WEBVTT - Mick Shots: Moving On

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<v Speaker 1>The following is a production of Dallas Cowboys dot Com

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<v Speaker 1>and the Dallas Cowboys Football Club.

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<v Speaker 2>Cowboys.

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<v Speaker 3>This is Mick Shot screaming live on Dallascowboys dot Com

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<v Speaker 3>and the official Dallas Cowboys apt now Here are Bill Jones,

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<v Speaker 3>Savannah Humoller, Everson Wolves, and Mickey Spagnola.

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<v Speaker 4>It's a moving on.

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<v Speaker 5>Tuesday here inside the SWBC podcast studio, as it's a

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<v Speaker 5>beautiful day here at the Star in Frisco, in a

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<v Speaker 5>beautiful day to look ahead to the Los Angeles Chargers

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<v Speaker 5>next Monday night. Bill Jones, you got all the names

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<v Speaker 5>right off the top there.

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<v Speaker 6>Everson.

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<v Speaker 5>I heard you talked about on serious NFL Radio on

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<v Speaker 5>the drive end, Charle Charlie Weiss, what you talking about?

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<v Speaker 6>What does that do wrong? Bring up Dwight clock again

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<v Speaker 6>is the one who know.

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<v Speaker 5>Charlie Wise was talking about Everson Walls. He was talking

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<v Speaker 5>about teams picking up veteran defensive backs when guys go

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<v Speaker 5>down with injured.

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<v Speaker 6>Thank you.

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<v Speaker 5>He was talking to Bob Poppa's co host Wow, and

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<v Speaker 5>he said, and I think that the Bills signed Josh Norman.

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<v Speaker 6>And veteran cornerback and.

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<v Speaker 5>So love that move because he said, you can't have

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<v Speaker 5>enough veteran cornerbacks on your team. And then he said,

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<v Speaker 5>I'll give you Everson Walls. Remember Everson Walls. That was

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<v Speaker 5>the prototype veteran corner joining a championship level team, and

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<v Speaker 5>how that story turned out.

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<v Speaker 7>I was nine years in the league at the time. Well,

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<v Speaker 7>Josh Norman, what is he right now?

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<v Speaker 6>He's around that, around that probably he's port thirty. He's

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<v Speaker 6>just blowing me off now.

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<v Speaker 4>I can look it up. You keep talking.

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<v Speaker 7>I don't think, don't I don't think. I think he's

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<v Speaker 7>little older than I was when I went to the Giants.

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<v Speaker 7>But yeah, that was one of those things. But I

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<v Speaker 7>still had something left. You know, that's the main town.

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<v Speaker 7>You don't want to just pick up any player.

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<v Speaker 5>Oh, Josh Jordan is older, see what I'm saying?

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<v Speaker 4>Oh years old?

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<v Speaker 6>Yes, I thought I was.

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<v Speaker 7>I think I wasn't even thirty yet when I had

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<v Speaker 7>gone to the Giants. So yeah, it still had a

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<v Speaker 7>little something left. It wasn't that well when I went there.

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<v Speaker 7>I guess they were just looking for a guy to

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<v Speaker 7>back up. I don't think they realized how good I

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<v Speaker 7>was going to be.

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<v Speaker 5>You know, so much funny about it was you're looking

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<v Speaker 5>for a veteran guy, a guy and making the way

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<v Speaker 5>he described it, he said, he got a veteran guy.

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<v Speaker 6>He might be slow, but that's the story of my career.

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<v Speaker 6>But you know, just so, I mean, I wasn't just there.

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<v Speaker 7>I ended up breaking into the starting lineup, so I

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<v Speaker 7>wasn't just there, and I knew that what I was

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<v Speaker 7>there for. And I told Psels you let me start,

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<v Speaker 7>I'm gonna help you win the Super Bowl. I swear

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<v Speaker 7>to god, I told him those words because he was

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<v Speaker 7>just blowing me off like something Jersey guy, a whatever kid.

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<v Speaker 7>Yeah yeah, yeah, whatever. He didn't believe a word I said.

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<v Speaker 7>I promised him I would help him win the Super Bowl.

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<v Speaker 7>The only person that really believed in me was Belichick,

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<v Speaker 7>and he came in smiling. I hadn't seen him smile

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<v Speaker 7>since that's the first time I saw him smiling. The

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<v Speaker 7>last time I saw him smile, I had to work no,

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<v Speaker 7>you know, he smiled later on that year, though.

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<v Speaker 6>So we had we we knew what we had.

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<v Speaker 7>We had a team that ran his own zone defense,

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<v Speaker 7>which helped a lot in regards to myself and the

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<v Speaker 7>man to man that we had to play, but also

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<v Speaker 7>having Launch Taylor on the team. Just got to tell you,

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<v Speaker 7>not just him, but Pepper and that whole defense. We

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<v Speaker 7>won the way you were supposed to win, and that's

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<v Speaker 7>what defense. So I was happy to leave that.

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<v Speaker 5>Team in interceptions, Mackey, on these days, thirty years from now,

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<v Speaker 5>we're gonna be talking about a veteran linebacker that the

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<v Speaker 5>Cowboys brought him in five or six games into the

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<v Speaker 5>season when their middle linebacker goes down with an injury,

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<v Speaker 5>and now he led them to the promised Land.

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<v Speaker 6>Right, who are we talking about?

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<v Speaker 5>Well, you do tell Mickey, right, Oh yeah, there's Mickey

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<v Speaker 5>is scouring.

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<v Speaker 6>Oh yeah, rosters for you guys talking to me. Yes,

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<v Speaker 6>we're talking.

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<v Speaker 5>That was the bad news of yesterday as Leighton vander

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<v Speaker 5>esh reportedly four to six weeks.

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<v Speaker 4>So here's the deal on him. I can't help you there.

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<v Speaker 4>Uh he suffered you know, they called it a neck injury. Right,

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<v Speaker 4>he suffered a severe stinger. But when he goes down,

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<v Speaker 4>knowing that a couple of years ago he had to

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<v Speaker 4>have uh, disc surgery for his neck and fuse two

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<v Speaker 4>of the vertebrates together. When they take the dis you know,

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<v Speaker 4>everybody calls it spinal surgery. You don't surgically repair your spine,

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<v Speaker 4>you repair your vertebrate.

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<v Speaker 5>Uh.

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<v Speaker 4>And I think that's why you saw all the concern

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<v Speaker 4>while he was laying there though he had he had movement.

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<v Speaker 4>He's you can see his feet were moving, his hands

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<v Speaker 4>were moving.

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<v Speaker 8>Uh.

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<v Speaker 4>So it's a it's it's a stinger. And you tell

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<v Speaker 4>me if you had, you know, a case of a

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<v Speaker 4>kind of a case of spinal stenosis and you've already

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<v Speaker 4>had dysurgery, and you go down and you feel some tingling,

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<v Speaker 4>what's going through your mind?

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<v Speaker 9>It's taking you right back there.

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<v Speaker 10>You're like, that's it.

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<v Speaker 6>Took me, even as a fan, as a fan, that's

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<v Speaker 6>where it took me. I was like, and think.

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<v Speaker 5>Especially his posture as is the crown of his helmet

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<v Speaker 5>hits aside of Micah, and it's those are what causes

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<v Speaker 5>the neck, the severe neck injuries. When you got your

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<v Speaker 5>head all the way down and.

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<v Speaker 4>Think about it, if it went through your mind and

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<v Speaker 4>your mind, what was going going through his No doubt, right,

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<v Speaker 4>So they're going to put him on injured reserve, and

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<v Speaker 4>I thought, you know, it's four weeks, so I'm going, oh,

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<v Speaker 4>that's good because there's a bye weekend there, so it's

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<v Speaker 4>really three now, the bye week doesn't count four games,

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<v Speaker 4>not four.

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<v Speaker 10>Games for four games.

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<v Speaker 4>So and then I'm thinking, okay, you're it's good that

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<v Speaker 4>he'll have five weeks, right, but he can't practice, so

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<v Speaker 4>to me, you don't just come off the IR up. Yeah,

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<v Speaker 4>so it's probably.

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<v Speaker 6>Five I've heard that many times.

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<v Speaker 4>It's probably five five games.

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<v Speaker 5>So four games takes you through the Giants game on

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<v Speaker 5>November twelfth.

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<v Speaker 4>So you missed him first Philadelphia game.

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<v Speaker 5>Put him on IR this week. It's four games, five weeks,

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<v Speaker 5>So November nineteenth at Carolina would be his first game eligible.

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<v Speaker 5>And then that's the Sunday before Thanksgiving, and so you

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<v Speaker 5>got Washington on Thanksgiving Day on the twenty third.

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<v Speaker 4>So when's the Philadelphia game? The first one?

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<v Speaker 5>The first Philadelphia game is November fifth, so.

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<v Speaker 4>He would miss he would miss that.

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<v Speaker 6>That's that's just.

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<v Speaker 5>We got Chargers by week who stole the Rams of

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<v Speaker 5>November twenty ninth, and Philadelphia on.

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<v Speaker 4>November fifth, somebody stole the media.

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<v Speaker 5>So you're looking at basically Thanksgiving week.

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<v Speaker 4>Yeah, and that's a short week.

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<v Speaker 5>So and you got a Thursday game the week after

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<v Speaker 5>that too, against Seattle right on November thirtieth.

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<v Speaker 4>Okay, so you asked, what are they going to do

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<v Speaker 4>at linebacker? Well, obviously, Damone Clark now is going to

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<v Speaker 4>play more snaps, so he'll be the main guy.

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<v Speaker 5>And that wasn't as big a concern. I mean, Damone

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<v Speaker 5>Clark can do the Leyton vander esh It's it's what

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<v Speaker 5>it's the trickle down.

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<v Speaker 4>From trickle down. That's where I was going to go

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<v Speaker 4>because Clark ended up playing sixty five percent of the snaps.

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<v Speaker 4>But when we were talking with John Fossil, it becomes

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<v Speaker 4>a special teams problem because I didn't realize that Clark

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<v Speaker 4>was playing that many special team snaps. So in the

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<v Speaker 4>game he played nineteen special team snaps. I think there

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<v Speaker 4>were twenty five in the game, so he plays seventy percent. Well,

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<v Speaker 4>if he's got to take up the slack, he's not

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<v Speaker 4>going to be on special teams. Now, you've got to

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<v Speaker 4>have somebody step up on special teams.

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<v Speaker 6>You know.

