MNF: Cowboys@Cardinals

  • To unlock all of features of Rams On Demand please take a brief moment to register. Registering is not only quick and easy, it also allows you access to additional features such as live chat, private messaging, and a host of other apps exclusive to Rams On Demand.

Prime Time

PT
Moderator
Joined
Feb 9, 2014
Messages
20,922
Name
Peter
https://www.si.com/nfl/2017/09/25/monday-night-football-preview-cardinals-cowboys

Monday Night Football Preview: Analyzing Cardinals-Cowboys in Week 3
ANDY BENOIT

image

GETTY IMAGES

Three things to watch, plus a couple more, in the Cowboys-Cardinals Monday Night Football game:

1. THE RUNNING GAME BATTLE
Ezekiel Elliott ran nine times for eight yards in Week 2 at Denver, and the Cowboys’ offense was reduced to a shell of itself. This team is built around its rushing attack. Without it the Cowboys lose much of the play-action and rollout game that Dak Prescott runs so well, and they’re left fighting through their rudimentary aerial concepts, hoping receivers can make plays.

So far, those receivers have not. Terrance Williams is a precise route-runner but only within the context of the play design. Defenses don’t pay him special attention. On the other side, Dez Bryant struggles to separate, which won’t change tonight against superstud corner Patrick Peterson. Bryant is at his best on downfield routes that come out of running formations. If the ground game isn’t rolling, those running formations aren’t used.

Dallas’s O-line is good enough to create zone-running lanes against any defense, but the Cardinals are not an easy one. They feature a lot of “reduced fronts,” with a nosetackle directly over the center and 3-technique defensive tackles clogging the B-gaps on both sides. These D-linemen are taught to penetrate.

It’s a great formula against most ground games and a near-perfect one against an outside zone game like Dallas’s. In two outings, the Cardinals have given 82 and 76 yards rushing, respectively, against the Lions and Colts, and have averaged 2.82 yards per attempt through the first two games, which ranked fourth in the league through that time span.

2. THE JUSTIN BETHEL FACTOR
The sixth-year corner is the obvious weak link on what’s otherwise a fast and talented Cardinals defense. The problem is, the Cardinals are a matchup-based D, which makes Bethel easy to isolate. Cowboys receivers Brice Butler and Terrance Williams are both battling ankle injuries.

Whoever has the best ankle of those two will have at least two or three deep shots dialed up for him on Monday night. Bethel tends to stay too flat in his initial off-coverage position, which can slow his transition out of his backpedal. The Cowboys will attack this.

3. CARDINALS PASSING ATTACK
Against Indianapolis last week the Cardinals lined up in a four-wide receiver set on 18 of 43 Carson Palmer dropbacks. This was going to be a staple package of theirs even before receiving back David Johnson went down. With him out, the Cardinals will do it even more.

That’ll be especially true Monday night, given that Dallas’s secondary is young and without two of its top four corners, Nolan Carroll and Chidobe Awuzie. Look for the Cardinals to go four-wide, cluster the receivers together and run criss-crossing patterns off of it. They have a great opportunity to confuse and out-leverage Dallas’s zone defensive backs.

BONUS HITTERS
• Keep an eye on Cardinals first-round rookie linebacker Haason Reddick. He’s young and explosive, but he also looked very much like a rookie last week at Indy. You want to go right at Reddick and make him think, rather than away from him, where he can use his speed and react. Look for the Cowboys to direct their play-action his way.

• If Arizona’s passing game gets derailed by a schematically simple but improving Cowboys D, it will happen up front. This makeshift offensive line can’t pass-protect. Bruce Arians, in fact, may have to alter his system and use more six-man protections.

(Arians prefers to block with five so that all five eligible receivers can get out in routes.) Cowboys defensive end Demarcus Lawrence was great in Weeks 1 and 2. He should be looking forward to facing offensive tackles Jared Veldheer and John Wetzel.

