Wednesday 2 November 2011

Garrett not pointing fingers after blowout

Tony Romo

updated 7:53 p.m. ET Oct. 31, 2011

IRVING, Texas - There was plenty of blame to go around after the Cowboys' 34-7 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles, Dallas' first blowout loss of the season, but coach Jason Garrett refused to point fingers at anyone on his team Monday.

"We need to do our jobs better to not have games like that," Garrett said.

The screening of the Eagles game tape merely underscored to players and coaches that the Cowboys were simply overwhelmed by a division rival coming off a bye week that badly needed a victory to climb back into the NFC East race.

"I don't think they did anything on offense or defense that surprised us," Garrett said. "We've seen a lot of the stuff they've done and were prepared for it. Unfortunately, we didn't execute as well as we needed to."

The Cowboys are also dealing with injuries to linebacker Sean Lee (left wrist), punter Mat McBriar (left foot) and cornerback Mike Jenkins (right hamstring).

Garrett said all three were being evaluated and their conditions would be updated later this week based on test results.

Lee, the team's leading tackler, and Jenkins, a starting cornerback, were injured in Sunday's game. McBriar has been hampered by a foot problem for over a week, and rookie placekicker Dan Bailey had to handle the Cowboys' final two punts on Sunday.

The good news for the Cowboys: a favorable upcoming schedule, starting with Sunday's home game against Seattle.

Four of the next five opponents ? Seattle, Washington, Miami and Arizona ? have a combined record of 6-22.

The exception during that five-week span: the 5-2 Buffalo Bills, who visit Cowboys Stadium on Nov. 13.

No matter the opponent, there are no guaranteed wins for the Cowboys, not if they turn in another performance like Sunday's.

The Eagles ran at will against a defense that had been giving up about 70 yards rushing per game, best in the league entering last weekend. Overall, Philly rolled up 495 total yards and held the ball for over 42 minutes.

LeSean McCoy rushed for 185 yards and two touchdowns while Michael Vick passed for 279 yards and a pair of TDs.

"We didn't do the job in all three phases of the game," Cowboys safety Abram Elam said on Monday. "We didn't want to lose that game, a divisional game we had to win. To lose the way we did was painful."

Dallas' offense wasn't much better, managing only 267 net yards and 12 first downs. The offensive line was unable to protect quarterback Tony Romo, who was sacked four times and hit often by an Eagles defense that didn't blitz much.

The Cowboys averaged 8.5 yards per play on the ground, but they were only able to get off 10 running plays because they were trailing 24-0 by halftime and were forced to throw as they tried to catch up.

"The Eagles just scored a bunch of points early and we just did not move the ball well in the first half," Cowboys receiver Miles Austin said on Sunday after catching only three passes for 27 yards.

Elam said he expects future opponents to take note of the game plan employed by the Eagles.

"This is a copycat league," Elam said. "They'll see things that work against you and try to attack you the same way. That's why we try to make corrections, try to improve on things."

One bright spot for the Cowboys on Sunday night: linebacker DeMarcus Ware, who had four sacks and 11 tackles.

"It was an awesome performance," Garrett said. "We were behind, but everybody on our team continued to play, and there was no better example of that than DeMarcus Ware. It's almost what you expect from the guy, week in and week out. What makes him great is the approach that he takes. Even in defeat, where we didn't play very well, he showed up again."

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Tuesday 1 November 2011

Russia: Court victory for girls switched at birth (AP)

MOSCOW ? Two Russian families on Monday won a $100,000-compensation each from a maternity home that accidentally switched their 12-year old daughters at birth, and said they could use the money to house the girls next to each other.

The story has captivated Russia ever since the families learned recently about the switch after the former husband of Yuliya Belyayeva refused to support their daughter, Irina, because she didn't look like him.

A DNA test revealed that neither of them were Irina's parent. An official investigation tracked down Irina's biological father, Naimat Iskanderov, who had been raising Belyayeva's own child, Anna.

Yulia laughed with joy after the judge delivered the verdict in a courtroom in Kopeisk in Russia's Ural Mountains, but Iskanderov remained stone-faced.

In the footage broadcast on Russia's NTV television, Belyayeva caressed her biological daughter, Anna, while Irina, whom she raised, sat stern-faced on a sofa, here eyes down. "She feels jealous," Belyayeva said.

It was not clear whether Belyayeva had married again after separating from her husband. Iskanderov parted with his wife when Anna was five but later married again, according to the daily Komsomolskaya Pravda.

Anna strongly resembled her biological mother, Belyayeva, while dark-haired and dark-eyed Irina looked like her ethnic Tajik father, Iskanderov.

Despite the verdict, Belyayeva said she will still struggle to overcome the feeling of shock over the inadvertent swap.

"The money just can't ease the pain," Yuliya Belyayeva said. "All the money in the world isn't worth a child's look at mother ... There are moments when I think it would have been better if I hadn't known anything about that."

Russian television reports said the girls don't want to leave the parents who raised them, so the families are thinking of using the compensation money, which is huge by Russian standards, to get houses close to each other or even share a home.

"I would like us to share a house so that we don't worry about her daughter coming to me and the other way round," Irina's biological father, Naimat Iskanderov said.

Belyayeva said she would prefer separate houses nearby, so that "we see our children growing up and take part in their education."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111031/ap_on_re_eu/eu_russia_switched_at_birth

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