At some point, Cowboys organization has to get fed up with mediocrity

After yet another failed postseason run, the Cowboys have to look themselves in the mirror and ask some serious questions. | From @StarConscience

Another season has gone by and yet again the Dallas Cowboys have squandered what seemed like a great opportunity to make a serious run at a sixth Super Bowl title. The 2021 version of this team may have provided the organization’s best shot at winning since the 1990s. However, after 12 wins and ranking at the top of multiple categories on offense and defense, the Cowboys were sent home without a single postseason victory.

It’s been a common theme for them over that last decade and a half. The Cowboys have had some very talented teams over that span, posting at least 10 wins in 2007, 2009, 2014, 2016, 2018, and 2021. Unfortunately, they have only produced a total of three playoff wins during that time.

As frustrating as it has been for fans, it needs to be even more so for the players. Not to say that it isn’t, but at some point, the page has to turn and this team has to have success in the playoffs. They have been too talented to only have a few less than a handful of postseason wins since 1995, their last championship season.

Will McClay, the Cowboys’ Vice President of Player Personnel has been the mastermind of building the team’s roster. Over the last several seasons, it’s become one of the most talented in the NFL. With that comes lofty expectations, as it should, but time and time again the Cowboys have come up short.

In the NFL there’s no telling when you’re gonna have a realistic shot to win it all with how much rosters turn over from year to year. This season was the perfect time to strike while the iron is hot and go for the gusto. With 21 free agents to make decisions on, this team will look a lot different in 2022. That’s what makes the Cowboys falling so short in the playoffs this season tough to swallow.

The Cowboys had guys like Tony Romo, Jason Witten, Dez Bryant, and DeMarcus Ware come through the doors in the early-mid 2000s and the 2010s. Most recently it’s been Dak Prescott, Ezekiel Elliott, Amari Cooper, DeMarcus Lawrence, and Micah Parsons. It’s been the same old story, however, wondering what could have been instead of relishing the fact that they are a serious contender for the Lombardi trophy year in and year out.

The glitz and glamour of being the most valuable and most-watched team in football are nice for headlines. However, the Cowboys are also the subject of ridicule and jokes from the media due to their continuous shortcomings, and at some point, this team has to get fed up with it and maximize the chances they have been given to compete at a high level.

So, when will this mediocrity end?

There’s no way of knowing when that will be, but it certainly needs to change. The Cowboys have had too many great players over the years as previously mentioned to not have made in past the second round in 26 years. It’s time for a new narrative when it comes to this team and needs to be one of a franchise that is routinely one of the last ones standing.

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Cowboys’ Micah Parsons among NFL’s 101 Awards winners

Micah Parsons is the NFC Defensive Player of the Year, according to the national media members who hand out the 101 Awards each season. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Rookie linebacker Micah Parsons joked back in December about displaying all of the jerseys and awards he’s accumulated over his first pro season. They’ll go in “a nice little closet” in his man cave, he said.

That closet is getting more crowded all the time.

The Cowboys phenom is among the winners of the 101 Awards for the 2021 NFL season, it was announced Tuesday. Parsons was named the NFC Defensive Player of the Year by the committee comprised of 101 members of the national media.

The 101 Awards have honored the top players and coaches each regular season since 1969, making it the longest-running awards event dedicated exclusively to the NFL.

The winners in this, the 52nd year for the awards, are:

  • AFC Offensive Player of the Year: RB Jonathan Taylor, Indianapolis Colts
  • NFC Offensive Player of the Year: WR Cooper Kupp, Los Angeles Rams
  • AFC Defensive Player of the Year: LB T.J. Watt, Pittsburgh Steelers
  • NFC Defensive Player of the Year: LB Micah Parsons, Dallas Cowboys
  • AFC Coach of the Year: Mike Vrabel, Tennessee Titans
  • NFC Coach of the Year: Matt LaFleur, Green Bay Packers

Another group or individual to be named later will also be honored with the Lamar Hunt Award for Professional Football, for significant contributions to the NFL.

Parsons was a dominant force in his first pro season, ranking second leaguewide in pressure percentage and sack percentage. He set a new sack record for Cowboys rookies and ended the 2021 season tied for third-most sacks by a rookie across all teams, all-time. Parsons was named to the Pro Bowl and was also a first-team All-Pro selection, the only rookie so honored.