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<v Speaker 4>And they also he's pretty young guy, isn't Yeah, Oh no,

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<v Speaker 4>and he's willing, yeah, Fossil was that was one of

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<v Speaker 4>the things impressed him about Clark that he he wanted

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<v Speaker 4>to go out there and help.

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<v Speaker 7>Yeah, we already, I mean, is this a change because

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<v Speaker 7>you know, that's what veterans do.

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<v Speaker 4>Well, that's what second year got.

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<v Speaker 7>Well still you know, yeah, a young kid is yeah,

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<v Speaker 7>uh well, now he's a veteran. He has to play, right,

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<v Speaker 7>he has no choice. Yeah, I mean playing special teams

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<v Speaker 7>depending on how where they put it.

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<v Speaker 4>And that and that's the thing.

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<v Speaker 5>He he's not playing every snap on on defense like

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<v Speaker 5>Layton was. Yeah, Layton late he was a guy. Yeah,

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<v Speaker 5>Layton's eight three down linebacker. And so his special teams.

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<v Speaker 5>He had six special team snaps in the last game

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<v Speaker 5>in New England Game two, so many Clark is going now.

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<v Speaker 5>Clark against San Francisco wound up playing forty six snaps.

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<v Speaker 5>Part of that was lateon went out late, but also

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<v Speaker 5>the way San Francisco used a full But he's gonna

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<v Speaker 5>be on the field more against San Francisco than what

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<v Speaker 5>he was against New England when he was on the

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<v Speaker 5>field for twenty five snaps.

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<v Speaker 6>Against New England.

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<v Speaker 7>To me, I don't know, it's just to me, special

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<v Speaker 7>teams shouldn't tax you that much.

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<v Speaker 10>You know, really these days you're.

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<v Speaker 6>Not thank you, thank you, You're not the gunner right

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<v Speaker 6>right now? That's serious.

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<v Speaker 7>Yeah, But now, I especially a young man like that.

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<v Speaker 7>I don't see that being a.

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<v Speaker 4>You could put him out there on kickoff coverage because

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<v Speaker 4>you never have a kickoff to cover.

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<v Speaker 7>And you know you don't have so many guys making

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<v Speaker 7>plays on special teams anyway.

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<v Speaker 4>So here here's the downside. In that game, he led

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<v Speaker 4>the team with ten tackles, so i'm assuming leading Layton did.

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<v Speaker 4>I'm assuming he's the team leader in tackles. Now, you've

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<v Speaker 4>got to be able to replace that had eight.

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<v Speaker 6>Yeah. Right, So.

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<v Speaker 4>Again, now in some of the change up things, if

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<v Speaker 4>it's Clark, you can use Marquise Bell to me. And

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<v Speaker 4>I think I said it yesterday. Parsons is a linebacker,

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<v Speaker 4>and Parsons and Clark are my starting linebackers. I don't

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<v Speaker 4>think there's any other way around it. I think that's

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<v Speaker 4>what it's got to be. And I think he'll be

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<v Speaker 4>even more effective at linebacker because they can't double team

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<v Speaker 4>a linebacker as easily as a defense.

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<v Speaker 6>You'll still probably put him on the line on third down.

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<v Speaker 4>And that's fine, Yes, that's fine. That so he still

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<v Speaker 4>has against two tight ends or a tight end and

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<v Speaker 4>a full back, he's got to be my linebacker.

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<v Speaker 5>So it's basically in situations where previously you had Leyton

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<v Speaker 5>and Damon Clark on the field at the same time

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<v Speaker 5>you've got Parsons in de Mont Clark. It's when Damon

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<v Speaker 5>would have come off the field in a nickel situation.

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<v Speaker 5>That's when Damone is in Layton spot and Micah is

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<v Speaker 5>back doing what he was doing.

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<v Speaker 4>Right, exactly what and Marquise Bells Bells helps out and

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<v Speaker 4>those nickel situations.

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<v Speaker 5>Marquise Bell is a safety who converted the linebacker five

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<v Speaker 5>weeks ago, and you need another so you additional linebacker,

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<v Speaker 5>and you need a couple actually, and.

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<v Speaker 6>You need you need someone with some experience.

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<v Speaker 7>I talked about this yesterday and you were you were

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<v Speaker 7>right in saying that, well, these guys are veterans. They

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<v Speaker 7>I don't think they are veterans in this defense, right,

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<v Speaker 7>They're not veterans in this defense. So when I talked

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<v Speaker 7>about the inexperience yesterday, I meant they don't know how

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<v Speaker 7>in this defense to attack three tight end offense, well,

0:12:11.520 --> 0:12:13.640
<v Speaker 7>two tight ends with the with the big, big fullback.

0:12:13.880 --> 0:12:16.079
<v Speaker 7>They don't know what that's all about. They don't know

0:12:16.120 --> 0:12:21.080
<v Speaker 7>where to feel they create the the mismatches, especially as

0:12:21.120 --> 0:12:24.199
<v Speaker 7>far as numbers are concerned, by going back weak side

0:12:24.240 --> 0:12:28.000
<v Speaker 7>every time, and yaw, you're stuck with either Bland or

0:12:28.120 --> 0:12:31.560
<v Speaker 7>Marquise Bell trying to fill that hole and turn it inside.

0:12:32.000 --> 0:12:35.960
<v Speaker 6>That's where they're not catching the experience. Then they go play.

0:12:35.760 --> 0:12:38.439
<v Speaker 7>Action on that and now they're totally lost because it's

0:12:38.480 --> 0:12:40.480
<v Speaker 7>not a run, it's a past. They have no idea

0:12:40.520 --> 0:12:43.520
<v Speaker 7>what the matchup is. That's how we end up getting burned.

0:12:43.800 --> 0:12:47.400
<v Speaker 7>They knew that the linebacker would not or the safety

0:12:47.440 --> 0:12:49.679
<v Speaker 7>I can't remember, would not be able to catch that

0:12:49.720 --> 0:12:53.400
<v Speaker 7>tight slot man coming all the way across, or Kittle,

0:12:53.559 --> 0:12:54.880
<v Speaker 7>Kittle where tight slot.

0:12:54.960 --> 0:12:57.120
<v Speaker 4>Bell watched him go right.

0:12:57.400 --> 0:13:00.520
<v Speaker 7>Well, that's because he's thinking. First of all, he's thinking right.

0:13:00.600 --> 0:13:03.440
<v Speaker 7>Second of all, based on that play action and the formation.

0:13:03.800 --> 0:13:06.160
<v Speaker 6>He had no idea. He went out the couple that time.

0:13:06.000 --> 0:13:11.319
<v Speaker 4>And then nobody, nobody re routed Kittle when he came

0:13:11.360 --> 0:13:12.520
<v Speaker 4>off the line he ran.

0:13:12.640 --> 0:13:15.640
<v Speaker 6>No one reroutes anymore. They don't rerout anymore.

0:13:15.720 --> 0:13:16.120
<v Speaker 4>Why not?

0:13:16.440 --> 0:13:16.959
<v Speaker 6>I don't know.

0:13:17.080 --> 0:13:19.520
<v Speaker 7>I hate it when you're in the slot. That's what

0:13:19.559 --> 0:13:22.000
<v Speaker 7>we did in New York. You're gonna re route that man.

0:13:22.080 --> 0:13:25.760
<v Speaker 7>Belichick's whole thing was you better put a shoulder, a

0:13:25.880 --> 0:13:29.280
<v Speaker 7>hip or something on that slot man to divert him

0:13:29.480 --> 0:13:30.320
<v Speaker 7>to the safety.

0:13:31.360 --> 0:13:32.840
<v Speaker 6>No one does that anymore Spas.

0:13:33.040 --> 0:13:35.520
<v Speaker 7>They really don't unless they're playing man to man period.

0:13:35.720 --> 0:13:38.160
<v Speaker 7>They always let the slot man go. That's why you

0:13:38.200 --> 0:13:39.760
<v Speaker 7>got so much pressure on your safety is in.

0:13:39.679 --> 0:13:44.120
<v Speaker 4>The back because the one route that Kittle came across

0:13:44.160 --> 0:13:47.640
<v Speaker 4>and Bell didn't pick him up. Vander ash just took

0:13:47.640 --> 0:13:51.319
<v Speaker 4>a step over there at Kittle, but he never touched him,

0:13:51.760 --> 0:13:54.600
<v Speaker 4>and I don't know what his responsibility was, but I

0:13:54.679 --> 0:13:57.920
<v Speaker 4>was thinking, well, if you reroute him there, you know,

0:13:58.120 --> 0:13:58.560
<v Speaker 4>get in there.

0:13:58.640 --> 0:14:01.880
<v Speaker 7>That's why the Giants d fence was so good. With Belichick,

0:14:02.080 --> 0:14:05.959
<v Speaker 7>we always re route. No one has a free release

0:14:06.080 --> 0:14:09.160
<v Speaker 7>in the slot position. Maybe on the outside, yes, but

0:14:09.240 --> 0:14:11.160
<v Speaker 7>the slot position you can't have it.

0:14:11.440 --> 0:14:13.000
<v Speaker 6>That's a foregone conclusion.

0:14:13.040 --> 0:14:15.720
<v Speaker 7>Now in the NFL, I don't hardly see anyone in

0:14:15.880 --> 0:14:19.640
<v Speaker 7>zone position in zone defense re routing slotman.

0:14:19.320 --> 0:14:22.400
<v Speaker 4>Including the forty nine ers on turping. He ran right

0:14:22.440 --> 0:14:27.359
<v Speaker 4>by the guy. By the way I'm understanding, he's probably

0:14:27.480 --> 0:14:32.880
<v Speaker 4>more day to day than any with that ankle injury

0:14:33.120 --> 0:14:37.080
<v Speaker 4>he suffered. With that BS tackle on the sideline that

0:14:37.120 --> 0:14:39.520
<v Speaker 4>the guy should have been called for a horse collar

0:14:40.080 --> 0:14:43.200
<v Speaker 4>or the tackle where you pull from behind and land

0:14:43.280 --> 0:14:45.600
<v Speaker 4>on the back of his legs and he was out

0:14:45.600 --> 0:14:49.240
<v Speaker 4>of bounds. But no flag. But boy, they sure got

0:14:49.280 --> 0:14:58.840
<v Speaker 4>Donovan Wilson. I can continue. There was a lot I

0:14:58.880 --> 0:15:02.440
<v Speaker 4>think they saw from what I'm told on tape of

0:15:02.560 --> 0:15:04.960
<v Speaker 4>punches being throwed that were just ignored.

