
Discipline is a major concern. The Cowboys have the league's #1 offense, producing 420.4 yards per game. Still, this team can be it's own worst enemy come game time. What should be a run oriented offense is forced into passing situations all too often by bone-headed penalties.
Prime boneheadedry examples - Gurode snaps the ball and the pulling guard, Leonard Davis, knocks the football out of Tony Romo’s hands before he ever gets a grip on it and the Chiefs recover it.
Or one drive with back to back penalties. Illegal formation on Miles Austin and a false start on Flozell Adams that led to 1st and 20 instead of 1st and 10.
And this isn't a new problem. Dallas is consistently one of the most penalized teams in the league. I just found this quote from Wade Phillips - Dateline Nov. 13, 2007, following a win against the Giants that Dallas kept letting the Giants back in the game (sound familiar?). He speaks in regards to Dallas' 10 penalties in the game: "We will address it," Phillips said Monday. "That's not acceptable because we are accountable. It's not for me, it's for their teammates. It cost us some points in that game. We had several of them; I'm not happy about that. I will tell them and I think they will respond."
How did that lil talk work out? According to my research (unofficial) Dallas responded in 2008 with 119 penalties for an amazing 952 YARDS. That nullifies the entire offensive production of 2 or 3 games! Twenty nine of those were false starts.
I'm sure it's not just me, but when I see a penalty flag thrown, I assume immediately that I'll hear "
False start, offense, number 76" It's almost a given.
Dallas repeatedly has issues closing out games. They are their own biggest opponent. They should have blown away the Chiefs, but with mental mistakes, poor judgment, fumbled punt returns and lack of discipline, KC kept hanging around. Cowboys committed THIRTEEN penalties in the game.
If you're keeping score at home, so far in '09 Dallas has
Fumbled the ball away 4 times
Thrown 4 interceptions
Been penalized THIRTY SEVEN times for 331 yards.
(unofficial research)