2003 Dallas Cowboys season
The 2003 Dallas Cowboys season was the 44th season for the team in the National Football League. Coming off three consecutive 5–11 seasons, Dallas hired former New York Giants, New York Jets, and New England Patriots coach Bill Parcells. In a scheduling coincidence, the Cowboys faced all three said teams in the 2003 regular season.
2003 Dallas Cowboys season | |
---|---|
Owner | Jerry Jones |
Head coach | Bill Parcells |
General manager | Jerry Jones |
Home field | Texas Stadium |
Results | |
Record | 10–6 |
Division place | 2nd NFC East |
Playoff finish | Lost Wild Card Playoffs (at Panthers) 10–29 |
Pro Bowlers | Flozell Adams T Larry Allen G Dexter Coakley LB La'Roi Glover DT Roy Williams S |
AP All-Pros | Roy Williams (1st team) La'Roi Glover (2nd team) Dat Nguyen (2nd team) |
Uniform | |
2003 draft class
2003 Dallas Cowboys draft | |||||
Round | Pick | Player | Position | College | Notes |
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1 | 5 | Terence Newman * | CB | Kansas State | |
2 | 38 | Al Johnson | C | Wisconsin | |
3 | 69 | Jason Witten * | TE | Tennessee | [1] |
4 | 103 | Bradie James | LB | LSU | |
6 | 178 | B. J. Tucker | CB | Wisconsin | |
6 | 186 | Zuriel Smith | WR | Hampton | |
7 | 219 | Justin Bates | G | Colorado | |
Made roster † Pro Football Hall of Fame * Made at least one Pro Bowl during career |
Notes
- The Cowboys traded their 2002 seventh-round (No. 237 overall) and 2003 fifth-round (No. 140 overall) selections to the New England Patriots for a 2002 fifth-round (No. 168 overall) selection.
- The Cowboys traded their 2002 first-round (No. 6 overall) selection to the Kansas City Chiefs in exchange for 2002 first (No. 8 overall) and third-round (No. 75 overall) selections, and a 2003 sixth-round (No. 186 overall) selection.[2]
Undrafted free agents
Player | Position | College |
---|---|---|
Erik Bickerstaff | Running back | Wisconsin |
Keith O'Neil | Linebacker | Northern Arizona |
Tony Romo | Quarterback | Eastern Illinois |
Torrin Tucker | Tackle | Southern Miss |
Regular season
Despite the release of team legend Emmitt Smith, the Cowboys' fortunes began to change with the introduction of Parcells as head coach. Parcells began to reshape the team, particularly on offense, with an overhaul of the coaching staff, including former New York Giants offensive coordinator Sean Payton. Parcells retained much of the defensive staff, including defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer, and maintained the team's basic 4-3 defense instead of immediately installing the 3-4 defense which was a trademark of all Parcells's prior teams. This proved a wise decision, as the Cowboys finished the season with the top-ranked overall defense. As in his previous stops, Parcells started to rebuild his team through the draft. In his first year in Dallas, Parcells picked future Pro Bowl players cornerback Terence Newman, tight end Jason Witten and future Cowboys defensive captain linebacker Bradie James. One of the biggest rookie acquisitions came via free agency when the team signed undrafted rookie and future franchise quarterback Tony Romo (although that move got little attention for a few years). Also typical of his prior teams, Parcells brought in veteran players who had played for him at his previous coaching stops, signing fullback Richie Anderson and speedy wide receiver Terry Glenn with whom Parcells had a checkered history.
Though the Cowboys opened the season with a loss, a dramatic come-from-behind victory the next week against the Giants at New York spurred the team's confidence, particularly in third-year quarterback Quincy Carter. This would be followed by a reunion with Emmitt Smith (now with the Arizona Cardinals) in Dallas. Smith would injure his shoulder early in the game and not return. After starting with a 7–2 record, the Cowboys went 3–4 in the second half of the season including a loss to the eventual Super Bowl champion New England Patriots in Foxboro. The game received a lot of hype due to Bill Parcells and Patriots head coach Bill Belichick seemingly strained relationship due to the events following their final season coaching together with the New York Jets. Though the Cowboys finished 10–6 and earned a playoff berth, they lost in the first round to the eventual NFC champions, the Carolina Panthers.
The Cowboys ranked first in total defense (253.5 yards per game), third in rushing defense, and second in scoring (16.3 points per game), which helped the team qualify for the playoffs for the first time in the decade. In October, the Cowboys snapped a six-game losing streak to the Philadelphia Eagles (at halftime of the Eagles game, Tex Schramm was posthumously inducted into the club's Ring of Honor).
This turned out to be the final season for long-time (and often Pro Bowl) Cowboys safety Darren Woodson. Woodson represented the last player link to the Jimmy Johnson Cowboys (and to all three Super Bowl teams of the 1990s). Woodson was on the roster the following season (2004) but never saw action due to injury.
