. Bullshit Bowl, or a dual sponsorship Tropicana/Absolut Screw Job Bowl would be far more appropriate.

Once again, the BCS never ceases to amaze to just how low they will sink to protect their horrendous system from the obvious elephant-in-the-room controversy that pops up year after year.  Let’s be frank here, the BCS is in no danger of leaving any time soon thanks to money tied up in contracts, conferences, and university presidents.  However, there is no doubt the BCS is a self-serving entity and the less negative press they get, the better the chances are for a longer contract.

This year though, all hell nearly broke loose.  Texas barely escaped an monumental upset at the hands of Nebraska, Cincinnati had a massive comeback against Pitt, and Alabama just a week prior barely escaped an Iron Bowl upset themselves.  Think about that for just a little while.  We could quite easily be in a situation in which Alabama, Florida, Texas and Cincinnati would all have a loss–leaving only TCU and Boise State as the only undefeated teams in college football.  Even if just the Nebraska upset had worked out, the BCS still would’ve had a nightmare (ratings-wise) had Texas been the only upset to go through as that would give us an Alabama/Cincinnati title game.

However, as even their propaganda spewing Twitter account will tell you, the BCS is only worried about matching #1 and #2 together for the title game.  They are the white knight bringing order to a once chaotic landscape of an antiquated system of bowl tie-ins and media votes they say.  Without them, how else could we crown a definitive champion?!  If we went into a playoff system, the #4 team in the country could win the title and then we could have bracket creep and have #12 eventually win!

Well…so they say.

This season definitely proves where their “we always are able to put #1 v #2 together” breaks down.  Unless Texas is able to put one hell of a game plan together, their Big XII Title “performance” points to an absolute curb-stomping by the Tide.  And with three other undefeated teams left in the mix (two of which aren’t in non-BCS conferences), it begs the question, “who is really #2?”

So if you are the BCS, what do you do in this situation to stack the deck back into your favor?  If TCU, Boise, and Cincinnati all win their BCS games, remain undefeated and Texas gets killed, that is obviously the worse case scenario and is unacceptable.

However, you are the BCS and you are able to use your own system in your favor.

Just a refresher of these rules:

BCS Championship: #1 BCS vs. #2 BCS
Rose Bowl: Big Ten Champ vs. Pac 10 Champ
Fiesta Bowl: Big 12 Champ vs. At-large
Orange Bowl: ACC Champ vs. At-large
Sugar Bowl: SEC Champ vs. At-large

Rules for At-large: Big East champ, must be taken in one of the at-large spots.  Also, if a non-BCS conference team is ranked #12 or higher in the BCS, they also gain one of the at-large bids — only one team may receive such an automatic bid.

The only other rules to keep in mind is that if a bowl loses their conference tie in to the BCS title game, they will have the first pick at a replacement team — trying to stay to tradition they will try to stay in the same conference, but if they can’t, they will pick an at-large team.  Furthermore, only two teams max from the same conference can be selected to the BCS (there are exceptions, but they won’t happen this season).  Finally there is a set selection order to fill in the remaining at large bids.  This year it will be in the order of: Orange, Fiesta, and then Sugar.

So you have your BCS title game set automatically, as well as the Rose Bowl.  Now you have the following at-large order for picks: Sugar (they lose #1 Alabama to title), Fiesta (they lose #2 Texas to title), then Orange, Fiesta, and Sugar to end.

Now granted, what follows is guess work as the Bowls don’t reveal their selections pick by pick, just the end results.  However, the reasoning I will give does make sense considering the way things played out.

Bowls always do their best to keep their conference tie-ins.  So with the first pick, the Sugar immediately looks to the SEC and to no shock, selects Florida.  The Fiesta Bowl then looks to the Big XII, and finds there are no suitable candidates for the game.  Now they know a non-BCS team must be taken, and TCU makes sense as a regional pick, so they take them being the higher of the two non-BCS teams.

Now things really get interesting/funny/simply awful.

The Orange Bowl is next.  They have their ACC champ, Georgia Tech, already in place.  Left to pick are Big East Champs, undefeated, and #3 BCS ranked Cincinnati, undefeated and #6 BCS ranked Boise and at-large, two-loss, and #10 BCS ranked Iowa.  So of course, the clear, logical choice to pick here is…Iowa.  Yes, the same Iowa that during their undefeated streak continued to squeak out wins and were exposed by their two losses, one of which was Northwestern.

