Prescott on Cowboys’ COVID bubble: ‘Healthiest team wins’

Dak Prescott and ‘most’ of the Cowboys players are holed up in the hotel attached to their team headquarters as 2020 training camp begins.

The COVID-19 era will undoubtedly leave its mark on the 2020 NFL season, in whatever form it ends up taking. From the mechanics of how players and coaches interact with one another to fans’ attendance at games to the various pieces of equipment that have instantly become a standard part of present-day football gear, the game will change as a result of the pandemic.

But it’s the less obvious things, too. The unexpected ways the virus will force teams to alter their tendencies, their gameplans, their strategies, their very philosophies. Football has always been about the Xs and Os. But in 2020, it could come down to one simple tenet: The healthiest team wins.

Those were the words of Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott as he spoke to media members via videoconference on Wednesday. But he wasn’t speaking about the normal on-the-field injuries that typically turn a football season into a war of attrition decided by twisted knees, sprained ankles, and gimpy hamstrings. He was talking about the global pandemic that has claimed 166,000 lives in the US, has altered even the most basic routines of the majority of Americans, has forced millions to shelter in place at home… and inspired a sizable contingent of the Cowboys players to voluntarily sequester themselves in the hotel attached to their team headquarters.

“I’m already there,” Prescott said of The Omni Frisco Hotel, located at The Star. “For me, it’s about trying to stay as safe as I can, as healthy as I can. Without knowing the true future of where this season’s going to go, I think it’s important for us as players to try to create the biggest bubble- or the smallest bubble, I guess you can say- that we can amongst players, because as long as this season gets to play out, I think part of it is: The healthiest team wins. So that’s something we’ve come together as leaders and taken on this option to stay in this hotel. So we can try and stay healthy, we can all be there for each other, we can set an example for the young guys about avoiding downtown, or about avoiding other people and where people can go. Because what’s important right now is this football team, this season, and not only our health, but the health of our families, so I think this is the best way that we can make sure that that happens.”

While the exact number of Dallas players living at the hotel is unknown, Prescott estimated it to be “most of” the roster. The arrangement, paid for by the team, will dramatically limit those players’ exposure to people and places in their normal daily lives, hopefully reducing their risk- and the collective risk of the team as a whole- of contracting the virus.

“Once again, I can’t be mad at the guys for their personal reasons, or their family matters, that they may not want to come into the bubble or come into the hotel. But I know and trust they’re being grown men and doing the things they need to do and the things necessary to keep their health safe and to not put themselves in jeopardy of getting this deal and coming in here and giving it to anybody else.”

 

The hotel is becoming quite the home away from home for Cowboys personnel this year. Mike McCarthy also took up residence at The Omni for a time after his hiring in January as the team’s new coach. In the early days of his Dallas tenure, as he began the work of assembling a new staff, living at the hotel made the daily commute to his new office as quick and simple as an elevator ride.

McCarthy voiced approval of the players’ self-imposed bubble on Wednesday, acknowledging that it’s a luxury some other teams don’t have, and one that will benefit more than just his guys.

“Being connected to the Omni, it’s frankly just natural that we do the best that we can to create an environment to keep our players safe. Plus with the education and keeping up with the current protocols and as we continue to go through this challenge of battling COVID, that there are updates and upgrades. It’s only going to make us safer as a football team and, frankly, it’s only going to make us safer in a personal realm of educating our families and bringing the same focus and education into our own homes. Just very fortunate for the setup that we do have here. So we’re really looking at trying to create an Oxnard-type environment here at The Star. I think we’ve knocked it out of the park, and our players have totally bought into it and they’re excited about it. We’re off to an excellent start as far as handling this challenge.”

As for Prescott, he says his hotel accommodations won’t put much of a crimp in his day-to-day life.

“I’m not much of a going-out guy anyway,” the 27-year-old admitted, “so it’s been pretty easy for me, for the most part.”

For most of the Cowboys bunking in at The Omni, living next to a practice field might be a unique experience. For Prescott, though, it’s just a change of scenery. The quarterback, who’s bringing down $31.4 million this season under the franchise tag, had a full-size football field installed at his home recently.

“Obviously once COVID came around, it was tough to find a place to throw. It was very tough. I’ve always dreamed about having a football field in my backyard, so that was something that I kind of put the foot down and said, ‘Hey, let’s get it going. It can give me somewhere every offseason.’ You can’t plan for things like this, but when things like this come around, I’ll just be able to have it, and it’s obviously private access, and we can get the work we need. That was kind of the thought in creating that field in my backyard, and it’s been very beneficial. Just having the guys out there, being able to throw, being able to get a lot of work, and we’re going to hit camp running because we’ve been working for a good amount of time now.”

 

Cowboys wide receiver Amari Cooper confirmed to ESPN’s Todd Archer that he and several other receivers, tight ends, and running backs have worked out “consistently” with Prescott over the offseason, often on the quarterback’s backyard field.