0:15:05.520 --> 0:15:07.000
<v Speaker 6>There was a lot of stuff. We could see it

0:15:07.080 --> 0:15:07.440
<v Speaker 6>in the game.

0:15:07.800 --> 0:15:12.040
<v Speaker 4>Somebody said, like, you know what, if we have to

0:15:12.080 --> 0:15:15.640
<v Speaker 4>play them again, it's gonna be a it's a it's

0:15:15.680 --> 0:15:18.320
<v Speaker 4>gonna be a fight. Yeah, yeah, ain't gonna put up.

0:15:19.200 --> 0:15:21.280
<v Speaker 4>They all ain't got called for one punch.

0:15:21.400 --> 0:15:22.920
<v Speaker 6>And we saw several things.

0:15:23.040 --> 0:15:25.280
<v Speaker 7>But at the same time, this is what and I

0:15:25.320 --> 0:15:28.120
<v Speaker 7>hate I hate talking about that because we put ourselves

0:15:28.160 --> 0:15:31.040
<v Speaker 7>in a position to where, well, would that make a difference, right,

0:15:31.200 --> 0:15:34.080
<v Speaker 7>And in some ways it would have if it changed

0:15:34.400 --> 0:15:37.760
<v Speaker 7>based on that time, that particular time and moment, as

0:15:37.760 --> 0:15:39.880
<v Speaker 7>you always do a bill, Well, if this would have happen,

0:15:39.880 --> 0:15:43.760
<v Speaker 7>then blah blah blah blah, that's very true. But forty

0:15:43.800 --> 0:15:47.200
<v Speaker 7>two points of forty plus points, it's hard to explain

0:15:47.240 --> 0:15:47.640
<v Speaker 7>that other way.

0:15:48.600 --> 0:15:54.120
<v Speaker 5>The grapes are sours, all right, we're just getting started.

0:15:54.240 --> 0:15:56.000
<v Speaker 4>Wait, that's gonna be the header for this.

0:15:58.880 --> 0:16:02.920
<v Speaker 5>You could work it into the last week.

0:16:03.040 --> 0:16:06.760
<v Speaker 4>What was last week's hearken hearking? I used to it too,

0:16:07.720 --> 0:16:11.920
<v Speaker 4>Are you hearkening back marketing back? No, I think you

0:16:11.960 --> 0:16:14.880
<v Speaker 4>said it earlier than what I'm going to use. Oh

0:16:14.920 --> 0:16:16.920
<v Speaker 4>I forgot I should have wrote it down. Hey, just

0:16:17.080 --> 0:16:22.640
<v Speaker 4>be sure you said it something Tuesday. Moving on, Moving on, Well,

0:16:22.640 --> 0:16:23.240
<v Speaker 4>before we.

0:16:23.080 --> 0:16:25.440
<v Speaker 7>Move on, I'm surprised Bill that brought it up. As

0:16:25.440 --> 0:16:28.280
<v Speaker 7>far as blowouts were concerned during the year and how

0:16:28.360 --> 0:16:33.600
<v Speaker 7>teams ended up. Nineteen eighty five, we got blown out

0:16:33.840 --> 0:16:38.000
<v Speaker 7>Bears forty four nothing one week, Cincinnati Cincinnati fifty two plus.

0:16:38.040 --> 0:16:40.800
<v Speaker 7>I don't remember what that school was, and then we

0:16:40.920 --> 0:16:41.600
<v Speaker 7>ended up coming out.

0:16:41.720 --> 0:16:43.960
<v Speaker 4>We had our mania. God, we could have looked it up.

0:16:44.040 --> 0:16:45.800
<v Speaker 6>No, well, I can say this much.

0:16:45.840 --> 0:16:49.000
<v Speaker 7>We went on the next week, uh to Well, the

0:16:49.080 --> 0:16:49.920
<v Speaker 7>Giants came in town.

0:16:49.960 --> 0:16:52.600
<v Speaker 6>The next week we won the NFC East. So we've

0:16:52.600 --> 0:16:53.000
<v Speaker 6>come back.

0:16:53.160 --> 0:16:56.080
<v Speaker 7>That was two consecutive blowouts we came back from to

0:16:56.160 --> 0:16:58.240
<v Speaker 7>come back and win the NFC East against a really

0:16:58.240 --> 0:16:59.080
<v Speaker 7>good Giants.

0:16:58.800 --> 0:17:04.840
<v Speaker 4>Team that year, Cincinnati kinnabrew ran all.

0:17:04.680 --> 0:17:07.760
<v Speaker 5>Over Larry kinnabrew Is. Fifty to twenty four was the

0:17:07.800 --> 0:17:10.679
<v Speaker 5>final score. December eighth nineteen.

0:17:11.320 --> 0:17:14.560
<v Speaker 7>We got twenty four because I blocked upot.

0:17:13.280 --> 0:17:16.919
<v Speaker 6>My only blocked my entire career.

0:17:16.960 --> 0:17:19.159
<v Speaker 5>Okay, just to review, since you brought it up. The

0:17:19.240 --> 0:17:25.120
<v Speaker 5>Chicago game was November seventeenth, forty four to nothing, came back,

0:17:25.440 --> 0:17:30.399
<v Speaker 5>rebounded from that, beat Philadelphia thirty four to seventeen, beat

0:17:30.440 --> 0:17:35.160
<v Speaker 5>the then Saint Louis Cardinals thirty five seventeen, then went

0:17:35.200 --> 0:17:38.160
<v Speaker 5>to Cincinnati, laid that egg, and came back and beat

0:17:38.240 --> 0:17:40.720
<v Speaker 5>the Giants twenty eighth twenty one to get to ten

0:17:40.800 --> 0:17:41.879
<v Speaker 5>and five on the season.

0:17:42.119 --> 0:17:43.919
<v Speaker 4>What was the first Cardinals score?

0:17:44.800 --> 0:17:49.720
<v Speaker 5>First Cardinals score was twenty one to ten loss at

0:17:49.720 --> 0:17:52.080
<v Speaker 5>Saint Louis November fourth.

0:17:52.600 --> 0:17:56.879
<v Speaker 7>Now, just actually begin, I mean we pulled it together

0:17:56.920 --> 0:17:58.160
<v Speaker 7>for that Giants game.

0:17:58.240 --> 0:18:01.840
<v Speaker 5>But the next week then the off last game of

0:18:01.840 --> 0:18:06.159
<v Speaker 5>the regular season was at San Francisco thirty one sixteen loss,

0:18:06.400 --> 0:18:08.440
<v Speaker 5>and then it was the game at the Ram.

0:18:09.200 --> 0:18:11.400
<v Speaker 6>Dickson of course went off on this. Yeah, I don't

0:18:11.400 --> 0:18:13.640
<v Speaker 6>think we scored that game almost.

0:18:14.720 --> 0:18:16.680
<v Speaker 4>I almost got run over in that San Francisco.

0:18:16.800 --> 0:18:19.119
<v Speaker 6>I did get run over the game.

0:18:19.000 --> 0:18:21.040
<v Speaker 4>Because you had to where the press box was, to

0:18:21.080 --> 0:18:23.840
<v Speaker 4>where the locker room was. You had to there. You

0:18:23.960 --> 0:18:26.920
<v Speaker 4>had to cross the field and they let people on

0:18:26.960 --> 0:18:29.479
<v Speaker 4>the field after and these people were running like a

0:18:29.520 --> 0:18:31.280
<v Speaker 4>bench of a bunch of Maybe.

0:18:31.160 --> 0:18:31.960
<v Speaker 6>What happened to you?

0:18:32.280 --> 0:18:34.560
<v Speaker 4>I almost got run over by a fans Did you?

0:18:34.600 --> 0:18:35.680
<v Speaker 6>Did you know? I?

0:18:35.680 --> 0:18:35.840
<v Speaker 5>Oh?

0:18:35.960 --> 0:18:41.119
<v Speaker 4>No, you were know you I did? I had to

0:18:41.119 --> 0:18:42.760
<v Speaker 4>fake them bags.

0:18:44.080 --> 0:18:45.160
<v Speaker 5>That Gaglestick Park.

0:18:45.680 --> 0:18:49.880
<v Speaker 4>It was yeah, right where I've ruined many of shoes

0:18:49.920 --> 0:18:51.399
<v Speaker 4>there in that goofy field.

0:18:51.600 --> 0:18:55.119
<v Speaker 5>All right, we will continue going down memory lane with

0:18:55.240 --> 0:18:59.480
<v Speaker 5>Everson and Mickey continues. At a moment, we'll harken back.

0:19:00.160 --> 0:19:02.400
<v Speaker 10>I'm Dak Prescott, quarterback of the Dallas Cowboys.

0:19:02.400 --> 0:19:04.480
<v Speaker 11>And they snapped the fresh guy who looks right, it's

0:19:04.520 --> 0:19:07.560
<v Speaker 11>not there. He escaped flapped. He'll look full punk style.

0:19:07.840 --> 0:19:08.560
<v Speaker 6>Just like football.

0:19:08.600 --> 0:19:10.600
<v Speaker 10>When it comes to crypto, it's important to have a

0:19:10.640 --> 0:19:13.240
<v Speaker 10>team you can trust. With Blockchain dot Com, I know

0:19:13.280 --> 0:19:15.919
<v Speaker 10>I'm in good hands. Since twenty eleven, they've been trusted

0:19:15.960 --> 0:19:18.320
<v Speaker 10>by millions around the world to buy, sell, and trade

0:19:18.400 --> 0:19:19.159
<v Speaker 10>crypto currency.

0:19:19.160 --> 0:19:22.320
<v Speaker 4>Prescott's gonna run this ship. Shelf run it up the middle,

0:19:22.359 --> 0:19:23.359
<v Speaker 4>and he scores.

0:19:23.440 --> 0:19:25.960
<v Speaker 10>Whether you're new to crypto or an active trader, They've

0:19:26.000 --> 0:19:26.760
<v Speaker 10>got you covered.

0:19:26.920 --> 0:19:27.760
<v Speaker 6>What are you waiting for?

0:19:28.000 --> 0:19:30.800
<v Speaker 10>Get started at blockchain dot com.

0:19:30.840 --> 0:19:33.639
<v Speaker 2>You know that sound anywhere. It's the crisp crunch, that

0:19:33.680 --> 0:19:36.800
<v Speaker 2>first nacho chip with its perfect cheese to sour cream

0:19:36.880 --> 0:19:39.919
<v Speaker 2>ratio sitting atop a layer of delicious beans. It's a

0:19:39.960 --> 0:19:44.080
<v Speaker 2>sip away from perfection. That's what we're looking for. Add

0:19:44.119 --> 0:19:48.200
<v Speaker 2>a delicious, refreshing pepsi, and we've achieved absolute nacho nirvana.