What’s the reason for this pick? You’ll hear from Orange Bowl reps that Iowa will travel better out of the remaining schools.  Although, it seems to make more sense to me that you would take the Big East Champ for the East-coast bowl game, especially since they won a BCS conference without losing a single game, but that just must be me and my silly logic!

So now with the Orange Bowl making the laughable pick, the Fiesta Bowl is next.  Left to them again are the Big East Champs and the second BCS buster.  Again, the clear choice is made…Boise State.  Why? I’m sure the Fiesta Bowl reps will say it makes more regional sense for Boise to be in the Fiesta Bowl rather than East-coast Cincinnati.  However, this still only seems to offend my crazy logic.

Finally, the Sugar Bowl is then required to pick up the “scraps” on the table as the Big East Champ is still without a BCS game and takes Cincinnati to finalize the selection process.  Keep in mind this is the same Cincinnati team that would be playing in the title game if Texas had lost; however, somehow they are magically the final team to be selected in the entire process.

Of course, I am sure a BCS rep would come in and tell me that; in fact, the Sugar Bowl took the Big East Champs as their first pick.  That argument makes no sense though.  Are you seriously going to sell me that the Orange Bowl was so high on Iowa that they would forgo a pick of in-state Florida?  I don’t think so.

The intent by the BCS couldn’t be more clear.  Place Cincinnati in easily the hardest of of all possible games, and have the two non-BCS schools sit at the kid’s table and play amongst themselves.  The worst case result here would be that Cincinnati beats Florida–it doesn’t matter what happens in the Fiesta Bowl, it is just two non-BCS schools fighting it out amongst themselves and the BCS knows no one in the media will legitimately make a case for either TCU or Boise as a #2 school with that win as the retort will be “well, who did those two schools actually beat?”  Even with a Cincinnati win, you have the argument that Florida was exposed in the SEC Championship game and clearly wasn’t as good as we thought they were–I mean, Cincinnati is ranked above them in the BCS standings!

Of course though, you have the best case scenario: no one cares about the Fiesta Bowl result, and Cincinnati loses to Florida.  The arguments of course are even easier for this case.

Either way, the BCS “gets it right” and college football and its fans get screwed.

TCU and Boise will probably be a great game, but having the two play themselves play each other is a slap in the face to both schools.  Non-BCS schools don’t fight just to get in a BCS Bowl, they fight to make a splash against a “big name” team.  They won’t get that chance at all.  It’s a joke and a sham.

Here is how the selection should have gone:

Sugar: Florida (BCS replacement) vs. Boise State (final at-large pick)
Fiesta: TCU (BCS replacement) vs. Iowa (2nd at-large pick)
Orange: Georgia Tech (ACC Champ) vs. Cincinnati (1st at-large pick)

I dare you to tell me that isn’t a damn good slate of games or makes “regional” sense for traveling.  Cincinnati gets the BCS Bowl closest to them, Fiesta gets Iowa, whom “travels better” than Boise, and the Sugar gets the remaining scraps because they pick last–though luck.

But no, as much as the BCS claims that their system clearly selects #1 v #2, that every week of the season matters, and that the most skilled teams will reap the greatest rewards, we have a situation more analogous to when “J”, played by Will Smith, joins the Men in Black:

J: All right, I’m in. ‘Cause there’s some next level shit going on and I’m OK with that. But before y’all go beaming me up there’s one thing you gotta remember: You chose me… so you recognized the skills, so I don’t want nobody calling me son or kid or sport or nothing like that, cool?

K: Cool, whatever you say, slick, but I need to tell you something about all your skills. As of right now, they mean precisely… dick.

Of course, it is easy for me to poke holes in the current system.  Do I have a better solution? You bet I do, I came up with it last year and it makes just as much sense then as it does now.

Instead, I’m left with an Orange Bowl that couldn’t be more unappealing, Rose Bowl game that will likely be a blow out, a Fiesta Bowl that means nothing, a Sugar Bowl that will barely mean much more, and a BCS Title game that will likely be another blow out.

FANTASTIC SYSTEM!