The 101 Awards will be presented in March in Kansas City at a gala event benefiting The University of Kansas Health System.

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Robert Quinn, Jakeem Grant named to PFWA’s All-NFC Team

The honors continue to roll in for Bears OLB Robert Quinn and PR Jakeem Grant, who were named to PFWA’s All-NFC Team.

The Chicago Bears fell way short of expectations during a 6-11 season, but there were still some standout performances by some players on the roster.

Outside linebacker Robert Quinn and return specialist Jakeem Grant were named to the 2021 All-NFC team, which is voted on by members of the Pro Football Writers of America.

Quinn recorded a single-season franchise record 18.5 sacks, where he registered at least half a sack in 14 of 16 games he played. He recorded 13 sacks in the final nine games. He also totaled 49 tackles and 17 tackles-for-loss, a team-high. It was a sensational bounce-back season after a rough first year in 2020, where Quinn totaled just two sacks.

Grant was a late addition to the roster in an Oct. 5 trade with the Dolphins, but he made an immediate impact as a return specialist. In 11 games with the Bears, Grant averaged 11.9 yards per return, third in the NFL, with one touchdown on 26 returns. He also averaged 23.4 yards per kickoff return on 23 returns, which ranked 11th.

Quinn and Grant were also named second-team All-Pro by the Associated Press and voted to the Pro Bowl.

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The Quinn Conundrum and 12 guys who could replace him as Cowboys DC

Quinn changed the culture for the Dallas defense and though everyone should want him back, fans shouldn’t despair if he leaves. Here’s why, and a list of who could step in. | From @KDDrummondNFL

Dan Quinn changed the Dallas Cowboys defense as he was exactly what was needed for a team that was rudderless and lost at sea under the previous coordinator. Things started out bad for Mike Nolan, a close friend of head coach Mike McCarthy, and got progressively worse. Instead of compromising and trying to fit his scheme around his players, he tried to force guys to do things they weren’t accustomed to (like asking DeMarcus Lawrence to rush from a three-point stance) and implement ideas that weren’t initially a good fit. The players rebelled initially and by a few weeks into the season anonymous complaints had made their way into the media.

It takes a couple years to turn a defense over, though, and there were things that started to work towards the end of 2020. Nolan was dealt a bad hand and the difficulties of installing a complex new system over Zoom meetings seems like the decision that most cost Nolan his job, and Quinn’s skillset reaped the benefit.

A player’s coach, Quinn came in enthusiastically and his personality immediately resonated with his players. A breath of fresh air to the veterans and a continued father figure to the young players worked out well, along with all that he studied about the NFL in the time he got to watch the 2020 season after being fired mid-year in Atlanta. Despite many feeling like Quinn was a great hire because he seemed to be someone who wouldn’t be looking to quickly jump back to being a head coach, Quinn is front and center as the guy every ownership group or standing GM wants to talk about for their openings.

Quinn turned down Jacksonville but has met with Minnesota, New York, Chicago. Miami and he’s meeting with the Denver Broncos for the second time. He’s clearly one of, if not the favorite to land that gig.

Entering the season, Quinn’s resume as a coordinator was just two seasons long. He adopted the league’s best defense in Seattle (one he helped raise), ranked No. 1 two years in a row for a Super Bowl winning and runner-up club, then parlayed that into the Falcons’ gig. There, he led that team to a Super Bowl so his head coaching ability can’t be questioned regardless of how his latter years went down.

The Cowboys defense turned the corner when it came to turning over the opposition. Their 34 takeaways lead the league and they had the most interceptions (26) in the league since 2018.

However folks may not remember that Dallas forced 20 turnovers over their final nine games under Nolan, a slightly higher clip (2.22 vs 2.12) than their rate for 2021. Readers shouldn’t misinterpret, the Nolan defense was a failure, but the talent was able to come through with an inferior leader so it will not be the end of the world should Quinn leave.

There are still, of course, areas of the defense that will continue to need to be worked on and Dmagazine’s Dan Morse outlined the issues still prevalent. Dallas finished middle of the pack in passing defense on yards-per-play basis and below average in rush defense.