0:19:48.320 --> 0:19:51.800
<v Speaker 2>Because while you can pile those nachos high with every spicy, cheesy,

0:19:51.840 --> 0:19:56.680
<v Speaker 2>savory topping, there's no topping of school Pepsi. Finish nachos

0:19:56.680 --> 0:19:57.520
<v Speaker 2>better with pepsi.

0:19:57.880 --> 0:19:58.600
<v Speaker 6>That's what I like.

0:19:59.400 --> 0:20:02.480
<v Speaker 8>The Metal of Honor is our country's highest military award

0:20:02.520 --> 0:20:06.119
<v Speaker 8>for valor in combat. More than forty million individuals have

0:20:06.200 --> 0:20:09.119
<v Speaker 8>served in the armed forces since the Civil War. Fewer

0:20:09.119 --> 0:20:12.679
<v Speaker 8>than four thousand have received the Medal of Honor. The

0:20:12.800 --> 0:20:15.119
<v Speaker 8>National Medal of Honor Museum will be a place to

0:20:15.200 --> 0:20:19.440
<v Speaker 8>preserve these legacies and inspire America. It's being built right

0:20:19.480 --> 0:20:22.879
<v Speaker 8>next door to the Dallas Cowboys in Texas. Help us

0:20:22.920 --> 0:20:26.360
<v Speaker 8>honor our country's greatest heroes. Learn more and get involved

0:20:26.440 --> 0:20:28.280
<v Speaker 8>at mohmuseum dot org.

0:20:28.359 --> 0:20:32.480
<v Speaker 12>Cowboys football and Miller Lite. What a pairing can Crack's

0:20:32.520 --> 0:20:37.600
<v Speaker 12>a kickoff tailgates going way past postgame Sunday night overtimes,

0:20:37.680 --> 0:20:42.480
<v Speaker 12>followed by Monday Morning Swag Brisky and the Smoker, Miller

0:20:42.560 --> 0:20:47.280
<v Speaker 12>Lite and the Creek, America's team playing America's Greatest school.

0:20:48.000 --> 0:20:51.800
<v Speaker 12>Miller Lite the only beer of the Dallas Cowboys. Dallas

0:20:51.800 --> 0:20:56.280
<v Speaker 12>Cowboys Football taste like Miller Time Celebrate Responsibly twenty twenty

0:20:56.280 --> 0:21:05.560
<v Speaker 12>three miliber Own Company, Fort Worth, Texas.

0:21:01.720 --> 0:21:02.600
<v Speaker 4>Shots.

0:21:06.280 --> 0:21:10.040
<v Speaker 9>K Post Roofing and Waterproofing, the official roofer of the

0:21:10.200 --> 0:21:13.640
<v Speaker 9>Dallas Cowboys. We have a text all.

0:21:13.640 --> 0:21:15.600
<v Speaker 5>Right, the text machine is working.

0:21:15.880 --> 0:21:20.040
<v Speaker 9>It is working today. Steve and New York would like

0:21:20.119 --> 0:21:25.639
<v Speaker 9>to know after five games, what concerns us more the

0:21:25.760 --> 0:21:28.800
<v Speaker 9>QB or offensive scheme under Schottenheimer.

0:21:29.280 --> 0:21:35.159
<v Speaker 4>Well, interesting, Shottenheimer, I need to run over there, and

0:21:35.800 --> 0:21:38.960
<v Speaker 4>it's your offense. Shape up, buddy.

0:21:39.560 --> 0:21:42.840
<v Speaker 5>Head coach likes that. It's this week is Shottenneimer's.

0:21:43.440 --> 0:21:46.200
<v Speaker 4>We'll take that. Mike McCarthy's off the hook.

0:21:46.400 --> 0:21:47.960
<v Speaker 5>Uh huh, that's right, all right.

0:21:48.000 --> 0:21:50.840
<v Speaker 4>What was his name, Steve, Steven New York. So Steve,

0:21:50.960 --> 0:21:56.600
<v Speaker 4>it's Mike McCarthy's offense. Correct. Just because Brian Schottenheimer has

0:21:56.680 --> 0:22:02.000
<v Speaker 4>the title of offensive coordinator, he's the offensive coordinating helper.

0:22:03.200 --> 0:22:08.879
<v Speaker 4>They're running Mike McCarthy's offense, and I'm not worried about Dak.

0:22:09.040 --> 0:22:12.119
<v Speaker 4>I think one of the things to fix Dak is

0:22:12.160 --> 0:22:17.840
<v Speaker 4>to just get him to slow down, settle down, quit

0:22:17.920 --> 0:22:19.800
<v Speaker 4>thinking I got to get the ball out of my hands.

0:22:19.800 --> 0:22:21.640
<v Speaker 4>I got to get the ball out of my hands.

0:22:21.960 --> 0:22:24.600
<v Speaker 4>And by doing that, I think he hasn't gone through

0:22:24.680 --> 0:22:28.440
<v Speaker 4>his progression of reeds the way he needs to now.

0:22:28.640 --> 0:22:31.360
<v Speaker 4>He got speeded up in that game because the protection

0:22:32.280 --> 0:22:36.480
<v Speaker 4>basically sucked. I mean he got hit nine times and

0:22:36.600 --> 0:22:39.399
<v Speaker 4>sacked three times. I think that should tell you something.

0:22:40.080 --> 0:22:41.200
<v Speaker 6>And let's just be real.

0:22:42.320 --> 0:22:45.560
<v Speaker 7>They weren't exactly wide opened down the field, right. You

0:22:45.680 --> 0:22:51.280
<v Speaker 7>had some very tight coverage from the jam position, press

0:22:51.320 --> 0:22:55.040
<v Speaker 7>position at the line of scrimmage from the cornerbacks. So

0:22:55.520 --> 0:22:58.560
<v Speaker 7>they're making it hard for the timing to be there

0:22:59.000 --> 0:23:00.560
<v Speaker 7>between the quarterback in a wide.

0:23:00.359 --> 0:23:02.199
<v Speaker 4>Receiver, especially if you're in a hurry to get the

0:23:02.240 --> 0:23:02.720
<v Speaker 4>ball out.

0:23:02.560 --> 0:23:04.200
<v Speaker 7>Of you hate hurry to get it out and they're

0:23:04.320 --> 0:23:07.520
<v Speaker 7>man to man and so you can't be predictable with

0:23:07.600 --> 0:23:11.080
<v Speaker 7>your routes. There has to be some type of adjustment made.

0:23:11.359 --> 0:23:13.280
<v Speaker 7>He has to be able to make an audible on

0:23:13.359 --> 0:23:17.480
<v Speaker 7>certain defenses because you can't run that short, quick slant

0:23:17.560 --> 0:23:20.280
<v Speaker 7>and intermediate routes against a man to man.

0:23:20.359 --> 0:23:21.800
<v Speaker 6>When they're pressing.

0:23:21.920 --> 0:23:24.360
<v Speaker 7>So hard on our wide receivers, they have to work

0:23:24.440 --> 0:23:26.560
<v Speaker 7>harder on getting open, or.

0:23:26.520 --> 0:23:28.399
<v Speaker 6>He has to make sure he has some different.

0:23:28.160 --> 0:23:31.480
<v Speaker 4>Checkdowns and the other thing. And I don't know why

0:23:31.800 --> 0:23:37.080
<v Speaker 4>cowboy quarterbacks have problems with this, but it kind of

0:23:37.080 --> 0:23:41.120
<v Speaker 4>reminded me of that Buffalo game when Tony Romo threw

0:23:41.280 --> 0:23:48.240
<v Speaker 4>four interceptions in the first half. Warner, their middle linebacker

0:23:48.480 --> 0:23:52.520
<v Speaker 4>is running down the field in the middle, and you now,

0:23:52.600 --> 0:23:54.840
<v Speaker 4>if you're going to hit that guy in a crossing route,

0:23:54.840 --> 0:23:57.359
<v Speaker 4>you got to throw over the linebacker, but before the

0:23:57.400 --> 0:24:00.439
<v Speaker 4>safety gets there, and that's how he broke up. I

0:24:00.440 --> 0:24:03.600
<v Speaker 4>believe that one pass and it's difficult, and that's what

0:24:03.800 --> 0:24:08.560
<v Speaker 4>Romo was doing. I forgot the Buffalo linebacker that intercepted him,

0:24:09.520 --> 0:24:12.359
<v Speaker 4>but he kept saying, Oh, I can do this, I

0:24:12.400 --> 0:24:14.760
<v Speaker 4>can do this, and he couldn't right, and then the

0:24:14.800 --> 0:24:16.280
<v Speaker 4>second half he adjusted.

0:24:16.480 --> 0:24:19.560
<v Speaker 5>So why was San Francisco able to do that in

0:24:19.640 --> 0:24:21.879
<v Speaker 5>this game but Dallas wasn't able to.

0:24:21.960 --> 0:24:24.679
<v Speaker 4>Well, it had to be something on how they scheme

0:24:24.880 --> 0:24:26.600
<v Speaker 4>the defense, or.

0:24:26.560 --> 0:24:32.159
<v Speaker 5>It could be that the Cowboys with the concern of

0:24:32.240 --> 0:24:37.040
<v Speaker 5>Christian McCaffrey in the backfield right, and the linebackers aren't

0:24:37.119 --> 0:24:40.040
<v Speaker 5>dropping as much because they have to support the run,

0:24:40.440 --> 0:24:43.400
<v Speaker 5>which they and San Francisco did a great job stopping

0:24:43.400 --> 0:24:47.280
<v Speaker 5>the run early in the game, and so the linebackers

0:24:47.280 --> 0:24:48.240
<v Speaker 5>could drop right.

0:24:48.359 --> 0:24:51.560
<v Speaker 7>They didn't need the linebackers to stop the run. That's

0:24:51.600 --> 0:24:56.240
<v Speaker 7>what we saw. Yeah, I saw defensive lineman, defensive ends

0:24:56.680 --> 0:24:59.600
<v Speaker 7>blowing up everything when we tried to go why And

0:24:59.680 --> 0:25:02.680
<v Speaker 7>that's part of this Texas Coast offense is We're going

0:25:02.720 --> 0:25:06.119
<v Speaker 7>to attack the edges and we couldn't get outside. They

0:25:06.840 --> 0:25:10.560
<v Speaker 7>supported those edges from the defensive end standpoint, so we

0:25:10.600 --> 0:25:11.639
<v Speaker 7>couldn't run the ball at all.