BOLD PREDICTION
My editors are forcing me to be bold, so here goes: The Cowboys will sack Carson Palmer at least four times. Final: Dallas 24, Arizona 16.
 

ljramsfan

Pro Bowler
Joined
Jun 24, 2010
Messages
1,193
Name
LJ
https://www.si.com/nfl/2017/09/25/monday-night-football-preview-cardinals-cowboys

Monday Night Football Preview: Analyzing Cardinals-Cowboys in Week 3
ANDY BENOIT

image

GETTY IMAGES

Three things to watch, plus a couple more, in the Cowboys-Cardinals Monday Night Football game:

1. THE RUNNING GAME BATTLE
Ezekiel Elliott ran nine times for eight yards in Week 2 at Denver, and the Cowboys’ offense was reduced to a shell of itself. This team is built around its rushing attack. Without it the Cowboys lose much of the play-action and rollout game that Dak Prescott runs so well, and they’re left fighting through their rudimentary aerial concepts, hoping receivers can make plays.

So far, those receivers have not. Terrance Williams is a precise route-runner but only within the context of the play design. Defenses don’t pay him special attention. On the other side, Dez Bryant struggles to separate, which won’t change tonight against superstud corner Patrick Peterson. Bryant is at his best on downfield routes that come out of running formations. If the ground game isn’t rolling, those running formations aren’t used.

Dallas’s O-line is good enough to create zone-running lanes against any defense, but the Cardinals are not an easy one. They feature a lot of “reduced fronts,” with a nosetackle directly over the center and 3-technique defensive tackles clogging the B-gaps on both sides. These D-linemen are taught to penetrate.

It’s a great formula against most ground games and a near-perfect one against an outside zone game like Dallas’s. In two outings, the Cardinals have given 82 and 76 yards rushing, respectively, against the Lions and Colts, and have averaged 2.82 yards per attempt through the first two games, which ranked fourth in the league through that time span.

2. THE JUSTIN BETHEL FACTOR
The sixth-year corner is the obvious weak link on what’s otherwise a fast and talented Cardinals defense. The problem is, the Cardinals are a matchup-based D, which makes Bethel easy to isolate. Cowboys receivers Brice Butler and Terrance Williams are both battling ankle injuries.

Whoever has the best ankle of those two will have at least two or three deep shots dialed up for him on Monday night. Bethel tends to stay too flat in his initial off-coverage position, which can slow his transition out of his backpedal. The Cowboys will attack this.

3. CARDINALS PASSING ATTACK
Against Indianapolis last week the Cardinals lined up in a four-wide receiver set on 18 of 43 Carson Palmer dropbacks. This was going to be a staple package of theirs even before receiving back David Johnson went down. With him out, the Cardinals will do it even more.

That’ll be especially true Monday night, given that Dallas’s secondary is young and without two of its top four corners, Nolan Carroll and Chidobe Awuzie. Look for the Cardinals to go four-wide, cluster the receivers together and run criss-crossing patterns off of it. They have a great opportunity to confuse and out-leverage Dallas’s zone defensive backs.

BONUS HITTERS
• Keep an eye on Cardinals first-round rookie linebacker Haason Reddick. He’s young and explosive, but he also looked very much like a rookie last week at Indy. You want to go right at Reddick and make him think, rather than away from him, where he can use his speed and react. Look for the Cowboys to direct their play-action his way.

• If Arizona’s passing game gets derailed by a schematically simple but improving Cowboys D, it will happen up front. This makeshift offensive line can’t pass-protect. Bruce Arians, in fact, may have to alter his system and use more six-man protections.

(Arians prefers to block with five so that all five eligible receivers can get out in routes.) Cowboys defensive end Demarcus Lawrence was great in Weeks 1 and 2. He should be looking forward to facing offensive tackles Jared Veldheer and John Wetzel.

BOLD PREDICTION
My editors are forcing me to be bold, so here goes: The Cowboys will sack Carson Palmer at least four times. Final: Dallas 24, Arizona 16.

Dez Bryant needs to get 22 points for me tonight. That is all
 

The Ramowl

Starter
Joined
Oct 14, 2014
Messages
706
That should give us more info about where the Cardinals really stand. Our division seems pretty weak so far and definitely up for grabs, I hope the Cowboys will confirm that tonight.
 

DaveFan'51

Old-Timer
Rams On Demand Sponsor
Joined
Apr 18, 2014
Messages
18,666
Name
Dave
Except for the effect on the NFC West standings, I really do't care who Wins this game! I hate the Cowpie's and I could care less about the Cards! I guess I should just say ...