Still, it was a far cry from where they were in 2020.

50% of their games last season resulted in allowing 400 or more yards. That was down to 29% in 2021, 35% if including giving up 399 yards to Arizona.

There was tangible improvement, but still room for more that could easily come as the result of continued maturation of the young talent.

Dallas drafting Micah Parsons has certainly helped cement Quinn’s reputation and while Parsons swears by his coordinator, no one looking at his skillset will think that will fall off a cliff if Quinn is no longer in the building.

Cowboys fans hope beyond hope that any of the teams Quinn would accept an offer from somehow choose another candidate and he returns to Dallas for 2022. Highly unlikely, but still possible.

If it doesn’t though, there’s no need for despair. At the end of the day, player talent is what is most important and there are plenty of highly qualified individuals who could continue this defense’s improvement.

Cowboys’ offense falling off the rails was unexpected downfall of 2021 hopes

The Dallas Cowboys and their offense were among the best teams in the NFL until their bye week, but their fortunes changed after Week 6. | From @BenGrimaldi

“What’s wrong with the Dallas Cowboys’ offense?” was a familiar phrase over the second half of the 2021 season. The Cowboys sprinted out to a hot start on offense and although they wound up leading the NFL in both total yards and scoring, it never felt as though the offense was the same after their bye week.

Aside from the 50-point scoring outbursts against a tired Washington Football Team in Week 16 and a Philadelphia Eagles team playing backups, Dallas’ offense only scored over 30 points once after Week 6, which came against the Atlanta Falcons. The Cowboys did score over 30 against the Las Vegas Raiders on Thanksgiving, but seven of their 33 points in that game came courtesy of a Tony Pollard kickoff return for a touchdown.

In the first six weeks of the season, the offense for the Cowboys (defensive touchdowns not included) averaged 31.8 points a game. They were led by a balanced rushing attack that was hammering defense with running backs Ezekiel Elliott and the aforementioned Pollard, while also throwing the ball with quarterback Dak Prescott.

After the bye week, the offense cooled off. In the final 11 games of the year, the Cowboys averaged 26.3 points a game. However, when removing 50 burgers they scored against meager competition, and they only scored 20.2 ppg in the other nine games after Dallas’ bye week.

It’s clear something happened to cause the offensive production to take a dip.

Perhaps it was the calf injury to Prescott, he never did seem quite the same after it occurred.

Maybe the Denver Broncos and Vic Fangio were right, they had the blueprint to slowing down the Cowboys’ offense.

Perhaps Kellen Moore’s offense got too predictable and they never figured out how to adjust. It certainly felt like the creativity and play calling never got the offense back to the same level after the bye week.

Maybe the idea to play less man-to-man and not blitzing against the Cowboys was the winning formula. Prescott was destroying the blitz before teams realized it didn’t pay to bring pressure, but instead to keep more defenders in coverage.

It might have been a combination of all these things because the offense never looked the same. What seemed almost too easy in the first six weeks turned into a grind on offense. The Cowboys may have ended the year with the No. 1 offense, but to weekly observers of the team, it was obvious things were off with the offense.

Another possible reason for the downfall of the offense was the running game fizzled out. Early in the season, the Cowboys were dominating on the ground.

Through the first six weeks, the Cowboys totaled 986 yards on the ground, and were rushing for just over 164 yards a game. In the 11 games after the bye, the Cowboys ran for 1,133 yards, just 103 per contest.

It’s easy to blame the slump on the injury to Elliott, who partially tore his PCL in Week 4. However, Elliott still torched the New York Giants for 110 yards on 21 carries the following week and had 17 totes for 69 yards in Week 6.

Through the first six weeks, Elliott was averaging 17 carries a game, for 86.8 ypg and 5.1 yards a carry. To begin the year, Elliott rushed for 521 in six games.

After the off week, Elliott only topped 15 carries three times the rest of the season. His numbers dipped to 12.2 carries, 43.7 yards per game and just 3.56 yards per carry, gaining just 481 yards in his final 11 games.

The injury did seem to zap Elliott of some of his explosiveness and the Cowboys were utilizing him less as well. The dip in carries made sense because the team had a more explosive and just as productive a runner behind Elliott in Pollard, yet he wasn’t used as much after the bye week either.