0:25:11.680 --> 0:25:13.080
<v Speaker 6>They didn't even need their linebackers.

0:25:13.160 --> 0:25:17.200
<v Speaker 4>Nineteen carries for fifty seven yards.

0:25:16.119 --> 0:25:19.240
<v Speaker 7>And it was the tackles for loss that were huge,

0:25:19.320 --> 0:25:22.400
<v Speaker 7>and they killed some of our drives, especially the decision

0:25:22.440 --> 0:25:23.640
<v Speaker 7>making process.

0:25:23.240 --> 0:25:23.720
<v Speaker 6>That we had.

0:25:24.359 --> 0:25:26.720
<v Speaker 7>We were trying to go for we had third down

0:25:26.760 --> 0:25:28.360
<v Speaker 7>and we were going to go two down territory.

0:25:28.560 --> 0:25:30.840
<v Speaker 4>Yeah, right, tackles for loss you think they had.

0:25:31.200 --> 0:25:33.000
<v Speaker 6>I saw at least four.

0:25:32.840 --> 0:25:33.399
<v Speaker 9>Nine ers.

0:25:35.800 --> 0:25:37.800
<v Speaker 4>Tackles for the losses.

0:25:37.840 --> 0:25:41.679
<v Speaker 6>Not including the sacks of course, right, yeah, nine ooh.

0:25:43.359 --> 0:25:49.000
<v Speaker 4>Nine, No, that was quarterback hits six tackles for losses

0:25:49.119 --> 0:25:54.600
<v Speaker 4>for sacks, so they weren't clearing the line of scrimmate.

0:25:54.680 --> 0:25:57.439
<v Speaker 7>And this is what I there's certain things that we

0:25:57.480 --> 0:26:01.320
<v Speaker 7>talked about making adjustments. You know, leave you said last week, Bill,

0:26:01.920 --> 0:26:06.040
<v Speaker 7>if you make the adjustments at halftime, it's too late. Well,

0:26:06.040 --> 0:26:08.680
<v Speaker 7>we never made the adjustment on stopping the run. First

0:26:08.720 --> 0:26:11.560
<v Speaker 7>of all, that same running play that kept parcels from

0:26:11.600 --> 0:26:14.840
<v Speaker 7>penetrating from the outside. But what you also had was

0:26:15.200 --> 0:26:19.520
<v Speaker 7>they're running the same freaking zone routes. So I think

0:26:19.520 --> 0:26:21.679
<v Speaker 7>we should have just played, which is tough when you

0:26:21.680 --> 0:26:25.320
<v Speaker 7>can't stop the run. Play more man to man and

0:26:25.400 --> 0:26:28.040
<v Speaker 7>you know, I mean, Purdy's a good quarterback, but you

0:26:28.119 --> 0:26:30.600
<v Speaker 7>allow him to be a good quarterback if you cover

0:26:30.680 --> 0:26:34.520
<v Speaker 7>those deep incuts with man to man position. To me,

0:26:35.680 --> 0:26:41.480
<v Speaker 7>I don't like our technique of funneling the wide receivers

0:26:41.480 --> 0:26:45.120
<v Speaker 7>inside because they don't just go to the safety. They

0:26:45.160 --> 0:26:48.680
<v Speaker 7>go all the way across the field, so you're always

0:26:48.720 --> 0:26:51.720
<v Speaker 7>in a trail position. So you have Gilmour, who's a

0:26:51.800 --> 0:26:54.480
<v Speaker 7>they have good cornerback, but he's caught in a trail

0:26:54.560 --> 0:26:58.520
<v Speaker 7>position at all times, and that's what they do. They

0:26:58.760 --> 0:27:01.840
<v Speaker 7>like you said, bring the line up because McCaffrey's running

0:27:01.840 --> 0:27:04.159
<v Speaker 7>the ball or whoever. The other running back that they

0:27:04.160 --> 0:27:06.920
<v Speaker 7>had is web mation, so you're, of course they're going

0:27:06.960 --> 0:27:09.320
<v Speaker 7>to go with deep in cuts behind where the linebacker

0:27:09.359 --> 0:27:12.919
<v Speaker 7>is supposed to be. Van Derres still almost there, but

0:27:13.040 --> 0:27:15.920
<v Speaker 7>almost didn't get it done when you got the defensive

0:27:15.960 --> 0:27:19.800
<v Speaker 7>back trailing the wide receiver and they ran that route

0:27:20.040 --> 0:27:24.080
<v Speaker 7>at least four or five times that game with success.

0:27:24.520 --> 0:27:26.800
<v Speaker 4>It worked. Yeah, it works with success.

0:27:26.920 --> 0:27:28.320
<v Speaker 9>It was repetitive and it worked.

0:27:28.400 --> 0:27:33.360
<v Speaker 4>So if you had listened to Jerry today, okay, without

0:27:33.800 --> 0:27:40.360
<v Speaker 4>saying it, he basically said he cleared the quarterback by

0:27:40.359 --> 0:27:43.640
<v Speaker 4>the way, Steven New York, right, we can win with Dak.

0:27:43.480 --> 0:27:46.879
<v Speaker 5>Preslet we want to exact quote, go ahead, Jerry and

0:27:47.040 --> 0:27:50.560
<v Speaker 5>the fan this morning. I completely believe we have the

0:27:50.640 --> 0:27:52.800
<v Speaker 5>quarterback that can take us where we want to go.

0:27:52.960 --> 0:27:55.560
<v Speaker 5>Dak Prescott is a quarterback that can get us to

0:27:55.600 --> 0:27:57.800
<v Speaker 5>the super Bowl, and that's the way that's going to be.

0:27:58.160 --> 0:28:02.159
<v Speaker 4>But the majority of the questquestions to him had to

0:28:02.240 --> 0:28:08.479
<v Speaker 4>do with scheme, and Jerry basically said, I'm not worried

0:28:08.480 --> 0:28:12.520
<v Speaker 4>about the personnel if we have to play this game again,

0:28:13.680 --> 0:28:17.480
<v Speaker 4>we can adjust our approach that we used. And he

0:28:17.680 --> 0:28:23.240
<v Speaker 4>was talking offensively and defensively. Now, the words never came

0:28:23.320 --> 0:28:26.919
<v Speaker 4>out of his mouth, but he basically said, we have

0:28:27.080 --> 0:28:32.000
<v Speaker 4>the coaching staff and the personnel to make the adjustments.

0:28:32.480 --> 0:28:35.960
<v Speaker 4>So basically what he was saying is he thought their

0:28:36.000 --> 0:28:43.160
<v Speaker 4>approach both ways did not match what San Francisco was

0:28:43.200 --> 0:28:45.800
<v Speaker 4>trying to do. Now, he didn't say, wow, we got

0:28:45.800 --> 0:28:47.000
<v Speaker 4>out coached, but to.

0:28:46.920 --> 0:28:48.600
<v Speaker 6>Me, he's just going to say that means we got

0:28:48.600 --> 0:28:48.960
<v Speaker 6>out coach.

0:28:49.320 --> 0:28:52.000
<v Speaker 4>But to me, that's what it meant, right, or that's

0:28:52.000 --> 0:28:55.560
<v Speaker 4>what he was somewhat suggesting that we can make changes

0:28:56.120 --> 0:28:58.240
<v Speaker 4>alterations into what we were doing.

0:28:58.320 --> 0:28:59.840
<v Speaker 7>I mean, you could say you got our coach, but

0:29:00.400 --> 0:29:02.720
<v Speaker 7>we always know the game is won in.

0:29:02.640 --> 0:29:06.480
<v Speaker 4>The trenches, and well, maybe what you were asking guys

0:29:06.520 --> 0:29:10.200
<v Speaker 4>to do didn't fit into what San Francisco was doing.

0:29:10.240 --> 0:29:13.560
<v Speaker 7>I always go back to Tom Landry, going back to

0:29:14.120 --> 0:29:17.160
<v Speaker 7>we used to go on thirty one safety zone. When

0:29:17.200 --> 0:29:19.160
<v Speaker 7>they're running the ball and they're going to flow strong,

0:29:19.560 --> 0:29:23.160
<v Speaker 7>we immediately go to inside coverage.

0:29:23.760 --> 0:29:28.000
<v Speaker 6>Screw the out routes, screw the curl routes. We go

0:29:28.080 --> 0:29:30.600
<v Speaker 6>to inside coverage. Because that's what.

0:29:30.680 --> 0:29:34.600
<v Speaker 7>Can beat you, getting beat deep and getting beat deep inside.

0:29:35.040 --> 0:29:37.800
<v Speaker 7>And that's what happened to us all game long. That's

0:29:37.800 --> 0:29:40.320
<v Speaker 7>why we never really cared about an out route. An

0:29:40.320 --> 0:29:43.480
<v Speaker 7>out route is not gonna make you lose a game.

0:29:43.800 --> 0:29:46.880
<v Speaker 7>It's those deep in cuts that's the ones that get you.

0:29:46.920 --> 0:29:49.040
<v Speaker 7>And of course the deep routes that's the ones that

0:29:49.120 --> 0:29:51.800
<v Speaker 7>help you, that allow you to lose a game. Billy

0:29:51.800 --> 0:29:56.280
<v Speaker 7>Waddie style against the Los Angeles Rams, I believe, nineteen eighty.

0:29:56.080 --> 0:29:58.160
<v Speaker 4>And if you think about it, and just off the

0:29:58.160 --> 0:30:01.000
<v Speaker 4>top of my head, I don't remember for them catching

0:30:01.040 --> 0:30:02.200
<v Speaker 4>a bunch of out routes.

0:30:02.640 --> 0:30:04.240
<v Speaker 6>Everything I saw one.

0:30:04.120 --> 0:30:06.920
<v Speaker 4>One because everything seemed to funnel up the mid, including

0:30:06.960 --> 0:30:07.760
<v Speaker 4>the running place.

0:30:08.320 --> 0:30:09.280
<v Speaker 6>Everything was inside.

0:30:09.320 --> 0:30:13.479
<v Speaker 4>They rarely, they rarely attacked the edges. It was up

0:30:13.520 --> 0:30:13.840
<v Speaker 4>the middle.

