NFL Preview - Dallas (1-0) at Seattle (0-1)
By Scott Garbarini, NFL Editor
(Sports Network) - The Dallas Cowboys were able to exorcise one demon in their
first game of the 2012 season. They'll now have a chance to put behind a
haunting moment from years past in their second outing.
When the Cowboys take on the Seattle Seahawks this Sunday, it'll be the first
time the team invades CenturyLink Field since January of 2007, when the two
opponents engaged in an NFC First-Round Playoff matchup that yielded an
unforgettable finish.
Dallas trailed the Seahawks by a point late in that contest before driving
deep into enemy territory to set up a go-ahead field goal attempt with 1:19
left. However, quarterback Tony Romo -- then also serving as the Cowboys'
holder -- mishandled the snap from center and kicker Martin Gramatica was
never able to get an attempt off as Seattle escaped with a narrow 21-20 win.
Romo bounced back strongly from that embarrassing episode the following year,
throwing a career-best 36 touchdown passes to lead Dallas to a 13-3 record and
the NFC's top playoff seed in 2007. And the highly scrutinized signal-caller's
outstanding play last week helped his team overcome another painful period --
a pair of late-season losses to the rival New York Giants this past winter
that spoiled the Cowboys' bid for a division title.
Romo was on top of his game in Dallas' season-opening grudge match against the
Giants, completing a crisp 22-of-29 passes for 307 yards and three touchdowns
with one interception to propel the Cowboys to an uplifting 24-17 road victory
over the defending Super Bowl champs and give the club an early leg up on one
of the biggest threats to its goal of capturing the NFC East.
"I do think his mindset of taking the next step -- we really saw him elevate
his game the next year and put himself in a category of elite quarterback --
that's when it started," Cowboys tight end Jason Witten said of Romo when
recalling the 2006 playoff defeat. "Finishing that (2006 season) that way
really fueled him. I think we've seen how he's handled it and pushed himself.
I think he remembers those adverse situations."
Romo didn't do it alone in last week's big win. Reserve wide receiver Kevin
Ogletree hauled in two of the quarterback's touchdown throws while posting
career bests for catches (8) and receiving yards (114), emerging star running
back DeMarco Murray contributed 131 rushing yards, while a made-over defense
headed up by new cornerbacks Brandon Carr and rookie Morris Claiborne kept New
York's dangerous passing game under wraps throughout the night.
The Seahawks enter Sunday's showdown as the ones attempting to shake off a
tough result to take after being edged by fellow NFC West member Arizona last
Sunday in the regular-season debut of Seattle rookie quarterback Russell
Wilson. Head coach Pete Carroll's young charges were in position to pull out
what would have been an advantageous win in the closing stages, but failed to
score a touchdown in four plays inside the Cardinals' 10-yard line and were
saddled with a 20-16 setback.
Seattle rallied from a 13-3 third-quarter deficit by netting 13 consecutive
points, with return specialist Leon Washington setting up a pair of scores
with two long runbacks, but a defense that held Arizona in check for most of
the afternoon allowed backup quarterback Kevin Kolb to engineer an 80-yard
touchdown drive that put the Cardinals ahead with less than five minutes left.
"I felt great about the opportunities that we had," said Wilson, who finished
with 153 yards and a touchdown with one interception on 18-of-34 passing in
his first career effort. We put ourselves in a good position. We just fell
short, and that's going to happen sometimes.
"The defense did a great job. Special teams did a great job helping us out as
well. We just fell short."
Seattle also came up short in a 23-13 loss to Dallas at Cowboys Stadium last
November, with Murray churning out 135 yards and a touchdown in that tilt and
the Cowboys intercepting the since-departed Tarvaris Jackson three times.
