Instant Analysis: What the experts say about the newest Cowboys edge rusher Sam Williams

The Ole Miss edge rusher has unquestionable skills on the field, but character concerns caused several teams to stay away. | From @ToddBrock24f7

The draft’s second round is a place where the Cowboys have traditionally taken a risk or two, often rolling the dice on a prospect with an injury history or character concerns that have caused him to fall below where his pure football skills should probably have him.

With the 56th pick, Dallas has selected Mississippi edge rusher Sam Williams.

Defensive end has been a sore spot this offseason, with the awkward departure of Randy Gregory after a dispute over contract language. Dante Fowler was added and Dorance Armstrong was re-signed, but the spot opposite DeMarcus Lawrence was seen as an area where improvement was needed.

Williams might have been a first-round consideration were it not for a 2020 sexual battery charge while at Ole Miss. Charges were cleared and Williams returned to the team, but the incident was enough to drop him down many teams’ boards.

Here’s his draft profile, according to several notable outlets.

Texas A&M OLKenyon Green would be perfect fit alongside Cowboys’ greats

The Texas native stayed home for college, will the stars align for him to remain in state? @DiabeticTyler takes a look at the versatile Aggie.

Kenyon Green may very well be off the board when the Cowboys are on the clock at No. 24, but if he is available, it would take a lot of convincing he isn’t a great solution. Dallas is in need of reinforcements along the offensive line and Green played tackle and guard in his time at Texas A&M, excelling at both positions.

He’s started since his freshman year, when he was named to the SEC All-Freshman Team, and then moved inside to guard as a sophomore and was Second-Team AP All-American. The Humble, TX native could be a mainstay at guard for the time being, able to kick out to tackle when Tyron Smith inevitably gets injured. There is no lapse in his footwork when switching between the two and he appears comfortable on both sides of the line.