0:30:13.880 --> 0:30:17.280
<v Speaker 7>Number fifteen, I forget his name, but he caught one. Yeah,

0:30:17.280 --> 0:30:20.080
<v Speaker 7>he caught the one out over there. You know, he

0:30:20.200 --> 0:30:23.600
<v Speaker 7>got twelve yards. And I tell when I do my

0:30:23.640 --> 0:30:25.760
<v Speaker 7>little coaching, I tell them all the time, a ten

0:30:25.840 --> 0:30:28.600
<v Speaker 7>yard well is not going to beat you. Yeah, what

0:30:28.720 --> 0:30:30.920
<v Speaker 7>beat you was the twenty five yard or twenty yard

0:30:30.960 --> 0:30:34.400
<v Speaker 7>incut and the deep pass. That's what beats you otherwise

0:30:34.480 --> 0:30:37.160
<v Speaker 7>you can strap it up and play the next down.

0:30:37.880 --> 0:30:41.400
<v Speaker 4>Jennings had one catch nineteen yards.

0:30:41.160 --> 0:30:43.200
<v Speaker 6>So that was a nineteen yard comeback that he had.

0:30:43.680 --> 0:30:46.320
<v Speaker 4>And if you think about the passes that I you caught,

0:30:46.960 --> 0:30:50.000
<v Speaker 4>they were over the middle, as I remember, right, all

0:30:50.040 --> 0:30:53.280
<v Speaker 4>of them. And then the next leading catch was four

0:30:53.440 --> 0:30:59.240
<v Speaker 4>from ju Sick, Juic sick, I get it. No J

0:30:59.520 --> 0:31:00.800
<v Speaker 4>in there the Jay.

0:31:00.800 --> 0:31:04.520
<v Speaker 5>It's a use check like a Yo used check.

0:31:04.640 --> 0:31:09.640
<v Speaker 4>I don't have an easy name to renounced, like Spagnola. Right, Kittles, well,

0:31:09.640 --> 0:31:13.160
<v Speaker 4>he's a Harvard guy. Kittle has three catches the tight

0:31:13.240 --> 0:31:19.560
<v Speaker 4>end right, Samuel three catches, McCaffrey two, and then yeah,

0:31:20.000 --> 0:31:24.320
<v Speaker 4>it was everything kind of in the middle. Mason Bell

0:31:24.520 --> 0:31:29.440
<v Speaker 4>had none. Mason had none, and then McLeod had one.

0:31:30.120 --> 0:31:33.800
<v Speaker 4>So but they were completing the passes right.

0:31:33.760 --> 0:31:37.240
<v Speaker 5>For touchdowns to Kittles three, he's only three catches.

0:31:38.440 --> 0:31:42.840
<v Speaker 4>He had twenty six targets and he completed sixteen of them,

0:31:42.840 --> 0:31:46.160
<v Speaker 4>sixteen for twenty six, only one hundred and sixty one yards.

0:31:46.240 --> 0:31:50.240
<v Speaker 4>But they were damaging this one hundred and sixty one.

0:31:49.680 --> 0:31:51.479
<v Speaker 6>Right, they've changed the field position.

0:31:51.880 --> 0:31:56.560
<v Speaker 4>Oh wait, that wasn't him, Sorry, that was Books eighteen

0:31:56.680 --> 0:31:59.480
<v Speaker 4>for twenty five. Sorry, I'm going to say that's two

0:31:59.560 --> 0:32:02.760
<v Speaker 4>fifty three, and it was, and it was damaging, by

0:32:02.800 --> 0:32:06.520
<v Speaker 4>the way, two fifty three. Could you live with two

0:32:06.520 --> 0:32:07.120
<v Speaker 4>fifty three?

0:32:09.240 --> 0:32:11.800
<v Speaker 5>I can't remember if I said this yesterday. I had

0:32:11.800 --> 0:32:16.640
<v Speaker 5>it up. First down, Okay, first downs. The forty nine

0:32:16.720 --> 0:32:19.920
<v Speaker 5>ers had two hundred and fifty three yards on thirty

0:32:19.920 --> 0:32:22.680
<v Speaker 5>three first down plays, seven point seven yards of play.

0:32:23.280 --> 0:32:26.720
<v Speaker 5>The Cowboys on first down had thirty nine yards on

0:32:26.840 --> 0:32:30.880
<v Speaker 5>twenty first down plays one point nine yards established it.

0:32:31.440 --> 0:32:34.000
<v Speaker 4>So they're getting in a lot of thirty shorts, right.

0:32:34.120 --> 0:32:37.680
<v Speaker 5>Everyone talks about how well you do on third down. Well,

0:32:37.720 --> 0:32:40.600
<v Speaker 5>in this particular game, how well you did on first down.

0:32:41.080 --> 0:32:45.960
<v Speaker 7>Matt dominated that first great defense. First down is extremely.

0:32:45.480 --> 0:32:50.640
<v Speaker 4>Importantession, and a lot they never got the third. They

0:32:50.680 --> 0:32:55.680
<v Speaker 4>only had eleven third down plays out of sixty seven.

0:32:56.520 --> 0:32:59.880
<v Speaker 4>So yeah, so a lot of it was they'd already scored,

0:33:00.000 --> 0:33:02.600
<v Speaker 4>they already scored, or they had already picked up the

0:33:02.640 --> 0:33:06.000
<v Speaker 4>first down because they had twenty five first downs.

0:33:06.400 --> 0:33:08.120
<v Speaker 7>The one that really hurt the most, and it was

0:33:08.240 --> 0:33:12.360
<v Speaker 7>just so glaring when we finally got a break. I

0:33:12.360 --> 0:33:15.280
<v Speaker 7>think it was a personal file or something. And he

0:33:15.440 --> 0:33:17.640
<v Speaker 7>still comes back and hits the same route over the

0:33:17.640 --> 0:33:18.240
<v Speaker 7>middle again.

0:33:19.360 --> 0:33:24.200
<v Speaker 4>Oh that was after my play. Yeah, yeah, my play.

0:33:24.280 --> 0:33:27.520
<v Speaker 7>And it just you know that to me, just let

0:33:27.560 --> 0:33:30.120
<v Speaker 7>it let me know we weren't calling the right plays

0:33:30.240 --> 0:33:33.760
<v Speaker 7>because now you still have your cornerbacks sitting outside and

0:33:33.880 --> 0:33:36.360
<v Speaker 7>I Yuka Whoever's still running that deep end cut for

0:33:36.440 --> 0:33:40.120
<v Speaker 7>twenty twenty plus yards and they still got a first down.

0:33:40.200 --> 0:33:46.680
<v Speaker 4>So here's what happened. After the penalty on Donovan Wilson.

0:33:47.160 --> 0:33:51.720
<v Speaker 4>They get McCaffrey for minus two second and twelve short

0:33:51.760 --> 0:34:00.760
<v Speaker 4>past the McCaffrey nineteen yards right, and then Mason up

0:34:00.800 --> 0:34:05.000
<v Speaker 4>the middle eight yards. So now you're second and two right, Well, okay,

0:34:05.120 --> 0:34:09.480
<v Speaker 4>what happens, Well, they get a four yard carry by

0:34:09.520 --> 0:34:13.439
<v Speaker 4>Mason and then Purdy to Samuel nine yards and then

0:34:13.640 --> 0:34:14.320
<v Speaker 4>the McCaffrey.

0:34:14.840 --> 0:34:16.440
<v Speaker 7>I think we had them on a holding call to

0:34:16.560 --> 0:34:19.080
<v Speaker 7>something before the play I'm talking about. It was a

0:34:19.080 --> 0:34:22.359
<v Speaker 7>holding call after they had made a big play, brought

0:34:22.400 --> 0:34:24.399
<v Speaker 7>them back, and then they came back and made another

0:34:24.400 --> 0:34:25.279
<v Speaker 7>big play the same way.

0:34:25.320 --> 0:34:27.920
<v Speaker 5>That's what dan quinn was talking about, Like on the McCaffrey. Yeah,

0:34:28.000 --> 0:34:30.239
<v Speaker 5>it statistically it looks like you held him in check.

0:34:30.320 --> 0:34:34.080
<v Speaker 5>Nineteen carries for fifty one yards. But for him down

0:34:34.120 --> 0:34:37.480
<v Speaker 5>in distance is so important on as you're defending an

0:34:37.520 --> 0:34:40.920
<v Speaker 5>offense because and for an offense to be able to

0:34:41.000 --> 0:34:43.200
<v Speaker 5>either throw it or run it, and the defense doesn't

0:34:43.200 --> 0:34:45.320
<v Speaker 5>know which way they're going to go, and that opens

0:34:45.400 --> 0:34:47.920
<v Speaker 5>up passing lanes because you think they might run it.

0:34:48.200 --> 0:34:52.320
<v Speaker 5>And it was so when McCaffrey turns a two yard

0:34:52.360 --> 0:34:55.319
<v Speaker 5>gain into a four yard gain on first down through

0:34:55.360 --> 0:34:57.520
<v Speaker 5>his ability yell, he only got four yards. Now you're

0:34:57.560 --> 0:35:00.560
<v Speaker 5>second and six rather than second and eight. It makes

0:35:00.560 --> 0:35:01.360
<v Speaker 5>a big difference, tell you.

0:35:01.600 --> 0:35:05.640
<v Speaker 7>And he was able to somehow split There were times

0:35:05.640 --> 0:35:07.600
<v Speaker 7>when he came up against more than one defender and

0:35:07.640 --> 0:35:10.640
<v Speaker 7>still able to make one miss and make the most

0:35:10.800 --> 0:35:13.680
<v Speaker 7>out of that that play instead of like getting a

0:35:13.719 --> 0:35:15.680
<v Speaker 7>three year ad all of a sudden, he's gotten six yards.

0:35:15.719 --> 0:35:18.440
<v Speaker 7>That's right, all right? We continue with more mix shots.

0:35:18.200 --> 0:35:20.279
<v Speaker 6>More moving on, more moving on.

0:35:21.400 --> 0:35:24.400
<v Speaker 8>The Medal of Honor is our country's highest military award

0:35:24.480 --> 0:35:28.080
<v Speaker 8>for valor in combat. More than forty million individuals have

0:35:28.160 --> 0:35:31.080
<v Speaker 8>served in the armed forces since the Civil War. Fewer

0:35:31.120 --> 0:35:34.640
<v Speaker 8>than four thousand have received the Medal of Honor. The

0:35:34.760 --> 0:35:37.120
<v Speaker 8>National Medal of Honor Museum will be a place to

0:35:37.160 --> 0:35:41.399
<v Speaker 8>preserve these legacies and inspire America. It's being built right

0:35:41.440 --> 0:35:44.880
<v Speaker 8>next door to the Dallas Cowboys in Texas. Help us

0:35:44.880 --> 0:35:48.360
<v Speaker 8>honor our country's greatest heroes. Learn more and get involved

0:35:48.400 --> 0:35:50.239
<v Speaker 8>at mohmuseum dot org.

