Saturday, September 17, 2011

Cowboys Issues...


Cowboys Issues:

Jerry's been trippin
The Cowboys have more to worry about than just being 0-1 and losing their first game in a horrendous, 2010esque fashion. Lets start up top. The Cowboys have a lunatic in charge of the important decisions. Jerry thought Romo played a great game last week. That is a mentally challenging argument to make. He also thought that it would be okay to only have 4 cornerbacks on the roster, one of whom is injury-prone and the other three unproven…here is where the problems will begin.

Terence Newman will be out once again, and despite Alex Smith’s ineptness, the 49ers do have playmakers in the receiving corps. Mike Jenkins has been banged up, although he did play well last week. Now Orlando Scandrick is out for 4 weeks and the only person left is Alan Ball? Alan Ball sucks, there is no way around that.

Sean Lee looks like an emerging star and hopefully he and the boys up front can create enough havoc to help out the secondary, but once again the Cowboys look stupid for not having properly bolstered their secondary.

On the offensive side of the ball, the team is going to live and die by the arm of Romo. He is good enough to put points on the board, but in the end he is a hog chugger. He has failed time and time again to excel when it matters most I have defended him in the past, and his talent is unquestionable; but I am sick of reading articles by Dallas journalists who talk about how much Tony Romo loves playing under pressure and isn’t scared of it. Great, he’s not scared, he just blows under it.

Also, the offensive line and running game need to step it up. I realize the Jets run defense is among the league best, but Felix Jones needs to start replicating his preseason. The young guys, like Bill Nagy are going to have to do a better job of generating push. Newly signed Derrick Dockery is expected to start this week because of a neck injury to Nagy. Also, the line and Tashard Choice need to get a damn yard when you need a damn yard. That is unacceptable.

Dez Bryant’s status is questionable with a bruised thigh. He needs to man up and play. He is too important to the team to not play, especially since the thought of Kevin Olgletree being the starter opposite Miles Austin makes me want to jump off my roof.

Issues aside, I expect Dallas to crush their once heated rival, the San Francisco 49ers. Just sayin.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Too bad his collar bone healed...


Week 1: Cowboys 24 Jets 27

Romo has lost the last 6 games he's started
I’m sorry, I thought Wade Phillips was fired last season. This team choked in the same way that Wade’s teams choked last season. Choked hard on the hog. Tony Romo may have proven once and for all that he will never live up to his superfluous expectations. He has failed, often miserably, in too many big games… and yes, this was a huge game.

The Jets were one of the best teams in the NFL last year, and should be again this year. We have a matchup of the Ryan brothers and this was the Cowboys first game after a terrible 2010, with Jason Garrett completely in control. They outplayed the Jets for the entire game, and then Romo literally handed the game back to the Jets. How do you toss a 64 yard pass to Witten and get to the Jets 2 yard line and then fucking fumble that away? Sorry Tony, you’re not a kid anymore, you’re supposed to be a grown ass man. You’re a veteran in you’re 30’s now. Tuck that ball away, slide on the ground. Do anything but what you did.

Then, after your defense gets your back and forces a Jets turnover,  what do you do?  Foolishly and arrogantly try to force the ball to Dez Bryant whose being guarded by the best receiver in football? I know Dez had been performing well earlier in the game but that is just fucking stupid.

Also, good teams don’t have things like getting punts blocked happen to them. That’s just childish. The Cowboys look like they will be a hell of a lot more competitive than last year, but it won’t matter if we have a quarterback who continuously blunders about in big moments and it won’t matter if we have a team that still “shrinks in the moment” and blows 4th quarter leads. Talk is cheap Red J…results determine your worth. 

Sunday, September 11, 2011

AMERICA: A Brief Essay on What Defines Americans



Today marks the ten-year anniversary of the most tragic and shocking day in American history. On a quiet, beautiful morning ten years ago, the clear blue New York skies were diluted with a shroud of terrible and angry fire, smoke, and debris, as two commercial airliners struck the Twin Towers. A few hundred miles south, the Pentagon was breached by another doomed airplane. United Flight 93 tumbled fatally into a field in Pennsylvania.

September 11th changed the entire world but it did not change who American’s are. It simply reinvigorated, perhaps revitalized, and definitely reaffirmed what we are, and what we have been since our colonial birth. 9/11 ultimately begs the question; What is an American?

When people talk about America, trite adjectives such as Freedom and Patriotism are often thrown carelessly around. Sometimes, unbeknownst to us, we take for granted that we live in the greatest nation that has existed on this ancient planet. That is a fact. We have proven time and time again that our nations backbone is not brittle, but in fact, more hardened and sturdy than that of any other nation on this earth. Our people are the most resilient on the planet and that is because it is in our blood.  

