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By Rainer Sabin / Reporter
rsabin@dallasnews.com | Bio
11:58 PM on Thu., Aug. 11, 2011 | Permalink

ARLINGTON -- There were three linebackers on the field and in the middle was a player wearing the No. 54. For a brief moment at the outset of Dallas' 24-23 victory over Denver on Thursday, Cowboys fans were transported to the another time and another place, when their team was the best of the best.

On the first play from scrimmage, new defensive coordinator Rob Ryan called for the team's starters to line up in the 4-3 Flex, a formation conceived by Tom Landry -- the legendary coach whose fingerprints are all over this franchise.

"Without living in the past, we try to put that in front of our players to understand what the tradition means, what the star means, what the standard is and all that," head coach Jason Garrett said. "I think it fits in with all of that. It was Rob's idea all the way. He brought it up to me and I said I love that. That's tremendous.''

The Cowboys worked on the formation in practice and didn't wait long to unveil it before an eager fanbase expecting to see one of Ryan's cutting-edge defensive alignments. Instead, they watched No. 54, reserve linebacker Kenwin Cummings, jump in a three-point stance and play the role of Randy White, the Hall-of-Fame defensive tackle who was the centerpiece of the "Doomsday Defense" that stymied opponents in the 1970s.

"It relaxed everybody," Cummings said.

It also proved effective. Cowboys outside linebacker DeMarcus Ware batted down Denver quarterback Kyle Orton's pass at the line of scrimmage. After the game, he beamed when reminded of the play -- one that seemed ripped from the Cowboys' glorious past.

"It was a tribute," Ware said.
 
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