Prescott, clearly, is all in on the 2020 season and will command one of the most promising offenses the team has featured in years.

Still, COVID-19 has made for uncertain times and unexpected changes of plans. The Mississippi State product was asked during Wednesday’s press conference if he considered opting out of the 2020 season, as over sixty other NFL players chose to do proactively out of concern over the virus.

“Never crossed my mind,” Prescott shot back. “Football has always been my safe haven. It’s always been a place for me to find peace. Especially with everything that’s happened in my life personally, especially in the place that this world is in, I think that football’s a safe heaven and it’s peace for a lot of people. It never crossed my mind to opt out and to not be here with the guys and to not be where I love to be doing what I’ve been blessed to do. Obviously, there are some concerns. But for me, it’s just about being as safe as I can, following the guidelines that the team and NFL have laid out for us to not put yourself in jeopardy of contracting this COVID thing.”

For those who have chosen to play on, the voluntary bubble at the team’s own facility presents the safest way to keep playing and preparing for an upcoming season. And should the quarantine prove effective at keeping the Cowboys healthy through training camp, Prescott is keeping the door open on possibly extending his stay into the regular season if the virus’s spread dictates.

“Right now, we’ve kind of talked about it as players more just for the camp, but who knows? As we go into this season, obviously, hopefully, doctors and people can still give us more updates of what’s going on in COVID and going on around not only our area, our community, our state, but this country. Right now, we’re just going to take it for the camp, but it may continue to go on. As I said, I think that the healthiest team has one of the best shots to win this so we’re going to do the best that we can to put ourselves in that small group.”

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Cowboys News: McCarthy’s best man, Cooper separates from DBs, pack

The NCAA took a few low blows today but the NFL moves forward with their unique and unprecedented 2020 NFL Season.

The sport of football is known for doling out hard-hitting punishment on the gridiron, but it took major blows on Tuesday with the cancellation and postponement of some of the larger NCAA conference seasons. The NFL moves forward though with their unique start to training camps.

Which Cowboys coaches hired under Mike McCarthy have been flying dangerously low under the radar? The NFL has lifted the tryout ban and what that could mean for some free agents in the immediate future. Despite the different style of training camp, NFL media members still believe McCarthy can have immediate success. Take a deep dive into all there is to know about what goes into the Dallas Cowboys 2020 training camp; all this and more in News and Notes.


Mailbag: Most Underrated Coaching Hire? :: The Mothership

With so many staff changse, it’s easy to overlook or forget one of the new Cowboys coaches. In the latest edition of Mailbag, Cowboys writers Rob Phillips & Jonny Auping each give their coaching hire that is flying too far under the radar.


Our New Metric Shows How Good NFL Receivers Are At Creating Separation :: FiveThirtyEight

Breaking news: wide receivers who are able to get themselves open are valuable in the NFL. The Cowboys have one of those valuable receivers. His name is Amari Cooper, who in 2019 ranked No. 2 at creating separation on deep passes.



No one rides harder for the Dallas Cowboys than Michael Irvin, who’s new favorite player seems to be wide receiver CeeDee Lamb.


Examining the Vander Esch-Smith position swap: Is it the right call for Dallas? :: The Athletic

Bob Sturm breaks down the linebacker positional switch between Jaylon Smith and Leighton Vander Esch heading into the 2020 season. The answer won’t reveal itself for perhaps years to come, but the amount of capital sunk into two players who may best be suited for the same position is troubling.


Ranking Which New NFL Head Coaches Are Best Positioned to Succeed This Fall :: Bleacher Report

It’s hard for NFL coaches to succeed in their first year with a new team, and with this year’s unusual off season it becomes a little more challenging. However, critics still believe in the Cowboys and new head coach Mike McCarthy.


Game Theory: Ranking all 32 teams by WR strength :: NFL

There has been tons of talk this offseason of the Cowboys talented receiver group. NFL.com ranked every teams wide outs, and it’s no surprise the Cowboys are near the top. Follow the link to find out exactly where in the top five the Cowboys trio lands.


Name To Know: Getting A Look At Connor McGovern :: The Mothership

Left guard and center are two spots up for grabs on the Dallas offensive line, and former 2019 third-round pick Connor McGovern has a real opportunity to seize one of those two roles. Learn more about the former Penn St. standout.


Second to none or second to one? Cowboys’ Martin not top guard in 2020 :: The CowboysWire

The Cowboys offensive line has been their strongest position group for years now. Zack Martin finds himself No. 2 according to Pro Football Focus behind the Colts’ Quenton Nelson.


2020 Cowboys Training Camp: The nuts, bolts, Plexiglas dividers, contact tracers of it all :: The CowboysWire

This is the ultimate “what you need to know” about The Star and Cowboys training camp in an unprecedented year for the NFL. Protocols galore, the Cowboys are well prepared.