This nation was founded on the premise of personal freedom in all fractions of life. The notion of defying tyranny and having freedom of religion, expression and thought as well as a chance to delineate the course of your own life, were not new ideas but we were the first to turn the key and make it a way of life.

Washington Crossing the Deleware
 We founded our nation, starting with the Declaration of Independence, under the premise that no man should be deprived of “Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.” Over 200 years later, we don’t have a perfect society, but perfection is impossible. It is the journey that defines perfection. George Washington believed so much in the idea of America that he risked everything he had, and extracted everything his ragged army had, to defeat the greatest army in the world at the time.

The brilliant minds of the founding fathers, bickered and squabbled, as our politicians do now, over what sort of document could govern “The Land of the Free.” They did not let their differences stop them however, and produced our Constitution, which, despite its little imperfections, has held this country together for generations.

Abraham Lincoln was willing to wage a war to not only exercise the rhetoric of the Declaration of Independence to its full capacity and abolish slavery, but to ensure that this nation remained unified. More American’s died in the Civil War than in any other endeavor we have partaken in. Still, it is a terrible but positive chapter in our history. We endured.

In the late 1950’s and throughout  1960’s, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and others held their ground against an undercurrent of sick and overt racism and demanded that America live up to its credence. The success of the human rights era of the United States finally helped to complete the composition of the country.

 We are a country of eclectic character. We are all immigrants; A melting pot of personal and collective struggle, fight and determination. We may not all embody the exact same principles and we may not all share the same specific beliefs, but we share a bond that is stronger than the greatest stone pillars on earth. We wake up and breathe a fresher air than anywhere else in the world. That air is fresher because we created it, without any compromise.

Many countries have tired to emulate our principles, and none have yet to elicit the success we have. Many other countries despise us because, in reality, we enjoy prosperity and a degree of happiness that is impossible for them.

We enjoy the freedom to make choices and enjoy social and economic prosperity. We can drink beer, smoke cigarettes, sing and dance, laugh and cry, wherever and whenever we want. We can get an education and if we apply ourselves in the correct manner, get whatever kind of job we want. We don’t have to look over our shoulder after every decision we make. We have a beautiful country that is worth fighting for, and that is why we have greater will and an unyielding, implacable strength that cannot be matched.

Our reaction to 9/11 was just an affirmation of this. The terrorists drastically underestimated our reserve, which is forged with blood and steel.  They thought that we would keel over and cry ourselves to death after the greatest attack on our nations soil. True, we were shocked and appalled, but we did the only thing we knew how to do: We got up, looked the devil straight in the eye and told him to come get some. As British philosopher Edmund Burke once said, “All that is necessary for evil to succeed, is for good men to do nothing.”  Point taken. Evil did not succeed, and will never succeed in this country.

As I write from my hotel balcony in Beirut, I can’t help but think of the Stars and Stripes that define our country. They defined my father and his father before him. They define me and always will. These stripes do not fray, do not wither and will not tear. They will endure longer than time itself.

 I was told here that I need to act less American or I could get into trouble; Wrong advice to tell an American. We our too proud and we have good reason to be. Being American may mean something different to every individual but there is one thing that it means for sure. It means being great.

Thomas Paine once famously wrote “ These are the times that try men’s souls: The summer solider and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of his country; but he that stands it Now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict the more glorious the triumph.” We are no sunshine patriots. We are American Patriots; Triumph We Have, Triumph We Will.



Cowboys resign Jason Witten

For all of Jerry Jones' failures as a GM in the past 15 years he has gotten a few things right. Today he resigned Jason Witten to a 5 yr 37million dollar deal, ensuring that the franchises best TE will retire a Cowboy. This comes on the wings of the Cowboys resigning Jay Ratliff who, along with DeMarcus Ware, is the cornerstone of the Cowboys defense.

Witten hasn't just been a model of consistency, tenacity and hard work. He has been one of the few ELITE tight ends in NFL history, not just Cowboys history. He embodies what an NFL player should be, and is respected not only by his contemporary peers but by former legends as well. He works his ass off and demands excellence from not only himself but his teammates. He blocks well, he catches nearly everything that comes his way and he runs routes in such an exceptional manner he is almost impossible to cover despite his lack of speed.

Jerry has fucked up the draft almost every year but by resigning Romo, Witten, Ware, Ratliff and Doug Free to long term deals, there is an exceptional core in place. Now the rest of the body needs to be filled out in an appropriate manner.