Pollard’s carries from Week 8 on went from over 10 carries a game to 7.6 for the rest of the season. The super-sub ran for 407 yards in the first six weeks, averaging 6.67 ypc and 67.8 ypg.

After the Cowboys’ bye, Pollard only ran for 312 yards in nine contests. Pollard had 61 carries through Week 6, but only saw 69 carries for the rest of the season.

The sudden stoppage in Pollard’s usage is difficult to understand, especially with Elliott being banged up and needing some rest. Pollard was among the league leaders in yards per carry (5.5) all season, but his touches decreased over the last half of the year.

It wasn’t just at running back where the Cowboys weren’t as effective after the bye week either. The wide receivers, especially CeeDee Lamb, saw their production crash.

In the first six weeks of the season, Lamb had 497 yards and four scores. In that timeframe, Lamb had four games with over 80 yards receiving. In his final 10 games he had just 605 yards and two touchdowns, going over 80 yards just three times.

After the Week 8 win over the Minnesota Vikings, neither Lamb, nor fellow wideout Amari Cooper topped 100 yards receiving in a single contest.

For a team with such a solid offense, that doesn’t make much sense. It seems unfathomable that Dallas’ top two receivers couldn’t produce big games in the final half of the season.

If the Cowboys played in such a terrible division where they played five games against the NFC East in the last six weeks, why weren’t the offenses best players racking up the statistics?

The offense for the Cowboys had problems after the bye week. They couldn’t run the ball as effectively and they couldn’t throw it to their play makers. For a team that boasted so many skill players, Dallas had problems getting their best guys involved and it carried over into the playoff game.

In the playoff loss to the San Francisco 49ers, Pollard got just six touches, including four on a touchdown drive. Lamb had just five targets and Cooper had six catches, but for just 64 yards. The Cowboys couldn’t find a way to put their best players in position to succeed.

The answers will hopefully come this offseason. Fans will see if Moore returns, but questions and theories remain about what happened. Whatever the causes, it derailed a season that had immense promise.

Instead, it in bitter disappointment, again.

You can chat with or follow Ben on twitter @BenGrimaldi.

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Cowboys News: 2022 draft dreams, Quinn’s interview tour, Haley weighs in on playoff loss

Charles Haley voiced his opinion on the Cowboys loss. More on 2022 mock drafts, evaluations and the interview tour for Dan Quinn continues. | From @CDBurnett7

The 2021 playoffs have just six teams left and the Dallas Cowboys are barreling into a crucial offseason that could include a makeover of the staff and a few position groups. If there’s any solace in last week’s disappointment, their conquistadors, the San Francisco 49ers, turned it into an NFC championship opportunity after defeating the Green Bay Packers.

With an angry Jerry Jones looking for solutions, how much of an overhaul is on the way for Dallas? The offensive line could see a rebuilding after being bullied in the wild card round but there’s big free agents to focus on, too. The Cowboys might look to the 2022 draft for their biggest improvements and our own Tyler Browning has two new profiles, one on each side of the ball to have you dreaming of new stars wearing the Star.

To add salt to the wound, Dan Quinn continues his interview tour and the head coach above him is facing more criticism with Hall of Fame Charles Haley blaming Mike McCarthy for the nervous start and giving his concerns for the future in Dallas. These are the weekend news and notes.

Hey, Bears fans, Jimmy Garoppolo hates the Packers, too

Jimmy Garoppolo grew up a Bears fan, so beating the Packers probably feels a little sweeter.

The Chicago Bears didn’t come close to making the playoffs this season. But Saturday night certainly felt like a playoff atmosphere as the Green Bay Packers hosted the San Francisco 49ers in the divisional playoffs.

The 49ers pulled off a miraculous 13-10 upset thanks to impressive defense and special teams, which included a blocked field goal, blocked punt returned for a touchdown and a 45-yard game-winning field goal by former Bears kicker Robbie Gould.

NFL Network’s Stacey Dales shared an on-field video after Gould’s game-winning field goal, where Gould and 49ers quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo were celebrating the victory.

