CLEVELAND — The Dallas
Cowboys’ defense had a game plan centered
heavily on one Cleveland Brown — Pro Bowl
tight end Kellen Winslow.
Tight ends had been known to tear apart Cowboys
defenses in the past. They found coverage advantages
and took advantage. But the Browns couldn’t do so
against the Cowboys’ defense Sunday.
Dallas kept Winslow and all his big-play Browns
teammates from changing the game in a relatively
easy-looking season-opening 28-10 victory at Cleveland
Browns Stadium. Winslow scored Cleveland’s lone
touchdown but was mostly harmless the rest of the game
and finished with five catches for 47 yards.
"In the past tight ends have been our Achilles’
heel," linebacker Bradie James said. "Once you stop the
run and stop Kellen Winslow, you can pin your ears back
and try to make some plays after that."
In the second half, Winslow had only one catch for 9
yards and was the centerpiece of the Cowboys’
strategy of slowing the Browns’ stars. Dallas
held Cleveland (eighth in total offense in 2007) to 205
yards of offense, Pro Bowl quarterback Derek Anderson
to 114 passing yards and running back Jamal Lewis to a
quiet 62 rushing yards.
Also, Pro Bowl receiver Braylon Edwards had just two
catches for 14 yards and never got in sync with
Anderson.
It was all about game planning to stop the son of
legendary Hall of Fame tight end Kellen Winslow. When
the Cowboys went to their new dime formation, Winslow
was covered by cornerback Anthony Henry. That’s a
change from last year, when safety Roy Williams covered
tight ends.
The Cowboys also gave Williams help on first and second
down with, get this, outside linebacker Greg Ellis in
coverage keeping Winslow from a free release off the
line.
"At times we showed what kind of defense we can be, but
we can play better," Pro Bowl safety Ken Hamlin said.
Cowboys coach Wade Phillips believes his defense can be
better this year after having another year in his 3-4
system with talent upgrades. Now, the Cowboys feel much
better about their depth. Last year when cornerback
Terence Newman was out, the rest of the Cowboys’
defense didn’t know what would happen.
"In the off-season we went out and got talent," James
said. "Like, last year when T-New was out, it was like
a panic. We have enough people to hold it down until he
gets back, and that showed up today."
Adam "Pacman" Jones, starting in place of Newman,
didn’t give up any big plays as he fought off the
rust, and the Cowboys applied pressure despite only one
sack, by DeMarcus Ware.
The Cowboys’ only real flaw was giving up a
16-play, 78-yard touchdown drive in the first half that
consumed 8 minutes, 57 seconds.
Nose tackle Tank Johnson, who expects to make an impact
on the improved unit this season, was already looking
ahead to next week. He had more of a glass-half-empty
look at the game.
"We’re not dominant; we’re not the best,"
Johnson said. "We were good and we won. A win is a win.
We’re not putting too much stock into beating a
team in Week 1."
(star-telegram.com)