11 Key Differences for Cowboys and Seahawks Since Week Three

Looking at previous head-to-head matchups is the first thing most analysts will do when assessing a new contest. The closer a rematch is to the original game, the more relevant any lessons learned might be. However, as evidenced by the Seahawks 43-16 victory and 26-23 loss to the 49ers two weeks apart, previous games are hardly guaranteed to predict future outcomes.

You can be sure Cowboys fans will be emphasizing every key difference from their week three loss to the Seahawks that reflects positively on their chances this Saturday, while Seattle fans will focus on the things that remain the same from their comfortable victory. As objectively as possible, here are the differences that both sides should acknowledge and interpret.

No Earl Thomas

Dak Prescott was intercepted twice in the first game. Both came at the hands of Earl Thomas. Thomas played an amazing game in what was likely his last full game in a Seahawks uniform. ProFootballFocus (PFF) had him as the highest-graded defender for Seattle (91.1/100).

Seattle has been without Thomas since week four, and mostly relied on Tedric Thompson to fill his All-Pro shoes. Of late, Delano Hill has stepped in after Thompson was injured.

Thompson played just 12 snaps in the first matchup, and Hill played none. This represents a massive change from the first game, and one that favors the Cowboys.

Amari Cooper upgrades Cowboys receivers

The young and ultra-talented Amari Cooper was acquired by the Cowboys in week nine, well after the first game against Seattle. Since then, Cooper has graded out as the Cowboys best offensive player by PFF.

He had 217 yards and 3 TDs against the Eagles in week 14, and 180 yards and 2 TDs against the Redskins in week 12. He has not had more than 75 yards in any other game, and has not had more than 32 yards receiving in his last three contests.

Allen Hurns played 66% of the snaps in the first matchup, Deonte Thompson played 46% of the snaps, and Terrance Williams played 15%. Only Hurns is still getting any snaps for Dallas, and he got just 8% of the snaps in week 16, the last game that mattered.

Some of those snaps went to Michael Gallup, who went from 42% of the snaps against the Seahawks to 79% of the snaps in week 16, but Cooper is the real game-changer, and represents a large upgrade over the players Dallas ran out there in the first game.

Doug Baldwin is back

While everyone will talk about Cooper, you are unlikely to hear anyone in the national media mention Seattle’s most talented receiver did not play in the first game. After battling a variety of ailments all season, Doug Baldwin Jr. has found his groove. He finished with four touchdowns in the final five weeks, and was the fourth-best receiver in football over that span, per PFF.

That first game saw Brandon Marshall get 62% of the snaps on offense, Jaron Brown get 72%, and Keenan Reynolds get 23%. Marshall is no longer on the team (or in the league), and Brown played just 19% of the snaps in the last meaningful game Seattle played in week 16.

Baldwin’s return, plus the increased role of David Moore, represent a significant and positive difference for the Seahawks.

Justin Britt missed the first game

Week three represented the game where the Seahawks flipped the switch to a run-first offense. They had been rushing on 34% of neutral script situations in the first two weeks, and changed to 65% in the weeks that followed.

They struggled to run effectively against a very good Cowboys run defense, but there were two key missing elements. The first was that Seahawks center Justin Britt missed the game and was replaced by mighty mite Joey Hunt.

While Hunt is a capable pass blocker, he is limited in run blocking. Britt is literally and figuratively central to the Seahawks rushing attack. His combination blocks with guards D.J. Fluker and J.R. Sweezy have been a staple for the Seahawks top-ranked rushing offense.

Seattle averaged roughly a yard less per carry on runs behind center in the Dallas game than they did in every game Britt played since. This is a significant positive change for the Seahawks.

George Fant as tight end

The second major factor in the Seahawks rushing attack has been the play of George Fant as a tackle-eligible tight end. Fant has played about half the offensive snaps in the second half of the season as what amounts to a sixth offensive lineman. He did not play a snap in the first game against Dallas.

Fant is the second-best lineman on the team, and the best run blocker, per PFF. As good as Dallas is against the run, they have not faced this heavy package that has been key to Seattle’s rushing attack.