Not only did Garoppolo give Gould credit for being a “legend,” but the camera picked him up sharing a sentiment about the Packers that Bears fans feel in their very souls.

“I (expletive) hate the Packers,” Garoppolo was heard saying after the game, which makes sense considering he grew up a Bears fan in Arlington Heights.

Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers is now 0-4 against the 49ers in the postseason, including an NFC Championship loss just two years ago.

With Green Bay eliminated from the postseason, it raises questions about Rodgers’ future with the Packers. Rodgers told reporters he’s going to take some time to think about his next move.

“I’m gonna take some time and have conversations with the folks around here and then take some time away and make a decision,” Rodgers said.

For now, Bears fans are celebrating the fact that they can now enjoy the postseason after the Packers were eliminated.

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Bears fans are celebrating after Packers’ crushing defeat to 49ers

The Packers suffered a brutal defeat to the 49ers in the divisional round, which has Bears fans everywhere celebrating.

For Bears fans, their two favorite teams are the Bears and whoever is playing the Packers. During Saturday’s divisional action, that meant rooting for the 49ers.

While it seemed like San Francisco was due for a playoff exit, they bounced back in the second half thanks to strong defensive play and special teams, which included blocking a Packers field goal and returning it for the 49ers’ only touchdown of the game.

Ultimately, it was a familiar face in former Bears kicker Robbie Gould who booted San Francisco to victory with a 45-yard field goal as time expired. The 49ers pulled off a 13-10 upset to advance to the NFC Championship Game while Green Bay was knocked off in their first game of the postseason.

Following the Packers’ crushing defeat to the 49ers as time expired, Bears fans took to Twitter to celebrate another early playoff exit for Green Bay. Especially considering that might’ve been the last time we see Rodgers in a Packers uniform.

It’s not quite a Bears win. But a Packers loss is certainly cause for excitement.

Could Cowboys, Ezekiel Elliott, have handled the RBs knee injury better?

Our @StarConscience feels Elliott playing through a PCL tear since Week 4 is indicative of putting the team’s interests above protecting a warrior from himself, and hurting themselves in the long run.

Ezekiel Elliott has been incredibly durable during his NFL career. Besides missing six games in 2017 due to a suspension, Elliott has only missed the season finale for the Dallas Cowboys in 2016 and 2018, both as pre-playoff rests, and one game with a calf strain in 2020.

The 2021 season was the fourth 1,000-yard campaign for Elliott in six seasons. However, after two 100-yard performances and averaging 90.4 yards per game with five rushing touchdowns in the first five weeks, Elliott registered just 45.8 yards a contest in the last 12 games, and the reason why was because he played with a partially torn PCL for most of the season which was revealed after the Cowboys playoff loss to the San Francisco 49ers in the wild-card round.

Elliott’s dedication and commitment to his teammates are admirable and he should be respected for it. Also, it’s understandable why he would want to remain on the field and protect his spot on the depth chart with a guy like Tony Pollard behind him who showed his worth by gaining 719 yards on 5.5 yards per carry in 2021.

In this case, though, the Cowboys dropped the ball, failing to protect the player from himself.

A partially torn PCL is considered a Grade 2 sprain, treated without operation as long as there is no other damage to the surrounding ligaments or tendons in the knee. A Grade 3 requires arthroscopic surgery and since Elliott announced he would not be going under the knife, it’s a fair assumption he has a Grade 2.

Grade 2 sprains are normally treated with a knee brace (which Elliott started wearing midway through the injury), physical therapy and anti-inflammatories.

Another important factor in recovery? The RICE Method: Rest, Ice, Compression and Elevation. Almost every orthopedic website discussing partial PCL tears identifies a recovery period ranging from several weeks to several months.

If the Cowboys would have gone the route of sitting Elliott for a few games they may have gotten a more productive and certainly a more well-rested version of him to close out the season and even into the playoffs. Perhaps the Cowboys doctors could not guarantee that a few weeks of rest would not have significantly aided Elliott’s return to form, that his situation was one that would require the far end of the spectrum, but it’s certainly noteworthy that a few weeks off wasn’t even attempted.

During the last 12 games, not only did Elliott’s production go down but it was noticeable he was playing hurt. Although Pollard hasn’t shown capable of carrying the load Elliott can for a full season, he was more than capable of holding down the fort for a few weeks while Elliott got to rest.