SERIES HISTORY
Cowboys lead 9-4
Streak: Cowboys have won last three meetings
Last Meeting: Cowboys 23, Seahawks 13 (Nov. 6, 2011 at Dallas)
Last Regular-Season Meeting at Site: Seahawks 13, Cowboys 10 (Oct. 23, 2005)
Cowboys HC Jason Garrett vs. Seahawks: 1-0
Seahawks HC Pete Carroll vs. Cowboys: 1-1 overall, 0-1 with Seattle
Garrett vs. Carroll Head-to-Head: Garrett leads, 1-0
Notes: Cowboys making first appearance at Qwest Field since memorable 21-20
loss to Seahawks in opening round of 2006 NFC Playoffs and are 1-2 all-time at
CenturyLink Field, posting a 43-39 shootout win there on Dec. 6, 2004.
Seattle's last regular-season victory in the series took place at home in
2005. Carroll's only triumph over Dallas as a head coach occurred while at the
helm of New England in 1999.
BY THE NUMBERS
Offensive Team Rankings
Dallas: 3rd overall (433.0 ypg), 7th rushing (143.0 ypg), 10th passing (290.0
ypg), tied 14th scoring (24.0 ppg)
Seattle: 29th overall (254.0 ypg), 13th rushing (115.0 ypg), 30th passing
(139.0 ypg), tied 25th scoring (16.0 ppg)
Defensive Team Rankings
Dallas: 7th overall (269.0 ypg), 12th rushing (82.0 ypg), 5th passing (187.0
ypg), tied 9th scoring (17.0 ppg)
Seattle: 3rd overall (253.0 ypg), 5th rushing (43.0 ypg), 11th passing (210.0
ypg), tied 6th scoring (16.0 ppg)
Turnover Margin
Dallas: Even (1 takeaway, 1 giveaway)
Seattle: Even (2 takeaways, 2 giveaways)
Red Zone Touchdown Percentage (offense)
Dallas: 66.7 percent (3 possessions, 2 TD, 1 FG) -- tied 7th overall
Seattle: 25.0 percent (4 possessions, 1 TD, 2 FG) -- 26th overall
Red Zone Touchdown Percentage (defense)
Dallas: 66.7 percent (3 possessions, 2 TD, 1 FG) -- tied 24th overall
Seattle: 50.0 percent (4 possessions, 2 TD, 2 FG) -- tied 11th overall
WHEN THE COWBOYS HAVE THE BALL
Dallas' offense was operating at near full efficiency in an impressive opener,
with Romo (307 passing yards, 3 TD, 1 INT last week) getting solid protection
from his front line and firing accurate passes to a deep wide receiver corps
that got a huge boost from the previously underachieving Ogletree (8
receptions, 114 yards, 2 TD) alongside mainstays Dez Bryant (4 receptions, 85
yards) and Miles Austin (4 receptions, 73 yards). The trio accounted for all
but 35 of Romo's 307 passing yards and should present a challenge for
Seattle's talented secondary this week. Murray will be a handful as well, as
the Seahawks found out when the standout young running back amassed 186 yards
from scrimmage (139 rushing, 47 receiving) in last season's meeting, and the
Cowboys are awfully tough to slow down when he's being fed the ball. In six
career games in which Murray has had at least 20 touches, as was the case last
week, Dallas is 6-0. Romo was still able to shred an injury-riddled Giants
secondary despite favored target Witten being a relative non-factor, with the
veteran tight end managing just 10 yards on two catches while making an
unexpected and gutsy return from a lacerated spleen suffered in the preseason.
He'll have 11 days to heal up for Sunday's clash, however, and provides
another quality weapon to an offense that rolled up 433 yards on New York if
at or near 100 percent.
