Bucs’ Pro Bowl center activated from IR, set to make season debut vs. Cowboys

Ryan Jensen suffered a severe knee injury during Tampa Bay’s training camp, but he’s expected to return in time for Monday’s wild-card game. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Things may have just gotten a little more difficult for the Cowboys defense as they prepare to face a Buccaneers offensive line that’s been hurting all season.

Tampa Bay center Ryan Jensen was activated from injured reserve on Monday and is expected to make his season debut against Dallas in the wild-card round.

Jensen was a key piece to the Bucs’ Super Bowl-winning season in 2020 and was named to his first Pro Bowl for the 2021 campaign. But a severe knee injury suffered on the second day of the team’s training camp has kept him sidelined for the entirety of 2022.

The 31-year-old had his practice window activated in late December, and he took practice reps with the Bucs’ first team last week.

Given that development, as per Michael Gehlken of the Dallas Morning News, Jensen’s return had been expected by the Cowboys.

According to Bucs Wire, the extent of Jensen’s injury had not been revealed all season long; the team had only called it “serious.” Only now has Carmen Vitali of Fox Sports explained that Jensen “partially tore multiple ligaments in his knee, including his ACL.”

Five months later, he’s expected to reclaim his spot in Tampa Bay’s starting lineup.

Second-year man Robert Hainsey had been playing center for quarterback Tom Brady this season, but a hamstring injury forced him to withdraw early from Tampa Bay’s Week 18 loss to Atlanta.

Now Brady gets back a ten-year veteran who handled 97.4% of the team’s offensive snaps last year. And while the Bucs’ patchworked offensive line allowed just 22 sacks during the season-fewest in the NFL- that’s more a product of Brady’s quick delivery of the ball.

Overall, Tampa Bay’s line had been seen as a potential weakness for the Cowboys defense to exploit. The Buccaneers ranked last in the league in 2022 in rushing attempts, rushing yards, rushing touchdowns, and yards per carry.

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From veterans to rookies, Cowboys embracing postseason: ‘It’s where you leave your legacy’

The Cowboys are trying to be business-as-usual, while ratcheting up the intensity for a playoff opportunity that doesn’t come around often. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy told his players immediately following the regular-season finale, “We’ve been talking about this since April. It starts right now. ”

Dak’s rehab. Minicamp. Oxnard. Preseason. Dak’s shoulder. Hard Knocks. Opening night. Zuerlein’s misses. Trevon’s assault on quarterbacks. Dak’s rust. Injuries. The suspension of La’el Collins. Undefeated October. Dak’s calf. Cooper Rush on Halloween night. The Hulk package. Dan Quinn’s dominant defense. November struggles. COVID. Bad refs. The rise of Micah. Dak’s slump.  Undefeated December. More Zuerlein misses. Comebacks. Redemption. Grit. Twelve wins. NFC East championship.

It was all just a prelude to the tournament that’s about to begin. The Cowboys’ 34th postseason appearance will mark the second-most among all NFL teams. But history and past success don’t carry over into the playoffs. As McCarthy has been saying since his players throttled the Eagles just a few days ago, “This is the start line.”

And although the team as a collective understands the do-or-die nature of every game from here on, each man wearing the star comes to Sunday’s start line with a slightly different perspective of what it all means to him.

“It means a lot. Just dreaming as a kid, watching all the games from I don’t know how long I’ve been watching football,” said wideout CeeDee Lamb, about to play in his first postseason game. “I try to put myself or envision myself in the position that those guys have played before me. It’s huge. For me to have this opportunity before me on Sunday is kind of unimaginable. Honestly, just because I can’t really believe it right now. It’s a surreal moment.”

For running back Ezekiel Elliott, Sunday’s tilt with the 49ers will mark his fourth playoff outing. He’s averaged 22 carries and 103 rushing yards per game across three previous postseason contests in 2016 and 2018.

“These big moments, this is where you’ve got to have your best performances,” Elliott shared. “These moments like this are what your career is remembered as. It’s where you leave your legacy. Just got to go out there and take advantage of the opportunity.”

Prescott has the same 1-2 postseason record as Elliott in a Cowboys uniform. He, too, grasps how rarely this opportunity presents itself to an NFL team.

“Being older now, being six years into this,” Prescott explained, “really just going back to not making the playoffs the years that we didn’t, and being hurt last year, that alone is enough that I don’t take any moment for granted. All the hard work and everything that you do is for these times and for these moments and for these games. I think, more than anything, it’s about sharing it with the young guys and the other guys that may not have been through the things that I’ve been through or been in the league as long, make sure they understand it’s a ‘now’ mentality.”

For a rookie like Parsons, who has taken the league by storm in his first pro seasons, he says he’s had that mentality for the entire 2021 campaign.