This potential mishandling of Elliott’s injury falls squarely on the Cowboys as an organization. Yes, winning games is what any team’s main objective is but it should never come before the health and well-being of a player. Most injuries a player attempts to play through run the risk of related injury to that part of the body, or another through compensation.

It should be noted Elliott avoided further injury here, and that’s part of the delicate balance of being a professional player and the ridiculous gamut they put their bodies through to be among the best at their trade.

The days of Elliott leading the league in rushing may be behind him but he proved during the early part of this season he’s still capable of being a very productive runner. That’s what makes the Cowboys’ decision to keep putting him on the field egregious, in my estimation. The risk, although it worked, could have been disastrous not just for this season but for the rest of Elliott’s career.

Regardless of the reason why the Cowboys didn’t decide to sit Elliott for a while this situation is a bad look for them and paints the picture that they are willing to risk a player’s long-term health just to win games. It’s highly doubtful that’s the case, but the optics are not good.

 

Jerry Jones weighs coaches, players as Cowboys move forward: ‘We deserve better’

The Cowboys owner is still stinging following the team’s early playoff exit. There’s no telling who- if anyone- will be held accountable. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones is still hurting, five full days after the team’s ouster from the postseason. During a wide-ranging and eye-opening interview on Dallas radio station 105.3 The Fan on Friday afternoon, a noticeable frustrated Jones took plenty of shots following the 23-17 loss to San Francisco, with coaches and players alike landing in his crosshairs.

Head coach Mike McCarthy may not be as safe as previously thought. The same goes for recently untouchable assets like wideout Amari Cooper. Jones kept his options open during the conversation, but made it clear by the tone of his voice that a rinse-and-repeat won’t be acceptable for next season.

Jones admitted that the loss still stung on Monday as he addressed the team during the final dispersal meeting. But he wished the players and coaches could have gotten the full, undiluted brunt of the disappointment he felt immediately after the loss.

“When I spoke to everybody Monday after the game, I said I wish- and I don’t know why I’m rubbing salt in it. I’m just trying to make it hurt more,” Jones told the K&C Masterpiece show. “I’d like to have a meeting like that the day of the game, so that we could all feel together just how you feel when you look up and there’s no more to play.”

A significant portion of Cowboys Nation is calling for sweeping changes to the staff after the collapse of such a promising roster. Before he left AT&T Stadium Sunday night, Jones was cryptic when asked about McCarthy’s future, saying, “I don’t even want to discuss anything like that at this particular time.” Team executive vice president Stephen Jones swooped in Monday, though, to say he felt “very confident” that McCarthy would be staying on.

But maybe not everything in Dallas is set in stone, as Jerry was quick to point out.

“I haven’t completed my overall evaluation, and I don’t have any idea when I will complete my overall evaluation. But there are a lot of moving parts here, as you know. We have 29 coaches. It’s not uncommon at all for members of coaching staff to come and go. This is par for the course. That’s the NFL today,” Jones said. “I won’t get into any conversations that I’ve had with anybody relative to anything to do with the staff. I understand the interest in it, but there’s nothing compelling me.”

No, there’s nothing compelling Jones to speak publicly on his mindset concerning the Cowboys coaches. But there also wasn’t a question asked about it. Jones had actually been asked for an overall evaluation of the season; he volunteered to start his answer by talking about coaching changes.

He finished the answer there, too.

“I’ve got a lot to think about regarding these coaches. I’ve got a lot regarding these scouts. I’ve got a lot to think about regarding various aspects of the organization.”

Whether that’s a foreshadowing of some kind of seismic shift at The Star or just in-the-moment window dressing to placate an angry fanbase remains to be seen.

Of course, it’s the coaching staff who has come under fire for many of the team’s weaknesses. Fixable issues like pre-snap penalties, missed kicks, clock management, and playcalling gaffes- many of the issues that came into play Sunday against the 49ers- had haunted the Cowboys as early as Week 1.

Jones appears to have tired of those items not being adequately addressed in the 18 weeks that followed.