Violance.jpg

I hope they Beat the Shit out of each other!!!:D
 
Last edited:

Mojo Ram

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Feb 3, 2013
Messages
22,976
Name
mojo
Dallas fans will be invading the Cardinals' sardine can stadium tonight. It's not as bad as it was back in the Sun Devil Stadium bleacher days when there were more Cowboys fans then Cardinals fans...but Phoenix metro AZ has been and always will be Dallas town Southwest. It will be interesting.
----------------

Arizona Cardinals-Dallas Cowboys game tests fans' allegiances
For the Cardinals, the Cowboys coming to town has been like enduring a visit from a richer and more popular older brother. Everyone fawns over him for a few days and ignores the sibling who is around to take out the trash and clean up after the dog.

A couple of decades passed before the Cardinals became the most popular NFL team in their own town.

Vai Sikahema, a running back and returner for the Cardinals from 1986-90, grew up in Mesa, so he knew how popular the Cowboys were in Arizona. Still, Sikahema was taken aback when the Cardinals played their first home game in Arizona on Monday night, Sept. 12, 1988.

“It was a sea of silver and blue,” he said. “I remember I trotted out to pregame warmups with (teammates) Roy Green and Stump Mitchell and we actually got booed.”

The Cowboys’ popularity in Arizona dates to the pre-Cardinals days. When the Valley didn’t have an NFL team, Cowboys games were routinely broadcast in the market. The team won consistently, and it didn’t hurt that it had a handful of good players from Arizona State during some of those years.

It took a couple of decades for the dynamic to begin to shift in the Cardinals’ favor. The Cardinals moved into a stadium of their own in 2006, won more frequently and it was no longer uncool to buy tickets and apparel.

It hasn’t completely flipped, however, and the 2017 Cardinals know there will be plenty of Cowboys fans with Arizona driver's licenses when the teams meet Monday night at University of Phoenix Stadium.

When he arrived in Arizona in 2013, it didn’t take Cardinals coach Bruce Arians long to find out how popular the Cowboys were here.

“I was here about a week,” he said. “I heard all the stories, and rightfully so. They had no team they could root for (pre-Cardinals), so obviously they’re not going to change their allegiance.”

Much of the Cardinals’ history in Arizona can be told through their games against the Cowboys, beginning with the first home game at Sun Devil Stadium.

The Cardinals lost 17-14, partly due to a decision made by coach Gene Stallings before the last play of the first half.

The Cardinals were in position to kick a 42-yard field goal, but Stallings decided to run a fake. Kicker Al Del Greco took the lateral and was tackled at the 16-yard line.

Afterward, Stallings admitted the obvious: It was not a wise decision on his part.

“It doesn’t take a Phi Beta Kappa to figure that out,” he said.

The game also illustrated the Cardinals’ problems in prime time. From 1970 through 2014, the Cardinals were 7-15-1 on Monday nights, including losing eight of their first nine after moving from St. Louis to Arizona.

After the 1988 game, the Cardinals didn’t play on Monday night again until 1995, when they met the Cowboys on Christmas night. It turned out to be Buddy Ryan’s last game as coach and general manager.

The Cardinals were 4-11, and fans were disenchanted with Ryan, who had promised to bring a winner to town.

Two players got into a fight in the locker room before the game, with broadcaster and ex-Cardinals great Dan Dierdorf witnessing the scuffle.

The Cowboys whipped the Cardinals 37-13, and Ryan watched the end of the game from the tunnel, mistakenly leaving a bit early because he thought the game was over.

His tenure was over the next day.

For the Cardinals, the most memorable part of the game was fullback Larry Centers leaping over cornerback Larry Brown, which was shown in the movie “Jerry Maguire.”

Playing the Cowboys always provided a little extra motivation, Centers said.

“When things aren’t going great, you look for anything you can to motivate you,” Centers said. “That’s definitely something I used as fuel to help me step my game up any way I could.

“Plus, being from Texas and not necessarily being a Cowboys fan, it was always special when I got to compete against them.”

In 1998, the Cardinals made the playoffs for first time in a non-strike year since 1975. They met the Cowboys on Jan. 2, 1999, in the first round and upset them 20-7 in Dallas. It was the Cardinals’ first playoff victory since 1947.

