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| Williams (above) has the build of Owens, but not the downfield speed and separation.
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| James D. Smith/Icon SMI |
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| | 2009 Schedule |
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September
13 at Tampa Bay
20 N.Y. GIANTS
28 CAROLINA (M)
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October
4 at Denver
11 at Kansas City
18 Bye
25 ATLANTA
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November
1 SEATTLE
8 at Philadelphia
15 at Green Bay
22 WASHINGTON
26 OAKLAND (T)
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December
6 at N.Y. Giants
13 SAN DIEGO
19 at New Orleans (S)
27 at Washington
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January
3 PHILADELPHIA
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| | SPOTLIGHT |
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DeMarcus Ware, Linebacker: Theoretically, film study should get less intense as a player becomes
more experienced, but that hasn't been the case for the 6'4", 262-pound
Ware. In his first few years the 2005 first-round pick concentrated on beating
the man in front of him. But once coordinators starting using reinforcements to
neutralize him, Ware had to shift his focus to beating everyone in front
of him. "Now, instead of studying the tackles, I have to look at what blocking
schemes teams use against certain defensive formations," says Ware. "I've had to
become a smarter player."
There's no doubt he was a better one in '08, when he tied for second in the
NFL in forced fumbles (six) and threatened Michael Strahan's sack record,
finishing with a league-leading 20. Now he wants to generate even more
turnovers. Lacking another top pass-rush threat to draw attention from Ware,
coach and coordinator Wade Phillips will keep moving his All-Pro around the
field to give him the best shot at the ball. "You can sack a guy and bring up
third-and-20, and the offense might still convert," Ware says. "What we want is
to get the ball back to our offense. That's what good defenses do."
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This article appears in the September 7, 2009 issue of Sports Illustrated.
You-know-who has left town, and now Big D looks to homegrown wideout Roy Williams to make some noise
Roy Williams is no stranger to the outsized pressures that come with
playing football in the Lone Star State. The Odessa native thrived as a receiver
at Permian High -- the West Texas powerhouse of Friday Night Lights fame -- and
set numerous pass-catching records as a Texas Longhorn. He grew up rooting for
the Cowboys and became one last fall. "Coming back home was easy for me because
I'm here with family, and with fans who are like my family because they've
cheered for me most of my career," says Williams, a first-round pick of Detroit
in 2004.
Whether he'll continue to feel the love depends on his ability to justify
Dallas's acquisition of him at midseason in 2008. Just before the October trade
deadline the Cowboys sent three future picks to Detroit for Williams, then
signed him to a five-year, $45 million contract that effectively minted him
as their No. 1 receiver, long-term. That made Terrell Owens expendable, and
he was unceremoniously released in March.
The change makes the receiving corps younger (Williams is 27, T.O. 35) and
creates chances for understudies Patrick Crayton, Miles Austin and Sam Hurd -- and
it eliminated the team's most grating distraction. "It's not because he doesn't
mean well," player personnel boss Stephen Jones says of Owens. "I just don't
think he can help himself."
At 6' 3" Williams is just as tall as the man he replaces and just as
physical with defensive backs at the line, but he lacks the downfield speed and
separation that make Owens a regular double- and sometimes triple-team target.
Those limitations didn't keep Williams from producing in Detroit, where he
scored 29 touchdowns in 4 1/2 seasons, but they have kept him from
rising to the level of T.O., whose 38 TD catches from 2006 through '08 were
the most in the league over that span.
Williams didn't even remotely approach Owens's production in the
10 games they played together last year -- Williams had only 19 catches
for 198 yards and a TD while hobbled with a foot injury, inviting immediate
comparisons with Joey Galloway, another subprime wideout on whom Dallas had
mortgaged its future. To distance himself from the criticism, Williams took a
few pages out of the T.O. book (albeit the less dramatic first edition) in the
off-season. First he worked on his body, shedding seven pounds to get to 208.
Then he worked on Tony Romo. "My thing was getting in his hip pocket and letting
him see that I'm a likable person, that he can talk to me about anything," says
Williams, who spent four weeks getting to know the QB on and off the field.
Despite the added familiarity, Williams is reluctant to put much emphasis on
the likely jump in his stats. "I had 82 catches and 1,310 yards and seven
touchdowns my Pro Bowl year [2006] in Detroit, and we were 3-13. It takes a lot
of people other than just me." To that end the Dallas offense will become more
methodical, increasing the workload of running backs Marion Barber, Felix Jones
and Tashard Choice while using tight ends Jason Witten and Martellus Bennett to
exploit mismatches in the intermediate passing game. In theory this balanced
approach should keep turnovers down, extend defenses and showcase the Cowboys'
underused weapons. "It'll spread catches more evenly, instead of just having one
guy be the focus," says Austin, who after battling knee injuries for most of
last year is poised for a breakout '09.
The crushing expectations on America's Team will be even greater this year
with the opening of its $1.15 billion stadium and the pressure to win its
first postseason game since the 1996 season (not to mention preserve Wade
Phillips's future as coach). But the Texas heat is nothing Williams can't
handle -- or isn't welcoming. "I'm trying to win now," he says. "I'm just happy to
be on a team that can make something happen."
-- Andrew Lawrence
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