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Revolt and Not Slow Down: an abbreviated history of Panthers vs. Cowboys


PhillyB
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early weeks require early measures. i wrote most of this bleary-eyed in the terminal at denver international airport waiting for a super-delayed red eye flight (and surrounded by donkey fans.)

thankfully i didn't see any dallas jerseys. re-living these games was downright cathartic and i should probably go see a doctor about my blood pressure now.

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1 minute ago, PhillyB said:

early weeks require early measures. i wrote most of this bleary-eyed in the terminal at denver international airport waiting for a super-delayed red eye flight (and surrounded by donkey fans.)

thankfully i didn't see any dallas jerseys. re-living these games was downright cathartic and i should probably go see a doctor about my blood pressure now.

Yeah, after reading this, I probably should too. I have blocked so much of this out. Can't wait to see what the officials have in store for us Thursday 

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Love the writing style. I laughed out loud at many points in the article. 

Some pre 2005 games that you didn't write about

2003 -  we get beat by quincy Carter and the Cowboys defense blitzes us all damn day long. At least we got revenge in the playoffs. 

2002 - we lost 14-13, also to quincy Carter after blowing a 13-0 lead in the 4th. A tuck rule call allows the Cowboys to keep the ball on their game winning drive. 

 

Edited by BIGH2001
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1 hour ago, PhillyB said:

How, exactly:

 

  • They can revolt by taking down a mid-tier Cowboys secondary forced to start rookie free safety Byron Jones in place of injured CB Morris Claiborne. The Dolphins beat him like a drum all day.
  • They can revolt by stifling a suddenly vulnerable-looking Cowboys offensive line that consists of Doug Free struggling against speed rushers and interior guards susceptible to talented, stunting under tackles (like Kawann Short.) 
  • They can revolt by frustrating an incredibly emotional Dez Bryant into making stupid, game-losing plays (or lack of plays entirely.)
  • They can revolt by forcing Tony Romo into impressively desperate throws that invariably turn into picks, as happened multiple times against the Dolphins.
  • They can revolt by grinding out tough ground yards against a Cowboys defensive line susceptible to undisciplined run defense, poor contain, and consistently leaving gaping holes between guard and tackle.

How does the Cowboys' pass rush and running game look?

Edited by pantherking15
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14 minutes ago, pantherking15 said:

How does the Cowboys' pass rush and running game look?

pass rush is hot/cold. i can't really key in on it exactly (and i haven't watched enough game film to give you any meaningful breakdowns there.) they are 23rd in sacks and dead last in forced fumbles, for whatever that's worth.

running game has been pretty good (especially with romo behind center) but mcfadden pulled his groin or something against the dolphins and he's questionable for sunday.

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    • I feel like this trade just lives rent free in people's heads and keeps morphing into different things. First thing is that the rumored trade was for future firsts. They wouldn't have any extra picks in 2023; the firsts would have been for 2024 and 2025. With very few exceptions, NFL GMs don't value picks that far away. You have to have a lot of job security to pull that off. Like Chiefs, Eagles, Rams kinda stability. That's obviously not the case with David Tepper, especially since he'd just fired his head coach. No GM except for like Howie Roseman is going to trade an asset you have now for a future asset you probably get to use.  Second, at the time you'd have to assume these are first rounders late in the first round. Obviously currency is currency and the panthers need young players, but these weren't slam dunk top ten picks. At the end of the day there's one pick that separates a first and second round pick.  Lastly, the only place that ever reported this trade was the Rams. All the reporters just repeated what McVay said and it became gospel. We have no idea how serious the negotiations were, if they ever really happened, if the offer was real, etc. And I personally believe McVay and Sneed are the kind of guys who would make up rumors like that to fug up other teams, mostly because I assume if I've thought of it someone smarter than me has.  I don't know how you'd call it the greatest draft haul of all time. Firsts quickly lose their value the farther out they are and Burns had 16.5 sacks last season. And anyway those picks would probably just been tossed into the burning inferno of the Bryce trade up so it's a moot point anyway. 
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