It'll be strength-on-strength when Dallas has the ball, as an athletic Seattle
defense has the speed and skill to give Romo and his mates a far tougher test
than the depleted Giants did in Week 1. Though the Seahawks weren't able to
stop Murray from running wild last season, they completely shut down Arizona's
ground game last Sunday, with beefy linemen Brandon Mebane (4 tackles, 2 PD)
and Red Bryant (3 tackles, 1 PD) effectively clogging gaps and rangy outside
linebackers K.J. Wright (9 tackles) and Leroy Hill (3 tackles) covering plenty
of ground with support from physical strong safety Kam Chancellor (5 tackles,
1 PD). As a result, the Cardinals mustered a paltry 43 rushing yards on 20
attempts. The pass defense was very good as well, with second-year cornerback
Richard Sherman (4 tackles, 1 PD) doing an excellent job against All-Pro
receiver Larry Fitzgerald and coming up with a key interception that helped
spark Seattle's second-half rally. He and the 6-foot-4 Brandon Browner (4
tackles) form an imposing outside tandem, though declining veteran Marcus
Trufant might be able to be exploited by Austin when deployed in the slot in
nickel packages. Getting steady pressure from sources such as top pass rusher
Chris Clemons (1 sack) and situational tackle Jason Jones, something Seattle
wasn't able to do in last year's bout with the Cowboys, would aid the cause as
well.
WHEN THE SEAHAWKS HAVE THE BALL
While the defense and a raucous home crowd should give a reasonable chance to
avoid an 0-2 start, the offense will have to produce more than the 254 total
yards it did a week ago and execute better within the red zone -- where
Seattle scored just one touchdown in four trips against Arizona -- to make
that scenario a possibility. With Wilson (153 passing yards, 1 TD, 1 INT)
still feeling his way around, expect the Seahawks to ride running back
Marshawn Lynch (85 rushing yards, 2 receptions) extensively in this game. The
2011 Pro Bowl selection was a force in last November's encounter with the
Cowboys, gaining 135 yards and a touchdown on 23 totes even with Dallas
stacking the box for much of the action. Wilson will need to show some
improvement in his second start as well, as the 2012 third-round pick
struggled with his accuracy and averaged a subpar 4.5 yards per pass attempt
in Week 1. Most of his throws were short deliveries to wide receivers Braylon
Edwards (5 receptions), Sidney Rice (4 receptions) and Doug Baldwin (2
receptions), and the Seahawks had just one passing play over 16 yards in the
loss. A shaky offensive line had some trouble handling the Cardinals' pass
rushers to boot and will be making one lineup change for this game, with 2011
third-rounder John Moffitt replacing overmatched rookie J.R. Sweezy at right
guard. Left tackle Russell Okung is expected to play despite incurring a bone
bruise in his left knee last Sunday, which is good news with Dallas possessing
the prolific DeMarcus Ware on the opposite side.
With Seattle lacking much of a vertical threat, expect the Cowboys to place
most of their defensive focus on Lynch. Though the team will likely be without
Pro Bowl nose tackle Jay Ratliff (ankle) for a second straight week,
replacement Josh Brent did an adequate job of tying up blockers against the
Giants and freeing inside linebackers Sean Lee and Bruce Carter (5 tackles) to
make plays. Lee was all over the field in the opener, racking up 12 tackles
(10 solo) and forcing a key fumble in a stellar performance. Carr, a marquee
free-agent pickup during the offseason, and first-round choice Claiborne (4
tackles) also held their own last week, holding New York's accomplished wide
receiver combo of Hakeem Nicks and Victor Cruz to a relatively harmless 96
yards on 10 catches with their aggressive press styles. Ware (5 tackles) was
his usual disruptive self as well in recording a pair of sacks of Giants
quarterback Eli Manning, and his presence must be accounted for by the
Seahawks in order to prevent another pedestrian passing day from Wilson. All
told, it will be quite an early test for Seattle's promising young field
general.
OVERALL ANALYSIS
This has the potential of being a difficult matchup for a Dallas team that
faces the prospect of coming out a bit flat off a win in a game it had circled
on the calendar ever since the schedule was released. The Seattle defense is
very good, and the excessively loud atmosphere of CenturyLink Field can create
nightmares for enemy quarterbacks and should have an impact on Dallas'
execution to at least some extent. However, the Seahawks are going to knock
off a more experienced and skilled opponent unless Wilson makes some
significant strides in throwing the football, and that won't be an easy task
against a Cowboys secondary that looks much improved from last year's porous
group and with Ware and his compatriots continually breathing down the
rookie's neck.
Sports Network Predicted Outcome: Cowboys 17, Seahawks 13
09/14 11:07:40 ET
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