Tuesday, January 6, 2015

Cowboys-Packers NFC Divisional preview

GREEN BAY, Wis. - Thanks to one particularly bad call (or was it three?) and Tony Romo's late heroics, the Dallas Cowboys earned a meeting with the Green Bay Packers at Lambeau Field in an NFC Divisional Round playoff game on Sunday.

The contest will be the first time the Cowboys and Packers will meet in Curly Lambeau's Cathedral of Football in postseason play since the famed and frozen "Ice Bowl" of 1967 between Vince Lombardi and Tom Landry that decided the NFL Championship.

Romo would lead Dallas over their final 59 yards on Sunday, culminated in an 8 yard go-ahead touchdown strike to Terrance Williams in the Cowboys' eventual 24-20 Wild Card victory over the Detroit Lions.

With that possession, Romo secured his 28th-career game-winning drive, tied for the most since 2006, his first year in the league, and a trip to his native Wisconsin.

Romo went 19-of-31 passing on 293 yards, rallying from a 20-7 deficit, flinging a 76 yard catch-and-run score to Williams to close out the first half. DeMarco Murray added a rushing score, bringing Dallas within 20-14, finishing the night with 76 yards.

"You just have to stay in the moment and understand the game," Romo said afterwards. "It doesn't end after the first quarter, second quarter. You just have to keep calm. I've played in enough games to understand that. Maybe I didn't do that as well when I was younger."

Dallas was handed a fistful of 8-8 seasons and only one postseason victory when Romo was younger, though on Sunday a matured passer went 8-of-12 for 195 yards and both his touchdowns on third-down plays, and despite being sacked by Ndamukong Suh on consecutive snaps on their game-winning drive, converted a 4th-and-6 to Jason Witten for 21 yards before finding Williams on the back line.

Those days of postseason choking for which he became known seem long gone.

"If you are mentally tough enough, and you've been through it, and I think experience helps you, you just get rid of those thoughts and understand that this game is going to go all the way to the end," Romo said, who is 0-2 in divisional contests. "Just don't give them anything to let this game get out of reach and it will find a way to get back at the end."

Dallas (13-4) opened their season with a defeat to the 49ers before winning their next six outings. They suffered a 2-3 mid-season slump, including a 33-10 defeat to the Eagles on Thanksgiving that briefly decided the NFC East before a four-game winning streak ended their regular season.

Their revenge-match with the Eagles on a Sunday night, a 38-27 Cowboys decision, and Philadelphia's subsequent three-game losing skid, gave the division definitively to Dallas.

Green Bay enjoyed a first-round bye over Wild Card weekend thanks to their fourth-straight NFC North title, secured two Sundays ago with a 30-20 victory over Detroit. Though one could hardly call the time off restful.

Life in the Frozen Tundra has been touchy over the last week as Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers has been left out of practice, nursing a calf injury from their game against Detroit. He had to be helped from the field that day after falling to the turf in pain as he threw a touchdown to Randall Cobb.

Rodgers was taken to the locker room on a cart, and after missing two series would return to action, finishing with 226 yards and two touchdowns, including his second to Cobb that gave the Packers their first lead, and even a 1 yard rushing score that came in the fourth quarter to produce a two-touchdown advantage.

He underwent treatment on his injured left calf this week and will be examined by team doctor Patrick McKenzie on Wednesday. Head coach Mike McCarthy was optimistic his quarterback would return on Thursday, saying he had "hip in his hop."

"I'm not concerned," McCarthy said on Monday. "Look at the way he played in the second half of the Detroit game. He's learned to play through different situations. He has continuity with his teammates. So I think you've got to be in-tune with that. But, hey, the way he progresses, he's a quick healer. He jumped out there last week and was playing normal football there until the injury. So I think he'll be in pretty good shape come Sunday."

Though his absence is still a concern in the coach's eyes.

"It's a big challenge for Aaron," he said. "I think Aaron was brought up in the right way. He likes to practice. He enjoys the competition of practice. Brett [Favre] was the same way. As a coach, your quarterback has a responsibility to practice because to me the head coach and the quarterback control the tempo and the energy of practice."

Rodgers is yet to be intercepted in more than two calendar years at Lambeau Field, and has thrown the third-most touchdowns in football this season (38) and the sixth-most yards (4,381). Jordy Nelson is second in receiving scores (13) and Cobb's 12 are the third-most.

Green Bay fields the 23rd-best rush defense (119.9 ypg), though are allowing 3.6 yards per rush in the second half of this season, compared to 4.78 in their first eight outings. Their yardage per game in that time has drastically improved, as well. After permitting 153.5 yards on average in their first eight, their second half found them giving up only 86.4 every Sunday.

That improvement will face a hearty test against the Cowboys' 2nd-best backfield and the game's best rusher in DeMarco Murray, whose 1,845 yards and 13 touchdowns are tops the professional ranks.

"The Dallas Cowboys' run game is excellent," Mike McCarthy said this week simply. "Murray is a big-time back. He's definitely a difference-maker."

Murray carried 18 times for 134 yards and a touchdown, with a 7.4 yard average per rush, against the Packers in Dallas late last season, a one-point win for Green Bay.

"Any time you see a player for the first time live, they leave an impression on you, and I was very, very impressed with him," McCarthy said of that meeting.

Packers defensive coordinator Dom Capers will be tasked with stopping him.

"This will be the best test that we've had," Capers said. "I think this [Cowboys] offensive line is as good as there is in the league. Obviously by this running back's statistics, he can run and does a nice job receiving the ball out of the backfield. So this will be a challenge."

Murray, who rushed for over 100 yards in 12 games this season, added 416 yards on 57 receptions and has 1,200 yards through the air in his career.

"We just have to make sure we do our best," Packers defensive lineman Mike Daniels said. "Make sure we prepare the right way this week, make sure we come out and, it sounds really rhetorical, but just get after it. It's just plain and simple. That'll solve a lot of problems if we just buckle down and play our best fundamentally sound game and play it as hard as we possible can. That'll take care of a lot of things."

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