“One of the pet peeves I have is that I don’t like this, ‘Well, we’ve got to work on this in the offseason, we’ve got to work on this.’ I don’t go for that. I’ve been trying to push that. I want those things recognized and addressed after we play Tampa, after the first game, or after we play the sixth game. I don’t want to wait until we’re sitting here with no season left to address these things we’re doing or not doing.”

The club was effective, however, in shoring up many weaknesses on the roster. McCarthy and his staff were able to bring in an assortment of veterans in free agency who helped Dallas engineer an impressive turnaround, doubling 2020’s win total.

“Those free agents, those one- and two-year free agents that we added in here were an outstanding group of players, and they really were contributors and could have contributed more,” Jones offered. “We had outstanding receivers, and there are people playing with a lot less on the offensive line than we are in the NFL. And so we’ve got to step up here and analyze how we’re going to approach it. This is all good to look back. Nothing wrong with living in the past and looking back a little bit.”

But gazing in the rear-view mirror, the 79-year-old owner knows not all of the same contributors will be in the Cowboys’ future for 2022. That certainly goes for players, but would also seem to apply to coaches, scouts, and anyone else currently on the Cowboys payroll.

“Nothing counts but this morning, this afternoon, and the next weeks ahead. So we’re going to do something about it,” Jones promised. “If I thought changing out men at any level would improve us, I would change it out. I’ve looked around. I see a lot of names, a lot of great names, a lot of names from colleges, a lot of great names. I see them coming through. I’ve seen a lot of great names at various duties in the NFL come and go over the last 30 years. I haven’t seen but a couple of them that might have a straight shot into what’s up above.”

Of course, it’s all about putting the Cowboys into the uppermost echelon by winning a sixth Lombardi Trophy. That goal has eluded Jones for a quarter-century now, and has swallowed whole the career of many a player who, at one time or another, seemed to carry the hopes of the franchise on his back.

“I’m very, very frustrated and upset that we’ve- you can call it COVID, you can call it anything,” Jones said. “But we have used up some very talented players over the last few years.”

This season was just the latest chapter of a book that Cowboys Nation has gotten used to reading.

For longtime veterans like the aforementioned Cooper and DeMarcus Lawrence, 2021 represented perhaps their best chance at a Super Bowl. Their huge contracts certainly represented a belief by Jones that they’d be instrumental pieces in getting the Cowboys there.

Now with major surgery required to get the club under the salary cap for 2022, both players are suddenly less of a sure thing as the roster-building starts all over again.

“We have ten players- and this is the way it is around the NFL,” Jones reminded, “we have ten players that get two-thirds of the money. Ten… that gets two-thirds of the money. And so you’ve got to have a lot of other things that is [part of the] thought process when you’re sitting here talking about somebody’s contracts.”

One of those other things is, obviously, on-the-field performance. Cooper’s, especially, dropped off considerably. His 865 receiving yards was his lowest output for a season since 2017; his catch percentage of 65.4% is also his lowest since that same year. Not what Jones had been hoping for when he cracked open the vault for Cooper in 2020.

With second-year receiver CeeDee Lamb still on the rise and Michael Gallup still in the building, many have suggested that Cooper is the most expendable one of the talented group, given his exorbitant price.

Jones wasn’t ready to speak specifically about Cooper’s future with the club. But he did intimate that the team should have been getting more bang for their buck, especially down the stretch.

“No, I don’t have any comment on Cooper’s contract. I thought that the way we were playing early, when we did make something happen, I thought Cooper had a big part in that,” Jones went on. “How he fits in, he should take half the field with him when he runs a route. Not half, that’s an exaggeration, of course, but a whole bunch of that defense ought to have to honor Cooper. He ought to be able to catch it in the middle when they’re going with him. Others do; you throw to people that are covered all the time in the NFL. You have to.”

McCarthy and Cooper are just two examples, of course. There’s a much longer list of individuals who have room for improvement and a plethora of reasons why the Cowboys are watching the divisional round of the playoffs from the couch instead of taking the field.

When the expectations are high, so is the fall when they aren’t reached.

“I thought we did a really, a really good job of getting to the playoffs,” Jones said. “Still, I can’t get over what we did in the playoffs.”

On this point, at least, the Cowboys owner and Cowboys fans are in perfect alignment.

“We deserve better than that.”

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