Two years later, coach Vince Tobin was fired after the Cardinals lost to Dallas 48-7.

As an organization, the Cardinals' fortunes began to shift when they moved into University of Phoenix Stadium in 2006. Two years later, they went 9-7 and made it to their first Super Bowl.

One of those nine wins was in overtime over the Cowboys in Glendale. Sean Morey blocked a punt in overtime, and linebacker Monty Beisel returned it for the winning touchdown.

That started the Cardinals’ current four-game winning streak over the Cowboys, which includes two overtime victories and another that was settled by a field goal with seconds left.

There will be a considerable number of Cowboys fans at Monday's game, but it’s not like the old days, when a red jersey at Cardinals-Cowboys games stood out like a pimple.

Receiver Larry Fitzgerald pointed to the victory in 2008 as the pivot point.

“It’s been positive since then,” he said. “So hopefully we’ll have a good contingency of Cardinals fans in the building and not too much blue.”

http://www.azcentral.com/story/spor...boys-monday-night-football-history/691087001/
 

Prime Time

PT
Moderator
Joined
Feb 9, 2014
Messages
20,922
Name
Peter
  • Thread Starter Thread Starter
  • #15
http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap30...hings-to-watch-for-in-cowboyscardinals-on-mnf

Five things to watch for in Cowboys-Cardinals on 'MNF'
By Jeremy Bergman NFL.com

It's never too early to begin again, even when your invincibility has been shaken and your strengths have been exposed as weaknesses. So call this week's edition of Monday Night Football three and a half hours of soul-searching in the desert, because both the Dallas Cowboys and Arizona Cardinals are looking for answers after their early-season setbacks.

This NFC matchup of 1-1 teams pits two franchises against one another that have both exceeded expectations with 13-3 seasons in the past two years, but have since fallen on hard times, brief or not.

In Arizona's first game, their everything on offense, David Johnson, went down with a devastating wrist injury, keeping him out for at least half the season. With no equivalent replacement at the position -- Johnson's dual-threat attributes know no equal throughout the league -- the Cardinals have had to rely on the aging Carson Palmer and a wide receiving corps paced by Larry Fitzgerald, both of whom are rumored to be playing out their final seasons in football. This wasn't the plan in Glendale, but it's now the reality.

The Cowboys haven't been bothered by injuries so much as by, depending who you ask, a lack of effort. Dallas' blowout loss to the Broncos last Sunday saw Ezekiel Elliott and the Cowboys' run game shut down for the first time in his career, and then saw the back give up on a game-sealing interception.

(I won't say "quit" because that'll irk Michael Irvin and Cowboys fanatics worldwide and be disastrous for my mentions.) Dallas still has the talent to take the NFC East and lay waste the conference, but now has to rebound from arguably its worst offensive performance of the Dak-Zeke era and yet another distraction.

Here are five things to watch for on Monday night when the Cowboys travel to Arizona to battle the Cardinals in prime time:

1. Back in the saddle? The Broncos defense did a number on Dallas last week, relying on the No Fly Zone to lock down the Cowboys receivers with single coverage and stacking the box to stop Elliott from getting on a roll. The result? Elliott saw a stacked box on 77.8 percent of his carries and tallied just eight (!) rushing yards, while Prescott attempted a career-high 50 passes and threw two picks.

Playing through the pass is not and will not be the Cowboys' strategy this season, so look for them to get back to their bread (Texas toast?) and butter against Arizona. But can the Cards replicate Denver's dominant display and force the Cowboys into an uncomfortable evening?

Arizona boasts two of the top defensive backs in the league in Patrick Peterson and Tyrann Mathieu and the Cards load the box more than the league average (45.8 percent -- 10th in league).

2. Can Cards take flight? Depending on who you ask, Palmer has either lost five steps and is on his last legs or he's at the mercy of an unsure receiving corps forced to shoulder the load in David Johnson's absence. The jury's still out, but Monday presents a great opportunity for Palmer to right his season.

Dallas' secondary is inexperienced and injury-riddled and coming off its worst showing of the young season, surrendering four touchdowns to Trevor Siemian's Broncos on mostly intermediate routes in Week 2. Palmer and the Cards put up over 300 passing yards on a similarly inexperienced secondary in Indianapolis, primarily through J.J. Nelson and Jaron Brown.