0:35:50.360 --> 0:35:54.480
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<v Speaker 12>Miliberum Company, Fort Worth, Texas.

0:36:20.719 --> 0:36:23.040
<v Speaker 10>I'm Dak Prescott, quarterback of the Dallas Cowboys, and.

0:36:23.080 --> 0:36:25.560
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0:36:25.800 --> 0:36:28.200
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0:36:51.480 --> 0:36:54.239
<v Speaker 2>You know that sound anywhere. It's the crisp crunch, that

0:36:54.360 --> 0:36:57.840
<v Speaker 2>first nacho chip with its perfect cheese to sour cream ratio,

0:36:57.960 --> 0:37:00.880
<v Speaker 2>sitting atop a layer of delicious beer. It's a sip

0:37:00.920 --> 0:37:05.440
<v Speaker 2>away from perfection. That's what we're looking for at a delicious,

0:37:05.480 --> 0:37:09.520
<v Speaker 2>refreshing pepsi, and we've achieved absolute nacho nirvana because while

0:37:09.520 --> 0:37:12.440
<v Speaker 2>you can pile those nachos high with every spicy, cheesy,

0:37:12.480 --> 0:37:17.319
<v Speaker 2>savory topping, there's no topping of cool PEPSI. Finish nachos

0:37:17.360 --> 0:37:18.200
<v Speaker 2>better with pepsi.

0:37:18.520 --> 0:37:19.279
<v Speaker 5>That's what I like.

0:37:22.160 --> 0:37:23.760
<v Speaker 4>Tom shuts.

0:37:25.560 --> 0:37:29.560
<v Speaker 9>Dallas Cowboys Game Time powered by Lenovo, the official gaming

0:37:29.600 --> 0:37:33.080
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0:37:33.120 --> 0:37:35.840
<v Speaker 9>to compete in Madden twenty four for a chance to

0:37:35.880 --> 0:37:39.200
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0:37:39.239 --> 0:37:43.279
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0:37:43.320 --> 0:37:46.880
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0:37:46.920 --> 0:37:50.560
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0:37:50.640 --> 0:37:53.760
<v Speaker 5>You know tomorrow I could be coming in here smelling

0:37:53.800 --> 0:37:55.160
<v Speaker 5>a little bit like champagne.

0:37:55.360 --> 0:37:57.920
<v Speaker 4>Hmmm, going are you tonight?

0:37:58.040 --> 0:38:01.320
<v Speaker 9>Are you going on the game in different Rangers.

0:38:01.480 --> 0:38:05.239
<v Speaker 5>If the Rangers beat the Orioles tonight, it'll be a

0:38:05.280 --> 0:38:09.840
<v Speaker 5>clubhouse celebration, Champagne being sprayed all over the place, including

0:38:09.880 --> 0:38:12.480
<v Speaker 5>on us reporters in the in the clubhouse.

0:38:12.560 --> 0:38:14.839
<v Speaker 4>And so you're bringing a raincoat, yeah, I've got.

0:38:15.000 --> 0:38:18.680
<v Speaker 6>In fact, he's bringing the cup, bringing a cup.

0:38:21.560 --> 0:38:25.040
<v Speaker 5>This shows you how long I've had my truck and

0:38:25.200 --> 0:38:27.759
<v Speaker 5>how long it's been since I've cleaned.

0:38:27.480 --> 0:38:28.160
<v Speaker 4>Out my truck.

0:38:29.120 --> 0:38:31.759
<v Speaker 5>I have in one of the little back pockets in

0:38:31.800 --> 0:38:34.080
<v Speaker 5>the back on the door. In the back seat of

0:38:34.120 --> 0:38:38.120
<v Speaker 5>the truck, I've got a poncho. That's that I bought

0:38:38.719 --> 0:38:42.319
<v Speaker 5>when the Rangers were playing in the playoffs in twenty sixteen,

0:38:42.480 --> 0:38:45.640
<v Speaker 5>and I just kept it back there. I said, okay

0:38:46.440 --> 0:38:49.279
<v Speaker 5>during that playoff series that, okay, with they win, I

0:38:49.360 --> 0:38:50.520
<v Speaker 5>may have to go in the clubhouse.

0:38:50.560 --> 0:38:50.840
<v Speaker 10>Whatever.

0:38:50.920 --> 0:38:54.239
<v Speaker 5>So I bought like three ponchos, and so one of them,

0:38:54.440 --> 0:38:55.360
<v Speaker 5>at least one I've.

0:38:55.200 --> 0:38:55.839
<v Speaker 4>Got back there.

0:38:56.160 --> 0:38:59.440
<v Speaker 5>It's still been there for seven years. So I'll be

0:38:59.440 --> 0:38:59.880
<v Speaker 5>taking it in.

0:39:00.000 --> 0:39:01.440
<v Speaker 9>You don't have to wear it, and you have to

0:39:01.440 --> 0:39:01.759
<v Speaker 9>wear it.

0:39:01.840 --> 0:39:04.680
<v Speaker 7>No, No, that's not very professional. You know you shouldn't

0:39:04.840 --> 0:39:07.280
<v Speaker 7>you wear the ponzo and you're gonna be interviewing.

0:39:08.440 --> 0:39:11.319
<v Speaker 4>You know what you gotta have the first time came?

0:39:11.600 --> 0:39:12.120
<v Speaker 6>Well, how about that?

0:39:12.280 --> 0:39:16.000
<v Speaker 5>The first time the Rangers ever won a division championship

0:39:16.160 --> 0:39:19.000
<v Speaker 5>was nineteen ninety six, and I was the around the

0:39:19.000 --> 0:39:22.520
<v Speaker 5>ballpark reporter on the Rangers television network, and so it

0:39:22.640 --> 0:39:25.440
<v Speaker 5>was my assignment. And back then it was a huge

0:39:25.480 --> 0:39:28.520
<v Speaker 5>deal because the Rangers had never won anything and they'd

0:39:28.600 --> 0:39:31.799
<v Speaker 5>gone It was their twenty fifth season here and so

0:39:31.840 --> 0:39:34.160
<v Speaker 5>they finally win and the game didn't get over till

0:39:34.160 --> 0:39:38.560
<v Speaker 5>like midnight, and so I did on the Rangers network.

0:39:38.600 --> 0:39:41.239
<v Speaker 5>I did all the interviews, and I got. I was

0:39:41.280 --> 0:39:45.200
<v Speaker 5>wearing a suit and with no protection, no nothing whatever,

0:39:45.400 --> 0:39:49.520
<v Speaker 5>and so I was just drenched in champagne and driving

0:39:49.560 --> 0:39:54.359
<v Speaker 5>home at two o'clock in the morning. If I got,

0:39:54.400 --> 0:39:57.480
<v Speaker 5>if I had got, if I got on the way home,

0:39:58.520 --> 0:40:00.040
<v Speaker 5>there's no way I'm talking about.

0:40:00.280 --> 0:40:02.000
<v Speaker 4>Buddy, what do you been doing?

0:40:02.239 --> 0:40:03.160
<v Speaker 6>I promise.

0:40:05.400 --> 0:40:08.360
<v Speaker 5>So without drinking and drop, I was going straight to

0:40:08.440 --> 0:40:09.520
<v Speaker 5>the pokey.

0:40:10.280 --> 0:40:12.080
<v Speaker 4>Do I need to get go home and get you

0:40:12.160 --> 0:40:13.240
<v Speaker 4>my ski goggles.

0:40:14.080 --> 0:40:15.000
<v Speaker 6>That's what he would need.

0:40:15.080 --> 0:40:17.080
<v Speaker 4>Yeah, you need to get that's what you need. That's

0:40:17.120 --> 0:40:19.800
<v Speaker 4>more than anything, because they all wear goggles.

0:40:19.840 --> 0:40:23.360
<v Speaker 5>Yes, I got the I got the little swim goggles.

0:40:23.560 --> 0:40:24.040
<v Speaker 6>That's okay.

0:40:25.600 --> 0:40:30.080
<v Speaker 4>As long as though I started, I look forward to

0:40:30.120 --> 0:40:30.719
<v Speaker 4>watching later.

0:40:31.200 --> 0:40:35.799
<v Speaker 5>I started swimming this summer, and and uh for the hip, well,

0:40:35.840 --> 0:40:38.719
<v Speaker 5>I just just it's a really good extra. SoSE and

0:40:38.800 --> 0:40:42.320
<v Speaker 5>I was noticing my eyes were because of chlorine or whatever,

0:40:42.440 --> 0:40:44.120
<v Speaker 5>and so I went and bought some goggles.

0:40:44.160 --> 0:40:45.360
<v Speaker 6>And my wife was getting on me.

0:40:46.280 --> 0:40:48.960
<v Speaker 5>Why do you have goggles? You're not a swimmer?

0:40:49.840 --> 0:40:52.960
<v Speaker 4>From now you are, so now those goggles are going

0:40:53.000 --> 0:40:56.880
<v Speaker 4>to come in. I was curious about buying a single

0:40:57.560 --> 0:41:00.920
<v Speaker 4>ticket for the game tonight. There's very very few. Some

0:41:01.000 --> 0:41:05.120
<v Speaker 4>of them are obstructed views. There was one down the line,

0:41:05.239 --> 0:41:08.120
<v Speaker 4>maybe in the outfield. It was one hundred and fifty dollars.

0:41:08.480 --> 0:41:09.160
<v Speaker 4>Would you do it?

0:41:09.320 --> 0:41:10.800
<v Speaker 6>Yeah, yes, I'm.

0:41:10.680 --> 0:41:13.239
<v Speaker 5>Gonna look at Evaldi on the mountain night. Yeah, going

0:41:13.320 --> 0:41:15.640
<v Speaker 5>for the kill tonight. And and the other thing that's

0:41:15.680 --> 0:41:18.200
<v Speaker 5>great about that ballpark is just as long as you

0:41:18.239 --> 0:41:22.319
<v Speaker 5>get in, there's plenty of areas there.

0:41:22.719 --> 0:41:25.360
<v Speaker 6>It's a beautiful place to watch it, and it's I

0:41:25.440 --> 0:41:25.719
<v Speaker 6>love it.

0:41:25.840 --> 0:41:28.080
<v Speaker 5>Yeah, and you got so you can just stand there,

0:41:28.160 --> 0:41:30.760
<v Speaker 5>Well I could stand there and see over people.