Blake Jarwin and Dalton Shultz lead Cowboys TE makeover

Most Seahawks fans probably have never heard of either Blake Jarwin or Dalton Schultz. Jarwin played just 20% of the snaps in the first game against Seattle and had only one target for zero catches. Schultz did not play at all.

Schultz played 63% of the snaps in week 16, and is a solid blocking tight end who represents a significant upgrade over someone like Geoff Swaim, who played 93% of the snaps in the first game.

Jarwin is the wild card, though. A promising prospect since joining the team as an undrafted free agent last season, Jarwin had what might be his breakout game in the final week of the season. He finished with 119 yards and 3 TDs against the Giants.

Jarwin had not had more than 56 yards in any previous game, and had not scored a touchdown. That might just be an outlier game in a meaningless situation, or it might be a very timely metamorphosis for Dallas.

Either way, the Cowboys are more dangerous and more effective at tight end than they were in week three.

Sean Lee out, Leighton Vander Esch in

This one is interesting. Linebacker Leighton Vander Esch has been one of the best rookies to enter the NFL this season. He played 48% of the snaps in the first game against Seattle, and now plays every snap. That represents a potential advantage for the Cowboys.

The man he has largely replaced, though, is Sean Lee. Lee had a heck of a game against the Seahawks. He played 52% of the snaps, and led the team in tackles with 11, had a half-sack, and 1.5 tackles for loss.

Vander Esch has 10 tackles and 1 tackle for loss. No doubt Vander Esch is a great player, but will he double his production with double the snaps? That’s hard to say.

While this represents an important difference from the first game, it likely will be overblown given Vander Esch played a lot in the first game, and it will be difficult for him to match the numbers he and Lee posted as a tandem just by playing more snaps.

K.J. Wright in, Mychal Kendricks out

Seattle has a similarly murky exchange happening at linebacker. Pro Bowler K.J. Wright missed the first game, and is finally appearing fully healthy. His addition represents a significant positive for Seattle.

The man who was taking many of his snaps, though, in that first game was Mychal Kendricks. Kendricks had 6 tackles, a sack, and a couple of quarterback hits against Dallas.

His speed and production will be missed. Wright and Kendricks are very different linebackers, which makes it hard to say whether this will be a net positive for Seattle.

Poona Ford emerging for Seahawks DL

Dallas fans should know the name Poona Ford, as he was a standout for the University of Texas. What they may not know is that Ford has quietly earned more and more snaps in recent weeks.

Ford did not play a snap in the first game against the Cowboys, but has been playing roughly half the snaps the past three weeks, and has been playing outstanding football.

Since starting to get regular playing time in week 13, Ford ranks third among all defensive interior linemen with a 91.2 grade, per PFF. Only Aaron Donald and Grady Jarrett rank higher in that stretch. No defensive tackle ranks higher than Ford’s 92.2 grade in run defense over that span.

Ford has registered a run stop on 19% of his run snaps since week 13, best in the NFL for players with more than 30 run snaps in that period. By comparison, Damon Harrison registered a run stop on 12.5% of his snaps since week 13.

Ford could be a key addition to the Seattle defense nobody will be talking about.

Maliek Collins will play this time

One of the Cowboys starters at defensive tackle did not play in the first game against Seattle. Maliek Collins was out, and will be available this time. Collins is not a world-beater, and his absence largely meant more snaps for other starting guys like Tyrone Crawford, but his availability gives the Cowboys a better rotation at defensive tackle.

Jacob Martin adds pass rush

Rookie defensive end Jacob Martin did not play in the first game against Dallas. He is nowhere near the factor that some of these others players are, but he is capable of making the one play that changes the game.

Martin has emerged as the Seahawks second-best edge rusher after Frank Clark, and over the past four weeks of the season, Martin was the 9th best edge rusher in the NFL, per PFF (min 50 snaps).

