House of Cards comes falling down on embarrassed Cowboys

az1965

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azcentral.com take note how an article may be written... this is much better than the dallascentral... ur... I mean... azcentral.com had on their site.

House of Cards comes falling down on embarrassed Cowboys

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By Thomas George | NFL.com
Senior Columnist



GLENDALE, Ariz. -- A couple of concerns were on the Arizona Cardinals' minds before their collision with the Dallas Cowboys. Both anxieties involved embarrassment.

Up in the stands, the Cardinals wondered if Dallas fans would rule in numbers and in noise. They wondered if thousands of Cardinals fans would sell their tickets to Cowboys fans. That would embarrass the Arizona franchise in its own stadium.

"We focused ... on not buying into their hype. We, instead, decided to buy into each other."

-- Cards DE Antonio Smith​

On the field, the Cardinals wondered if the glitzy Cowboys they had studied from afar were even more quick and fleet and powerful up close. Was their best effort enough against talented Dallas? Despite the preparation, might the Cowboys embarrass them?

Well, the Cardinals fans showed up. Their team did, too.

It was a 30-24 Arizona victory in overtime before 64,389 mostly-red-clad fans that made both teams 4-2. Arizona won its sixth straight home game as it heads into its bye in first place in the NFC West.

Dallas heads to St. Louis a bit perplexed, plenty frustrated and -- thanks to Arizona for flipping the script -- embarrassed.

"Embarrassing and sickening," is the way that Dallas receiver Patrick Crayton described it.

Arizona received a 93-yard kickoff return for a touchdown by J.J. Arrington on the game’s first play and a Sean Morey blocked punt and 3-yard scoring return by Monty Beisel on the game’s last play.

In between, the Cardinals traded blows with Dallas as the game turned part alley-brawl as much as fancy and finesse. Dallas quarterback Tony Romo was sacked three times but hit, it seemed, 300 times. Running back Marion Barber, known for always dispensing blows, took wicked shots all day from the Arizona defense.

And though Crayton scored on a 55-yard pass and Barber on a 70-yard pass, though Nick Folk nailed a 52-yard field goal as regulation time expired to extend the game for Dallas, though Dallas won the overtime coin toss and looked prepped to drive, score, win and bolt ...

"We had other plans," said Cardinals defensive end Antonio Smith, who gained two hits on Romo and a fumble recovery. "They are as talented as advertised. But to me, they feed off that, feed off being the bully on the block. They have the big O-linemen, the big names. But we saw in film that the teams that did not buy into all of that, Cincinnati and Washington, the teams that hit them in the mouth and dished it back to Dallas, had success against them. So, we focused on ... not buying into their hype. We, instead, decided to buy into each other."

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Paul Connors / Associated PressMat McBriar's punt is blocked by Sean Morey and eventually recovered by Monty Beisel (52) for the winning touchdown in overtime.
That took the Cardinals a long way.

They were resilient in a game that was tied four times. They turned a deficit in total yards gained (Dallas 374, Arizona 276) into a weakened factor with big-play special teams matched by enough big plays elsewhere.

You heard Dallas players afterward talking about "tipping their hat" to the Cardinals and admiring "how much they brought it to us today." The Dallas players noticed the excitement, the electric atmosphere in the building. The Cowboys know a big-game, big-venue, big-ticket environment when they are in one.

This was it.

The Cardinals players decided to make the most of it.

Cardinals coach Ken Whisenhunt said he has seen his team lose games like this one. Give up when the going got prickly. Fold to the pressure. Not this time.

Cardinals quarterback Kurt Warner was asked if this victory created an identity for his team.

"It definitely could," he said. "No question, a big game against a top opponent, getting a win like this at home. There’s no telling what this could do for our football team."

After their bye, the Cardinals play at Carolina and then in successive weeks divisional games at St. Louis, home against San Francisco and then at Seattle. That could be the stretch where the Cardinals stake their firmest claim to the NFC West.

For the Cowboys, owner Jerry Jones after this loss was in the middle of the locker room early and late. Jones knew that his team would take this loss hard. He was there to soften the blow.

Jones said he did not expect the Cowboys to go where they want to go without some tough times, especially on the road. He said the Cardinals tested his team in mighty ways and were to be commended.

"Am I going to run out here and demand changes and look to shake things up?" Jones asked. "No. I’ve had a lot of games that I have lost that have bothered me more."