0:41:30.800 --> 0:41:35.719
<v Speaker 4>But just slip that one through.

0:41:37.040 --> 0:41:37.400
<v Speaker 6>You know what.

0:41:41.239 --> 0:41:43.600
<v Speaker 4>We're gonna bring it back to the Cowboys. So you're

0:41:43.680 --> 0:41:46.600
<v Speaker 4>saying that if I don't have a press pass, I

0:41:46.640 --> 0:41:49.520
<v Speaker 4>shouldn't buy one of those tickets in the end zone

0:41:49.560 --> 0:41:50.920
<v Speaker 4>for the Cowboys to stand up.

0:41:51.600 --> 0:41:53.359
<v Speaker 5>Don't do that unless you're gonna you have to.

0:41:53.840 --> 0:41:54.719
<v Speaker 6>You have to them.

0:41:56.600 --> 0:42:00.719
<v Speaker 4>I'll beat them. Yeah, r early entrant.

0:42:00.800 --> 0:42:02.400
<v Speaker 5>That's seeing the mad rush.

0:42:02.400 --> 0:42:04.320
<v Speaker 4>Hey, I got connections right exactly.

0:42:04.520 --> 0:42:05.719
<v Speaker 5>You've seen the mad rush when.

0:42:05.600 --> 0:42:06.520
<v Speaker 4>They're open the doors.

0:42:06.880 --> 0:42:09.080
<v Speaker 6>Well, well you saw him in San Francisco. He was

0:42:09.120 --> 0:42:09.600
<v Speaker 6>dodging it.

0:42:10.880 --> 0:42:13.799
<v Speaker 4>I beat those people. And the other thing I can

0:42:13.840 --> 0:42:15.799
<v Speaker 4>do is get up to the second level and get

0:42:15.800 --> 0:42:18.200
<v Speaker 4>in the front, get up them steps.

0:42:18.239 --> 0:42:22.560
<v Speaker 6>There you go. I gotta say though, I'm still a

0:42:22.640 --> 0:42:23.200
<v Speaker 6>Dak man.

0:42:23.640 --> 0:42:29.320
<v Speaker 7>You know, I have been following the x UH formerly

0:42:29.320 --> 0:42:33.640
<v Speaker 7>known as Twitter, and there are players former players out

0:42:33.640 --> 0:42:39.040
<v Speaker 7>there that really hate Dak Prescott and they don't even.

0:42:38.880 --> 0:42:42.520
<v Speaker 5>Know that, and they have roles on Network TV.

0:42:42.719 --> 0:42:45.440
<v Speaker 7>Well they've got another guy, do I tell you whatever

0:42:45.480 --> 0:42:48.399
<v Speaker 7>his name was? Yeah, he was what's going on with him?

0:42:48.440 --> 0:42:52.200
<v Speaker 7>I mean he's he says Dak is trash or something like. Wow,

0:42:53.000 --> 0:42:55.320
<v Speaker 7>things get so personal these days when it comes to

0:42:55.440 --> 0:42:59.279
<v Speaker 7>Dak Prescott. I just don't understand why he is there

0:42:59.440 --> 0:43:02.600
<v Speaker 7>such a inical outlook when it comes to not just

0:43:02.680 --> 0:43:04.800
<v Speaker 7>the way he plays, but just him as a person.

0:43:05.520 --> 0:43:08.399
<v Speaker 7>There's there's something personal about what they feel about him

0:43:08.560 --> 0:43:09.880
<v Speaker 7>that I don't understand.

0:43:10.520 --> 0:43:14.000
<v Speaker 4>And so he waits for the Cowboys number one. I

0:43:14.080 --> 0:43:17.160
<v Speaker 4>get that, Yeah, that's the quarterback.

0:43:18.400 --> 0:43:20.440
<v Speaker 7>I mean, why would you hate a man like that

0:43:20.480 --> 0:43:24.520
<v Speaker 7>who's done so much for the society and and you know,

0:43:24.600 --> 0:43:27.560
<v Speaker 7>had the kind of career that he's had. Very unusual

0:43:27.960 --> 0:43:30.000
<v Speaker 7>situation here. I mean, I get some people are making

0:43:30.040 --> 0:43:33.680
<v Speaker 7>money off of it. Uh you got Smith and Shannon

0:43:33.719 --> 0:43:34.360
<v Speaker 7>and those guys.

0:43:34.360 --> 0:43:36.960
<v Speaker 4>But jealousy, jealousy, man.

0:43:37.000 --> 0:43:39.120
<v Speaker 7>They're making enough money off of it. They're making a

0:43:39.200 --> 0:43:41.640
<v Speaker 7>whole lot of money off of it. But I see

0:43:41.719 --> 0:43:44.280
<v Speaker 7>Dak as being able to come back and do well.

0:43:45.280 --> 0:43:51.880
<v Speaker 7>I and we talked about it. Well, they talked about

0:43:51.880 --> 0:43:54.200
<v Speaker 7>it when it came to his first couple of games.

0:43:54.680 --> 0:43:58.240
<v Speaker 7>The timing has to be there for that offense period,

0:43:58.719 --> 0:44:02.000
<v Speaker 7>not just for Dak, but being higher offense, the offensive

0:44:02.040 --> 0:44:05.040
<v Speaker 7>line has to protect better so that his timing can

0:44:05.080 --> 0:44:08.320
<v Speaker 7>be there so he can go through his progressions even

0:44:08.360 --> 0:44:10.919
<v Speaker 7>when he's under some somewhat a lot of a bit

0:44:10.960 --> 0:44:13.040
<v Speaker 7>of pressure. Those are the kind of things that every

0:44:13.120 --> 0:44:16.200
<v Speaker 7>quarterback needs. You've got to have your offense or your

0:44:16.239 --> 0:44:19.080
<v Speaker 7>offensive line, they have to be there so that he

0:44:19.120 --> 0:44:23.319
<v Speaker 7>can go through his progressions with comfort as opposed to

0:44:23.360 --> 0:44:24.560
<v Speaker 7>being under such stress.

0:44:25.320 --> 0:44:29.279
<v Speaker 9>And Jerry even said it today as you mentioned, Bill,

0:44:29.320 --> 0:44:32.040
<v Speaker 9>but he also said, make no mistake about it, we

0:44:32.080 --> 0:44:34.120
<v Speaker 9>have the quarterback that can get us there. So if

0:44:34.680 --> 0:44:38.919
<v Speaker 9>Jerry thinks, everyone else here thinks, I think everyone needs

0:44:38.920 --> 0:44:40.759
<v Speaker 9>to put a little bit more faith into what we

0:44:40.840 --> 0:44:42.480
<v Speaker 9>have gotten into Monday night, for.

0:44:42.440 --> 0:44:46.200
<v Speaker 7>Sure, and they need to understand that there are certain

0:44:46.239 --> 0:44:49.120
<v Speaker 7>changes they have to make every game. You know, you

0:44:49.160 --> 0:44:52.520
<v Speaker 7>can't just go this is what we do. Well, yeah,

0:44:52.719 --> 0:44:54.719
<v Speaker 7>this is what we do, but there are certain adjustments

0:44:54.760 --> 0:44:57.720
<v Speaker 7>that they're kinda have to be made. Against certain teams

0:44:57.760 --> 0:45:00.239
<v Speaker 7>such as the forty nine ers, you can't just go

0:45:00.280 --> 0:45:03.120
<v Speaker 7>into that game status quo. It's just not the way

0:45:03.160 --> 0:45:05.440
<v Speaker 7>you do it against a team like that. You may

0:45:05.440 --> 0:45:07.439
<v Speaker 7>be able to do that against the NFC East team

0:45:07.719 --> 0:45:08.640
<v Speaker 7>or maybe even.

0:45:08.440 --> 0:45:09.760
<v Speaker 6>The Los Angeles Chargers.

0:45:10.080 --> 0:45:12.680
<v Speaker 7>But there are certain teams you can't do that against

0:45:12.920 --> 0:45:14.120
<v Speaker 7>and you will get exposed.

0:45:14.160 --> 0:45:17.720
<v Speaker 4>And that's what happened to know this because I didn't

0:45:17.719 --> 0:45:20.400
<v Speaker 4>realize that. Somebody said, did you Chargers win this weekend?

0:45:20.560 --> 0:45:24.680
<v Speaker 4>I said, I don't remember. They had a boy So

0:45:24.960 --> 0:45:29.640
<v Speaker 4>now they got a lot of what they want to

0:45:29.680 --> 0:45:35.600
<v Speaker 4>do is an extra day. So and Kellen.

0:45:35.360 --> 0:45:38.160
<v Speaker 6>Moore, and Kellen Moore has his whole thing.

0:45:38.320 --> 0:45:41.360
<v Speaker 4>Which, by the way, I think in the new stats

0:45:41.400 --> 0:45:45.000
<v Speaker 4>that just came out, if I could do this real

0:45:45.080 --> 0:45:47.640
<v Speaker 4>quick and find them before we got to go.

0:45:47.760 --> 0:45:49.440
<v Speaker 6>Oh, we already got it.

0:45:49.560 --> 0:45:55.280
<v Speaker 4>Their offense is ranked number five, their defense is ranked

0:45:55.480 --> 0:45:59.720
<v Speaker 4>thirty first, and they are thirty second against the pass.

0:46:01.680 --> 0:46:03.920
<v Speaker 6>So there you go.

0:46:04.160 --> 0:46:06.520
<v Speaker 5>And they're two and two on the season, and.

0:46:06.520 --> 0:46:09.120
<v Speaker 4>They're two and two. Still two and two?

0:46:09.640 --> 0:46:10.080
<v Speaker 6>All right?

0:46:10.239 --> 0:46:13.920
<v Speaker 5>That does it for a Moving on Tuesday edition of

0:46:14.400 --> 0:46:19.360
<v Speaker 5>mix Shots. We are definitely moving on tomorrow as we

0:46:19.719 --> 0:46:24.160
<v Speaker 5>celebrate a Division Series win and teammateted to the America

0:46:24.239 --> 0:46:24.719
<v Speaker 5>League champion.

0:46:26.160 --> 0:46:29.000
<v Speaker 4>Air messed up when he's got to go on the air.

0:46:30.040 --> 0:46:31.600
<v Speaker 6>Go Cowboys.

0:46:31.800 --> 0:46:34.759
<v Speaker 1>This has been a production of Dallascowboys dot Com and

0:46:34.880 --> 0:46:37.840
<v Speaker 1>the Dallas Cowboys Football Club