If Arizona can use its passing game to control the game against Dallas and open up lanes for its backup runners, then the Cards have a chance to limit the Cowboys' time on the field and dictate the pace of play.

3. Elliott's effort: After having his loyalty to the franchise called into question, all eyes will be on Zeke on Monday night. The Cowboys star tailback needs a bounce-back performance after a listless showing against Denver punctuated by his lapse in effort on a Broncos interception, something he admitted to earlier this week.

With pressure building around Elliott -- remember that on-again, off-again suspension storyline? -- he needs to prove that last week was an aberration against a top-tier defense and that he is not heading toward a sophomore slump.

History says he'll do just that against an Arizona defense that has surrendered an average of only 79 rushing yards through two games. Following eight sub-100-yard ground games, Elliott has averaged 105.5 rushing yards in the ensuing tilt.

4. Texas takedowns: The focus of Dallas' offseason was to develop a pass rush, or as Jerry Jones colorfully put it, find a "war daddy" on the defensive line. So far, reviews are mixed. DeMarcus Lawrence has tallied a team-high 3.5 sacks in two games, second to only Calais Campbell (4) in the league. Unfortunately, first-round selection Taco Charlton has yet to make a meaningful impact on the other side of the line, recording just one tackle so far.

The return of the suspended Damontre Moore should inject some life into the pass rush, but if Dallas can't get to the quarterback against a beleaguered Cardinals offensive line that will be without starting left tackle D.J. Humphries and could be missing left guard Mike Iupati, then the 'Boys are in trouble.

5. Tight (end) coverage: Outside the hashes, the Dez Bryant vs. Patrick Peterson battle will be monitored, scrutinized and broken down on so many occasions that Jon Gruden will run out of euphemisms and telestrator ink. If you, the knowledgeable, curious football fan, are looking for other matchups or mismatches between the Dallas offense and Arizona defense, watch how the Cardinals try to cover Jason Witten.

Last week, Arizona surrendered eight receptions for 79 yards on eight targets to Colts tight end Jack Doyle, three of which came on third down and none of which came against Mathieu. If Dallas gets stuck in third-and-long situations and Bryant and Peterson are tussling on the outside, look for Dak to find his bulky security blanket in the slot.
 

OC--LeftCoast

Agent Provocateur
Joined
Nov 24, 2012
Messages
3,695
Name
Greg
Where's our pal @Rynie to give us his prediction?

582fbff71f11b540874699.gif

Well lemme take a crack at this,

where's @Rynie ??

Where most 'poke fans reside before a big game, pretty much a fetal position...thumb jammed in mouth :LOL:c'mon Rynster...break that mold, aw hell fact is I take a sizable pool if your boys win :rimshot:

Go Boys!!!
 

TexasRam

Legend
Joined
Jan 13, 2013
Messages
7,774
Am I bad person if I wish Prescott would twist his ankle just a little and be out just a few weeks?
 

Mikey Ram

Hall of Fame
Joined
Oct 20, 2014
Messages
3,398
Name
Mike
I can't win tonight...I don't want either team to win, but I want the Cards to lose more...Help the Rams hold on to the lead...
 

SteezyEndo

The Immaculate Exception
Joined
Sep 16, 2012
Messages
7,123
Hoping Cowboys win, but I hope the Cards give them hell. Make them earn that win!...Give us good tape.
 

Ram65

Legend
Joined
Apr 30, 2015
Messages
9,635
3. CARDINALS PASSING ATTACK
Against Indianapolis last week the Cardinals lined up in a four-wide receiver set on 18 of 43 Carson Palmer dropbacks. This was going to be a staple package of theirs even before receiving back David Johnson went down. With him out, the Cardinals will do it even more.

That’ll be especially true Monday night, given that Dallas’s secondary is young and without two of its top four corners, Nolan Carroll and Chidobe Awuzie. Look for the Cardinals to go four-wide, cluster the receivers together and run criss-crossing patterns off of it. They have a great opportunity to confuse and out-leverage Dallas’s zone defensive backs.

Bruce Arians is Palmer's worst enemy. Interesting to see how much Dallas defense gets pressure on Palmer.