Schedule
Week | Date | Opponent | Result | Kickoff Time (CST) | Attendance | Record |
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1 | September 7, 2003 | Atlanta Falcons | L 27–13 | Fox 3:15pm | 0–1 | |
2 | September 15, 2003 | at New York Giants | W 35–32 | ABC 8:00pm | 1–1 | |
3 | Bye | |||||
4 | September 28, 2003 | at New York Jets | W 17–6 | Fox 3:15pm | 2–1 | |
5 | October 5, 2003 | Arizona Cardinals | W 24–7 | Fox 12:00pm | 3–1 | |
6 | October 12, 2003 | Philadelphia Eagles | W 23–21 | Fox 12:00pm | 4–1 | |
7 | October 19, 2003 | at Detroit Lions | W 38–7 | Fox 12:00pm | 5–1 | |
8 | October 26, 2003 | at Tampa Bay Buccaneers | L 16–0 | Fox 12:00pm | 5–2 | |
9 | November 2, 2003 | Washington Redskins | W 21–14 | Fox 3:15pm | 6–2 | |
10 | November 9, 2003 | Buffalo Bills | W 10–6 | CBS 3:15pm | 7–2 | |
11 | November 16, 2003 | at New England Patriots | L 12–0 | ESPN 7:30pm | 7–3 | |
12 | November 23, 2003 | Carolina Panthers | W 24–20 | Fox 12:00pm | 8–3 | |
13 | November 27, 2003 | Miami Dolphins | L 40–21 | CBS 3:00pm | 8–4 | |
14 | December 7, 2003 | at Philadelphia Eagles | L 36–10 | Fox 12:00pm | 8–5 | |
15 | December 14, 2003 | at Washington Redskins | W 27–0 | Fox 3:15pm | 9–5 | |
16 | December 21, 2003 | New York Giants | W 19–3 | Fox 12:00pm | 10–5 | |
17 | December 28, 2003 | at New Orleans Saints | L 13–7 | Fox 12:00pm | 10–6 |
Season summary
Week 1 vs. Atlanta Falcons
The Parcells era of the Cowboys began inauspiciously in a 27-13 loss to the Falcons at Texas Stadium. With Michael Vick out with injury Doug Johnson started for the Falcons and had two passing touchdowns and a rushing score. Quincy Carter had a touchdown to Joey Galloway and an interception.
Week 2 at New York Giants
On Monday Night Football Parcells returned to Giants Stadium for the first time since his final year as NY Jets coach and the ensuing game against the NY Giants became a memorable struggle. The Cowboys raced to a 23-7 lead as kicker Billy Cundiff proceeded through a huge day, but the Giants behind Kerry Collins erupted, outscoring the Cowboys 25-12 in the second half; the go-ahead Giants score (a 30-yard Matt Bryant field goal) came with eleven seconds left. A penalty on the ensuing kickoff gave Dallas the ball at its own 40 and a 26-yard catch by Antonio Bryant set up Cundiff's sixth field goal of the game, a 52-yarder with no time left. In overtime both teams traded punts before Quincy Carter led the Cowboys to the Giants 6-yard line and Cundiff connected on a seventh field goal and 35-32 win; in that process Cundiff tied Chris Boniol's record from Dallas' 1996 win over the Packers.
Week 4 at New York Jets
Following their bye week the Cowboys returned to the Meadowlands, this time to face the Jets. The Cowboys rushed for 202 yards and Troy Hambrick and Antonio Bryant touchdowns in the second quarter were enough as the Cowboys won 17-6.
Week 5 vs. Arizona Cardinals
The Cowboys hosted former NFC East foe Arizona; they limited the Cardinals to 151 total yards and sacked Jeff Blake twice in the endzone for a safety, ultimately winning 24-7. Quincy Carter had 277 yards and two touchdowns.
Week 6 vs. Philadelphia Eagles
The Eagles opened with an onside kick and Randal Williams ran it back for a Dallas touchdown, and became the quickest player to score a touchdown in NFL history, in only 3 seconds. From there the Cowboys raced to a 17-7 lead in the third quarter. But by late in the fourth quarter Duce Staley's 52-yard catch from Donovan McNabb and a Correll Buckhalter score put the Eagles up 21-20. Quincy Carter then completed a 19-yard pass to Joey Galloway; two Troy Hambrick runs set up the go-ahead Cowboys field goal with 1:14 to go; the Cowboys then sacked McNabb and he fumbled to Dallas, ending the game a 23-21 Dallas win.
Week 7 at Detroit Lions
The Cowboys embarrassed the Lions by scoring the game's final 38 points, with a monster day for Quincy Carter and Terry Glenn, who both hooked up for three touchdowns; Mario Edwards then intercepted Joey Harrington and scored. In the end the Cowboys were 38-7 winners and stood at 5-1.