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Sunday, Oct. 12
» Minnesota 12, Detroit 10
» Atlanta 22, Chicago 20
» New Orleans 34, Oakland 3
» N.Y. Jets 26, Cincinnati 14
» Houston 29, Miami 28
» Tampa Bay 27, Carolina 3
» Indianapolis 31, Baltimore 3
» St. Louis 19, Washington 17
» Jacksonville 24, Denver 17
» Arizona 30, Dallas 24 (OT)
» Philadelphia 40, San Francisco 26
» Green Bay 27, Seattle 17
» San Diego 30, New England 10
Monday, Oct. 13
» N.Y. Giants at Cleveland, 8:30 p.m. ET (ESPN)
Bye week:
» Buffalo, Kansas City, Pittsburgh, Tennessee.



Jones knows that the Cowboys are in it for the long haul, that they want to compile victories and impress fans and the league and win 'em all. But 13-3 last year in the regular season got the Cowboys nothing in the playoffs. How does his team peak in January? That continues to be the Cowboys quest.

"Last year at this time," said Jones, "we were playing our best football. This year, right now, we are not. And while we all want more, that might not be such a horrible thing for right now."

All in Dallas, however, have to be anxious about the primary blueprint and message.

In training camp, in the preseason, it was all about "FINISH" for the Cowboys. Finish plays. Finish games.
Dallas did not do enough of that against Arizona.

In fact, afterward, coach Wade Phillips was talking about his disappointment in the team not being able to pull off "a miracle finish."
Thus, the Dallas mantra started with "FINISH" and six weeks into the season it is being tweaked to "miracle finish."

That does not make much sense to the Dallas players. It does not help keep them on point.

And that "point" is with their star status and grand following and incredible hopes, the Cowboys must always seek ways to relax, perform, win matchups. Doing that will lead Dallas to where it wants to go.

"I do believe in who we are and what we are," Jones said. "There’s a lot more down the road."
 

NeverSayDieFan

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Thanks for sharing...

Far MORE IMPORTANT to me, is NOT what the "media" says, BUT RATHER what their players say. ...And what I'm hearing from the Dallas side is the Cards took it to us. GO CARDS!! :D
 
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az1965

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After Arizona ended a two-game losing streak by crushing the previously unbeaten Buffalo Bills eight days ago, Cardinals coach Ken Whisenhunt resisted the urge to get overly excited. “When we don’t make mistakes or turn the ball over, we’re a pretty good team,” he said. “But we can’t ride the rollercoaster. We’ve got to get off of that.” Losing to the Cowboys Sunday after blowing a 10-point lead in the final two minutes would’ve been the equivalent of a harrowing free-fall, but Whisenhunt’s team avoided it by forcing a quick three-and-out in overtime, then becoming the first team to close out a victory with a blocked punt for touchdown on the final play. Sean Morey raced in to smother Mat McBriar’s kick, and Monty Beisel recovered and flopped into the end zone for the 30-24 triumph that gave the Cards (4-2) a two-game lead in the NFC West. Arizona’s improvement is not random; rather, it is the product of an improved front office guided by methodical general manager Rod Graves and armed with a shrewd player personnel director in Steve Keim. This past April, Keim unearthed fifth-round halfback Tim Hightower of Richmond, a player not even invited to the NFL scouting combine. On Sunday, with the Cards facing a third-and-17 in the third quarter, Hightower managed to catch a deflected pass and run for the first-down yardage, setting up a game-tying touchdown. Meanwhile wideout Steve Breaston, a 2007 fifth-round pick out of Michigan, filled in admirably for the injured Anquan Boldin with eight receptions for 102 yards and a TD.

Yahoo.com
 

PortlandCardFan

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"We had other plans," said Cardinals defensive end Antonio Smith, who gained two hits on Romo and a fumble recovery. "They are as talented as advertised. But to me, they feed off that, feed off being the bully on the block. They have the big O-linemen, the big names. But we saw in film that the teams that did not buy into all of that, Cincinnati and Washington, the teams that hit them in the mouth and dished it back to Dallas, had success against them. So, we focused on ... not buying into their hype. We, instead, decided to buy into each other."

This whole paragraph is excellent!!!
 

john h

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Far MORE IMPORTANT to me, is NOT what the "media" says, BUT RATHER what their players say. ...And what I'm hearing from the Dallas side is the Cards took it to us. GO CARDS!! :D


In that one game the Cowboys lost their QB for 5 weeks, their all pro punter for the year and Felix Jones for 2-3 weeks. Now they have to go with a 40 year old QB who has not played in some time and find a punter.

This should remind us just how fragile any team can be. Our 38 year old QB could go down at any time as he does not have the OL the Cowboy have. If we were to lose Warner IMHO our playoff hopes would be dashed. Matt may be the guy someday but he would not perform at the same level as Warner. Warner has the timing down with his receivers, can make the experienced play calls at the line, and is clearly the team leader. We just have to hope we continue to have good fortune. Things are looking good for us but our luck over the years has not been very good. Football fortunes are also controlled by luck as well as ability.
 
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