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Wednesday, August 27, 1997
Career Crossroads: Aikman, Smith seek return
to greatness
By Jean-Jacques Taylor
The Dallas Morning News
(KRT)
DALLAS - The names of Troy Aikman and Emmitt Smith are scrawled
throughout NFL annals as a testament to their greatness on the
football field.
Together, they have earned six Super Bowl rings, 12 Pro Bowl
selections, two Super Bowl MVPs and one league MVP award.
Although each enters the 1997 season coming off their worst
seasons in five years, Aikman and Smith find themselves at vastly
different points in their careers.
At 28, Smith has reached an age where running backs traditionally
start to decline. Last season, Smith averaged a career-worst 3.7
yards per carry - the second-lowest of the 13 running backs who
gained 1,000 yards - and failed to earn a Pro Bowl selection.
For years, a debate has raged: Who's better? Barry Sanders
or Emmitt Smith.
Considering Smith finished eighth in rushing last season and
running backs such as Pittsburgh's Jerome Bettis, Denver's Terrell
Davis and Tennessee's Eddie George have been stamped as the next
wave of stars, the question is whether Smith remains the second-best
running back.
"Yeah, I'm Number Two," Smith said. "Barry does
more flashy things - things that cause a lot oooohhs and aaahhs
- but what I do between the tackles and short-yardage and goal-line
situations lends itself to productivity. I'm very proud of that."
Aikman, who turned 30 last November, never has thrown the ball
enough to set individual passing records like Denver's John Elway
or Miami's Dan Marino, but three Super Bowl championships attest
to his greatness.
And he should be entering his prime.
Quarterbacks usually get better with age because coverages
rarely confuse them. Experience makes them smarter and more efficient.
Aikman, signed through 2001, desperately wants to join Pittsburgh's
Terry Bradshaw and San Francisco's Joe Montana as the only quarterbacks
to win four Super Bowls.
"If I were to play another five years and we haven't won
another Super Bowl, then I would be extremely disappointed,"
he said. "I don't want to sit here and think the best years
are behind me.
"I'd like to think we can continue to have success and
compete for Super Bowls and win another one before I'm done."
Emmitt Smith and Troy Aikman both were miserable last year.
The wealth. The fame. The success.
It meant little to them because the Cowboys failed to achieve
the high standards they have set for themselves this decade.
Dallas won a record fifth NFC East championship last season,
but failed to reach the NFC Championship Game for the first time
since 1991.
Only Smith truly knows the emotional and physical pain he experienced
last season.
Not his mother. Nor his teammates. Nor his best friend.
Smith wouldn't - maybe he couldn't - talk to them.
Though Smith gained more than 1,200 yards and scored 12 touchdowns
last season, knee and ankle injuries limited his mobility and
stopped him from exploding through arm tackles and dragging defenders
into the end zone.
On Nov. 24, the Cowboys benched Smith in the fourth quarter
of a loss to the New York Giants after he gained 18 yards on 11
carries.
The man who always had been the best running back, whether
playing for Pensacola Escambia High School, the University of
Florida or the Cowboys, and who enters the season ranked 12th
all-time in rushing and sixth in touchdowns, found himself pondering
the future.
"I'd go home and lie in my bed at night and I think about
what in the world I'm doing, and it would almost bring tears to
your eyes," said Smith, his voice softening. "Something
is wrong and nobody's telling you what's wrong. They're just sticking
you back out there on the ... practice field and sticking you
back in the game.
"I just sucked it all in. I didn't really have anyone
to talk to. I didn't have anyone I could bounce it off of and
really let go. It was really miserable last year."
Aikman, a loner by nature, always has considered himself his
best confidant in tough times.
"I had a good off-season. I got my mind away from football
and evaluated the things that were important to me and decided
if it was something that I wanted to continue to do," he
said. "I'm excited and optimistic about this year or I wouldn't
have come back because it wouldn't have been worth it. I can't
go through two years like last year."
Aikman's anguish came from the approach many of his teammates
took to the game. The Cowboys' off-field distractions, which reached
epidemic proportions last season, affected him.
The game he had loved since he was a boy in Henrietta, Okla.,
ceased to be fun. "It's too important to too many people
to go through the motions and say, 'If we win games that's fine,
and if we don't, we don't,' " Aikman said. "You're not
going to win every game, but I can't see not giving it everything
you've got to try to be successful."
The quest for perfection drives Aikman to be the best, so it's
easy to understand why he was so miserable last season.
The Cowboys averaged 16.7 points per game and finished 24th
in the NFL in offense. He threw eight interceptions and only two
touchdown passes in the last eight games.
Aikman learned something about himself as the Cowboys struggled
to win their fifth consecutive NFC East championship despite not
scoring more than one touchdown in seven games.
"I tried to go out and compete as hard as I could each
game, but it was frustrating," Aikman said. "If I learned
anything last year, it's that I can't continue to play the game
if it means just going through the motions and not having a commitment
to win games."