He has roughly been equivalent to Trey Flowers on the Patriots. He recorded a pressure on 15.7% of his pass rush snaps. Flowers was around 16.5%. A more heralded rookie, Bradley Chubb, generated pressure on 14.6% of his pass rush snaps the past four weeks.

Possible differences

J.R. Sweezy, Zach Martin, and Tyron Smith are important OL injuries

Zach Martin and Tyron Smith as the Cowboys two best offensive linemen and they played the whole game against Seattle in week three. Both were held out of week 17 as precaution while dealing with injuries, and both are expected to play this week. Their relative health could represent a meaningful change in this game.

Sweezy hurt his foot in the Kansas City game in week 16, and did not play last week. Pete Carroll has said it typically takes 3-4 weeks for this injury to heal, and they hope Sweezy can do it in two. His status is iffy at best, especially given one less day of recovery with a Saturday game.

Assuming he does not play, Ethan Pocic will step in and is a massive downgrade from Sweezy.

Tyrone Crawford may not play, or may not be fully healthy

It was a scary moment when Crawford was carted off the field with his neck stabilized a few weeks ago. Amazingly, he is on track to play in this game. Crawford is the fifth-ranked starter on this Cowboys defense per PFF, and either his absence or ineffectiveness due to injury could lead to an advantage for the Seahawks run game.

A whole lotta change…

While there are absolutely lessons to be learned from the first game these two teams played, these represent some massive changes since that game occurred.

Dallas did a great job slowing down the Seahawks rushing attack, but Seattle was missing two key aspects of their offensive line.

Seattle did a great job slowing down the Cowboys passing game, but Dallas has added weapons and the Seahawks have lost important secondary talent.

Names like Thomas and Cooper and Vander Esch will be discussed a lot in the lead-up to this game as major changes. Guys like Baldwin, Fant, Jarwin, Collins and Ford may wind up representing at least as large of a shift.

Founder, Editor & Lead Writer
  1. Really great write-up, Brian. Does the venue change make a substantive difference as well? I would say it does–to a degree. In the playoffs after the first series, the intensity is there for both sides.

    For me, this game shapes up somewhat like the Seahawks vs Panthers game. It will be close, there will be back and forth scoring, but who will be able to make the key drive or drives in the fourth quarter? The QBs playing are the same as in week three, and the edge has to go to Wilson.

  2. Not quite sure why people are high on Fant. If he is that good, he should have replaced Ifedi already. PPF rated him as the second highest OL is misleading because he only played about 35% of the snaps, and most of those are as a TE. If he plays around 93% like Ifedi, his score will be similar to Ifedi.

    This game will probably come down, as usual, the trenches. Which lines, DL/OL, play better will win. If it is close in the 4th quarter, then I’d bet on RW.

  3. Dallas has the 24th ranked offense per DVOA. Weighted is no better. So the addition of Cooper hasn’t really impacted their offense. Cowboys will rely upon their defense to win this one. Their defense has played better than ours and it’s in Dallas so that will make this game a challenge for Seattle.

  4. Interesting week this is for prognostication. I live roughly half way between Dallas and Houston now, and as such, get inundated with fan support for both teams. The hype is endless. The guys above make some decent observations from a Seahawk fan point of view, and Brian’s comments are typically thorough. All that said, I think the key for this game is the injury picture which, in turn, will lead to the key factor in determining/guessing the victor.

    This time in the season/post season, there are injuries to be noted on every roster, but the Seahawks have more significant ones than the Boys in my estimation. The move of Hill to IR is probably the toughest as it hits at positional depth that was already suspect though improving. That’s followed closely by the Griffin possible sit down where depth is again marginal. The weak outlook for a Sweezy return is very close as well. Like I say, the Hawks look the worse for wear to me.

    The key factor in this game in particular (given how similar these teams are) will be mistakes made. The personnel substitutions increase that danger. If the Seahawks can control themselves, not make the significant errors, and perhaps cause Dallas to make one or two too many, then they can prevail………for this week at least. But failing that, they lose the edge I might have given them were they healthier.

    Still…………….ball for Paul. There’s always hope……

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