“To be honest, it’s just another game,” the 22-year-old linebacker said. “Another game where you’ve go to hone in on detail. Every game counted, ’til we got to this point. We’re the 3-seed going into this playoff game, and nothing’s new. Going to do the same preparation we’ve been doing all season. The only difference is, this will dictate if we’re going home or not. And I hope we’re not going home. This is going to be a good little stretch we’ve got, and I’m excited for it.

After a (mostly) successful 18-week grind, the Cowboys must walk that fine line between trying to maintain the businesslike approach that netted them a division title and a home playoff game and turning up the intensity this week with exponentially higher stakes on the line.

“I think you have to turn your excitement into mental excitement,” offered defensive end DeMarcus Lawrence. “Being excited to learn more, being excited to learn the opposite player you’re going against, learn the team that you’re going against, and also learn more about yourself and your team and how y’all can get better through those moments. Being quiet before the storm and waiting on Sunday and really unleashing the excitement.”

“I think you’ve got to stay in your routine,” said Elliott. “Definitely do a little bit more because it’s the playoffs, and every play is going to count. You never know when that opportunity is going to be when your number is called, so you’ve just got to stay within your routine, but do a little bit more just to make sure mentally that you’re ready.”

Being just a 3-point favorite in what is expected to be the closest game of the weekend, these Cowboys are under increasing pressure to go on a deep playoff run. The franchise has won just four postseason games in the last quarter-century. All of them have been first-round wild-card games at home.

But Prescott is among those still trying to keep an even keel leading up to kickoff.

“I do what I normally do,” Prescott said. “I don’t know necessarily why people have labeled the word pressure as such a bad thing, honestly. I think it creates high expectations and high standards, and it usually creates high results. For me, it’s just about being who I am, staying true to that, knowing who I am, preparing the same way that I have and that I do. Trust in the people around me, trust in the play callers and my preparation. Then just going out there and playing the game that I love without any hesitation.”

The opponent drawn for wild card weekend has only added to the week’s hype. Dallas and San Francisco have paired up for some of the greatest postseason games ever played, dating back to the 1970s. But some of that history is understandably lost on this current crop of Cowboys, most of whom weren’t even alive for the teams’ last playoff clash, at the end of the 1994 season.

“I’m learning, as of right now. It’s not hard to catch onto,” Lamb said of the Cowboys’ and 49ers’ storied past. “Obviously, we saw them my rookie year, kind of got an opener into that. And again this year has kind of been a reminder. This is a big game, man, that’s all it is. It’s a rivalry game, it goes all the way back. For this to be in Dallas and a playoff game, it don’t get no better than this.”

While Sunday’s game will conjure up plenty of ghosts for longtime Cowboys fans, this edition of the rivalry will have nothing, really, to do with Aikman and Smith, Irvin and Young, Sanders and Haley, Rice and Norton, Montana and Clark, Staubach and Brodie.

For each of the Cowboys players, it will be about the other 47 men standing next to them on the sideline.

“Man, I’m just truly blessed,” Lawrence said, speaking of being able to return from a 10-week absence with a foot injury. “The Lord sat me down earlier in the season and told me, ‘That wasn’t my time.’ Being able to bring me back with the team that made the playoffs, and now we can go on this playoff run and potentially a Super Bowl, it means a lot to me, man. This is what a young kid always dreams of.”

“You’ve got to cherish these moments,” Elliott added. “In this league, it’s very hard to make it to the postseason. You’re only going to get so many opportunities, so we’ve definitely got to do our best to go make this one count.”

“You don’t come around great teams like we have very often, ” Prescott explained. “So just make sure we don’t take a play for granted, either. Not only in our preparation, but when we get out there as well in the game time, just leave it all out there. … Playoff football: one play can be the difference if you keep playing or not. I’m just excited for this, excited for this game, excited for the playoffs, and excited to be going into it with this team.”

“It really is a blessing to be here playing football,” edge rusher Randy Gregory offered, “playing on a team that drafted me and being a part of this great organization, a part of this team. I feel like we’re a very special unit. I’m talking like our season’s over, but it’s really just beginning.”

This Sunday is, as the Cowboys keep hearing and telling themselves, just the starting line.

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Injury report: Cowboys near full strength; 49ers’ LT misses practice

Several Cowboys came off COVID, injury, or illness on Wednesday; only Jayron Kearse and Nahshon Wright were absent for the day’s work. | From @ToddBrock24f7

After a Week 18 trip to Philadelphia that saw several Cowboys starters stay back in Dallas or otherwise miss the regular-season finale with COVID, illness, or injury, the team looks to be nearing full strength just in time for Sunday’s first-round playoff game versus San Francisco.