Week 8 at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
The embattled Bucs shut out the Cowboys 16-0 as Keyshawn Johnson caught a touchdown while Quincy Carter was intercepted twice.
Week 9 vs. Washington Redskins
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Week 10 vs. Buffalo Bills
Bill Parcells faced his once and future quarterback Drew Bledsoe as the 4-4 Bills came to Dallas. Bledsoe managed only two drives ending in field goals while the Cowboys were only slightly better, managing a two-yard Quincy Carter touchdown for the 10-6 Cowboys win.
Week 11 at New England Patriots
Parcells traveled to Foxboro for the first time since the 1999 season and faced his former assistant Bill Belichick on Sunday Night. The Patriots had won five straight and made it six as they sacked Quincy Carter once and intercepted three passes. Former Patriot Terry Glenn was held to one catch as the Patriots ground out a 12-0 win.
Week 12 vs. Carolina Panthers
The Cowboys hosted the surging Panthers and the game lead tied or changed six times. Joey Galloway caught a touchdown, one of two from Quincy Carter, while Aveion Cason's touchdown put Dallas up 24-17. John Kasay's field goal at 3:51 to go made it 24-20 late in the fourth, but the Cowboys killed the remaining clock on four Carter completions for 21 yards and a four-yard run aided by a Deon Grant personal foul penalty.
Thanksgiving Day vs. Miami Dolphins
The 8-3 Cowboys hosted the 7-4 Dolphins for the first time since 1999. The two teams had clashed in memorable contests in 1993 and 1996 and both were in the thick of their playoff races. The second quarter became a frantic affair following a first quarter score by Jay Fiedler. The Dolphins erupted to outscore Dallas 23-14 in the second, and from there the game merely awaited its obsequies on two more Miami touchdowns (one a strip-sack of Quincy Carter run back by Jason Taylor) and a Carter score to Antonio Bryant. The Dolphins finished up 40-21 winners and both teams faced key division matchups at 8-4.
Week 14 at Philadelphia Eagles
The Eagles all but locked up the NFC East by crushing the Cowboys 36-10. They intercepted Quincy Carter twice and forced a fumble through the endzone for a safety. Donovan McNabb had three touchdown throws despite a failed fourth-down attempt in the fourth quarter, and Correll Buckhalter finished the game on a 64-yard touchdown run.
Week 15 at Washington Redskins
On a dismal day for quarterbacking (Quincy Carter and Tim Hasselbeck combined for just 16 of 50 passes for 164 yards and a Carter touchdown for an average passer rating of just 75) Troy Hambrick exploded to 189 rushing yards as Dallas shut out the Skins 27-0.
Week 16 vs. New York Giants
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Carter got back in groove with 240 yards and a touchdown as four Billy Cundiff field goals aided a 19-3 Dallas win over the Giants. Dallas now stood in a three-way race for the NFC Wildcards with the Seahawks and Minnesota.
Week 17 at New Orleans Saints
The Saints were still smarting from a shocking series of laterals ending in a touchdown and missed PAT against Jacksonville the week before. They responded by intercepting Quincy Carter three times and shutting out the Cowboys the remaining two quarters for the 13-7 Saints win. The Cowboys made the playoffs nonetheless on Arizona's last-second win over the Vikings; it was Dallas' first playoff appearance since 1999.
Wildcard Playoff at Carolina Panthers
For the first time since 1996 the Cowboys faced the Carolina Panthers in the postseason. It was also the first playoff game for Parcells since the 1998 AFC Championship Game. The end result, though, was an ugly 29-10 curtain on the season as the Panthers forced a fumble, picked off Quincy Carter once, sacked him three times, and limited the Cowboys to 204 yards of offense. Carter accounted for roughly a third of Dallas' rushing production with 25 yards on the ground (nine of them on a rushing touchdown, the only touchdown for Dallas in the game) but finished with a passer rating that failed to reach 57, compared to the 104 put up by Panthers quarterback Jake Delhomme.
Standings
NFC East | |||||||||
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W | L | T | PCT | DIV | CONF | PF | PA | STK | |
(1) Philadelphia Eagles | 12 | 4 | 0 | .750 | 5–1 | 9–3 | 374 | 287 | W1 |
(6) Dallas Cowboys | 10 | 6 | 0 | .625 | 5–1 | 8–4 | 289 | 260 | L1 |
Washington Redskins | 5 | 11 | 0 | .313 | 1–5 | 3–9 | 287 | 372 | L3 |
New York Giants | 4 | 12 | 0 | .250 | 1–5 | 3–9 | 243 | 387 | L8 |
Roster
Publications
References
- "Jason Witten close to breaking Michael Irvin's Cowboys record". FOXSports.com. December 30, 2016.
- "2003 NFL Draft Pick Transactions". ProSportsTransactions.com.
- Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved 2014-Aug-31.