So Aikman enters his ninth season looking to erase the bad
memories and secure the Cowboys' place in history.
To do that, the Cowboys can't be the same team that had more
penalties than its opponents in 12 of 18 games.
"We weren't a team that paid attention to detail, and
we weren't a disciplined football team," Aikman said. "There
were too many mental mistakes. Guys couldn't get lined up right.
We just didn't give ourselves a chance to win football games."
Offensive coordinator Ernie Zampese said he understands Aikman's
frustration.
"Troy is a perfectionist, and that's what makes him great,"
Zampese said. "And when things aren't going right, he gets
frustrated. He has all of the intangibles that you look for in
a leader, and when you combine that with the physical talent,
you end up with a great quarterback."
But it might not be fair to ask Smith or Aikman to be the same
players they have been in the past because the offensive line
isn't as good.
Left tackle Mark Tuinei and left guard Nate Newton are closer
to 40 than 30.
The center position - either John Flannery or Clay Shiver -
probably won't produce a Pro Bowl performer for the first time
since 1991.
Right guard Larry Allen is widely considered the league's best
guard, but tackle Erik Williams isn't the dominant player he was
before he injured his knee in a car accident that nearly killed
him three years ago.
"It would probably be a little unfair to expect me to
have a blowout season," Smith said. "But I expect to
be much better than last year."
In the last five seasons, the Cowboys have a winning percentage
of .729 (70-26). Much of their success has come from a physical
offensive line that has pounded on defenses and worn them down
in the fourth quarter.
But the Cowboys have won because they have been a balanced
team. Last year, they didn't pass or run well.
"If we stay healthy on the offensive line," Smith
said, "then I think it's fair to expect our offense to do
what it has done in the past few years. We have too many talented
guys to do what we did last year."
Aikman always has wondered what it would be like to be the
focus of the offense. It could happen this year as the Cowboys
try to ease Smith's load.
Dallas spent the off-season upgrading the passing attack by
hiring Jack Reilly as quarterbacks coach, signing free agent receiver
Anthony Miller, a five-time Pro Bowl player, and drafting 6-7
tight end David LaFleur.
Those players, combined with Michael Irvin, should give Dallas
its best passing attack since Aikman arrived. That means Aikman,
who has thrown more than 16 touchdown passes only once, could
be primed for a big season.
"You can have the greatest running back in the world,
but you're only going to score 14 or 17 points if that's all you
can do," Aikman said. "You have to make plays in the
passing game and you have to convert third downs to have any success
moving the football. Now, we think we can throw the football as
well as anyone."
Smith, who had several bone chips removed from his ankle last
January, knows this is a pivotal season in his career. He wants
to silence the doubters who believe he already has played his
best football.
The NFL is littered with terrific running backs whose careers
nose-dived as they approached 30. Smith, who signed an eight-year,
$42 million contract last year, does not want his name added to
that list.
"I might plummet, too. Who knows? Nobody knows,"
Smith said. "I go out and do the best I can.
"At times people make it very difficult to enjoy the game,
but I find a sense of peace out there on the football field because
I'm doing what I love to do."
The whispers about Smith began last year as he ran out of bounds
more frequently to avoid tacklers and his production near the
goal line diminished.
Smith heard the critics, and their words stung.
"I try to put last year so far behind me because it cut
me so deep last year," he said. "It cut me real deep.
"I don't know if it came from teammates or coaches, but
at times I felt like a lot of fingers were pointed at me. They
sat there and watched me go through all of this stuff, and nobody
stepped up and said anything. That was the most disappointing
thing."
Like many of his teammates, Aikman said Smith is a victim of
his own success.
"I think Emmitt still has some good years in him,"
he said, "and that he'll be running like he did in '95 and
before."
Television analyst John Madden said he isn't sure Smith can
return to the form that has allowed him to win four rushing titles.
"When a running back is young and he's 100 percent, the
defense never gets a flush hit on him," said Madden, "but
as soon as he loses a half-step or gets hurt like Emmitt did last
year, they lose that ability to avoid the hit. There are only
so many hits in a player's body, and running backs take more than
anyone else."
While Smith struggles to change public perception, Aikman said
he looks forward to the future. After all, he has come a long
way since 1-15 in 1989.
"I believed I'd win a Super Bowl before I got done playing
for the Cowboys," he said. "I didn't know when it would
happen, and I certainly didn't anticipate winning three. I've
accomplished so much and the teams I have been on have accomplished
so much prior to me turning 30. I feel like my best years are
still ahead of me and I'm just starting to reach my prime."
(c) 1997, The Dallas Morning News.
Visit The Dallas Morning News on the World Wide Web at http://www.dallasnews.com/
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All content copyright 1997,
AP, KRT, The Abilene Reporter-News
and Reporter OnLine
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