Safety Jayron Kearse is the only Cowboys player from last week’s rash of Reserve/COVID adds to still be on the list Wednesday, according to head coach Mike McCarthy in his midweek press conference. Kearse did not practice with the team, but is expected back on Thursday.

Several others were activated from the COVID protocol on Wednesday, including left tackle Tyron Smith, who was limited in the day’s session.

Linebacker Micah Parsons also returned from the COVID list. He told reporters after Wednesday’s practice about his experience with the virus.

“Some fatigue, muscle ache, sore throat, some congestion,” Parsons described. “I think from a standpoint of a comeback, I feel great. I had a whole bunch of rest. I had an extra bye week some of the guys didn’t get. So I feel refreshed. I liked how I played off my last bye week [Week 8 against Minnesota], so hopefully we can follow up with that.”

Linebacker Francis Bernard also returned to practice Wednesday in a limited capacity after being out with COVID.

Cornerback Nahshson Wright did not practice Wednesday for personal reasons, the Cowboys reported.

Running back Tony Pollard, who sat out Week 18 with a foot injury, was a full participant Wednesday, a good sign for the speedy threat.

Tight end Sean McKeon, safety Israel Mukuamu, and linebacker Keanu Neal were all limited, according to the day’s practice report.

Of note, cornerback Trevon Diggs was not on the injury report after missing Week 18 with an illness.

Tight ends coach Lunda Wells was also in COVID protocol as of McCarthy’s Wednesday briefing. “Actually, I think he’s testing today. He may be back today or tomorrow,” the coach said. “Other than that, we’re 100 percent.”

In a final bit of roster maneuvering, the Cowboys placed third-string quarterback Will Grier on injured reserve. Ben DiNucci moves up from the practice squad to be the backup to backup Cooper Rush.

For the visiting 49ers, star offensive tackle Trent Williams missed Wednesday’s work session with an elbow sprain. He missed the team’s season-closer dealing with the same injury, but head coach Kyle Shanahan says he’s hoping Williams will be able to play Sunday.

Veteran tight end George Kittle was given a veteran’s day off, while quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo was limited with a chipped bone in his thumb. Both are expected to play in Dallas.

San Francisco running back Elijah Mitchell did not practice; linebackers Dre Greenlaw, Azeez Al-Shaair, and Marcell Harris, safeties Talanoa Hufanga and Jaquiski Tartt, and punter Mitch Wishnowsky were all expected to be limited.

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Cowboys’ Micah Parsons, Tyron Smith activated off of COVID list

Micah Parsons and Tyron Smith missed the Cowboys’ season finale but have been activated off of the Reserve/COVID list. | From @StarConscience

When the Dallas Cowboys entered their season finale against the Philadelphia Eagles, they were without several key starters. Rookie linebacker Micah Parsons and left tackle Tyron Smith didn’t make the trip due to landing on the Reserve/COVID list.

Being that both players are vaccinated, they were fully expected to be ready for the Cowboys’ playoff matchup with the San Francisco 49ers on Sunday. According to Michael Gehlken of the Dallas Morning News, both players were activated off of the COVID list and will practice on Wednesday.

The former Penn State Nittany Lion has been everything the Cowboys’ defense could have asked for and more. Parsons finished with 84 tackles (20 tackles for loss), 13 sacks, 30 quarterback hits, three forced fumbles, and three passes defended. He became just the third player over the last 15 seasons to register 80 tackles and 30 quarterback hits joining 2022 Hall of Fame finalist DeMarcus Ware and J.J. Watt.

Parsons is a virtual lock to win Defensive Rookie of the Year and is one of the top candidates for Defensive Player of the Year. He’s been impactful as an edge rusher and an off-the-ball linebacker with his sideline to sideline speed and ability to play the run. He took over 400 snaps at linebacker, over 300 as a defensive lineman, nearly 30 at cornerback, and even lined up at safety which speaks to his incredible versatility.

Smith has had a rollercoaster 11th campaign in the NFL. He vowed in the offseason that he would play all 17 games, but unfortunately, he missed significant time for the sixth consecutive year. However, when he’s played, Smith has been one of the best offensive linemen in the NFL this season when it comes to run-blocking and pass-blocking grades according to Pro Football Focus.

The Cowboys haven’t had their starting five offensive linemen in unison that much in 2021 so getting Smith back in time for the playoffs is crucial for continuity purposes.

Parsons is the swiss army knife of the Cowboys’ defense and Smith is responsible for protecting the blind side of quarterback Dak Prescott. This makes both players essential to the Cowboys making a deep run in the playoffs, and that task gets off to a challenging start this Sunday when the 49ers come to town with a physical running game, multiple threats at wide receiver, and a formidable defensive front four.