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Amari Cooper sets high goal for himself in 2020

Former Alabama WR Amari Cooper, now on the Cowboys, sets a high goal for himself in 2020. Though difficult, not impossible for Cooper.

Former Alabama wide receiver Amari Cooper is set to begin his second full season with the Dallas Cowboys after being traded by Oakland in 2018. Playing in Dallas was seemingly a career-saving change for Cooper, and he’s apparently just getting started.

When speaking with DallasCowboys.com’s David Helman, Cooper revealed goals for himself and the team for the 2020 season.

Cooper, who shares the field with fellow high-profile receiver Michael Gallup, had high praise for Dallas’ 2020 first-round draftee, former Oklahoma wide receiver CeeDee Lamb.

While speaking about Lamb, Cooper revealed a difficult, but achievable goal: Having three wide receivers finish the year with over 1,000 yards.

“You have to draft the best player on the board — everybody understands that,” Cooper said. “I think he’s a great receiver. And I think with me and Michael Gallup going for 1,000 yards last season, I think the expectation is to have three 1,000-yard receivers this year.”

Last year, Cooper and Gallup both caught for over 1,000 yards. In fact, that is not a benchmark the former Alabama star often misses. In his five NFL seasons, four were concluded with over 1,000 receiving yards.

Though it isn’t something new to Cooper, he acknowledges that he still has to take the time during the offseason to train.

In an attempt to perfect his craft, Cooper states that he and his fellow skill position teammates have been working for months, despite league facilities having been closed for the past few months due to the ongoing Coronavirus pandemic.

“Me, Dak, some of the other receivers, tight ends, running backs – we’ve all been working together pretty consistently for months now,” said Cooper. “Working on our route running, working on the offense and everything like that. We’ve been getting a lot of work in, getting that timing right as if we were going to minicamp or OTAs.”

Cooper and the Cowboys will enter the 2020 season with a new head coach, Mike McCarthy, who coached the Green Bay Packers from 2006-2018 and won a Super Bowl during his time there.

Cowboys News: McCarthy talks position changes, love for Prescott

Mike McCarthy leads the headlines today as he met with the media today for the first time in a few months to catch everyone up on the team.

For the first time in what seems like forever, new Dallas Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy met with the media. He addressed plenty of questions surrounding the preparation for an unprecedented NFL season during a global pandemic. McCarthy addressed the schedule for training camp, a few position change ideas, and of course addressing QB1 Dak Prescott along with really liking the Cowboys quarterback room as a whole. McCarthy also addressed the social justice issues in the NFL and in the world as he told everyone to take a step back and listen.

The Cowboys Wire player profiles continue with an idea that the Cowboys running back room could be crowded. Leighton Vander Esch is feeling better than ever and is ready to make the changes needed to stay healthy in 2020. Amari Cooper’s bold claim should not be laughed at according to some media members.


McCarthy on Position Changes, Injuries & More :: The Mothership

Mike McCarthy met with the Cowboys media and covered everything from the start of camp operations, possible position changes for Leighton Vander Esch and Chidobe Awuzie, a few injuries, and waxed profusely about his starting quarterback, Dak Prescott.



Cowboys’ Vander Esch healed and ready for move to MLB, on-field leader :: The CowboysWire

Coming off a serious neck injury in 2019, Leighton Vander Esch says he feels better than ever and is ready to make all the necessary adjustments to lead the Cowboys linebacker room in 2020.


Cowboys rank best in NFC East at 5 of 11 position groups :: The CowboysWire

The NFC East is going to be a wild ride in 2020. Find out which categories the Cowboys rank No. 1 in.



‘Like I was in a car crash’: Cowboys legend Darren Woodson details COVID battle :: The CowboysWire

Find out what one of the best safeties in Dallas Cowboys history feels about dealing with Covid-19 during this pandemic.


Cam Jordan’s right about Bucs, NFC South race; five breakout DBs :: NFL.com

A massive article on NFL.com features on some of the bigger topics headed into the 2020 season. Amari Cooper should be taken seriously about his three 1,000 yard wide receivers claim.


Rico Dowdle wants to, can, make Cowboys rush attack 4-headed monster :: The CowboysWire

Our CowboyWire 2020 player profile series continues with good problems to have for the Cowboys. A very deep and talented group in the running back room, Rico Dowdle has a good chance to make some noise during camp.



 



ESPN’s position group rankings are telling about the strengths and weaknesses of the Cowboys :: Blogging The Boys

Out of 10 total position groups ranked by ESPN, the Cowboys found themselves in the top 10 in five categories.

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News: How many Cowboys will make Hall of Fame, Gregory disgruntled, COVID snitch hotline

In Cowboys news, we look at Randy Gregory’s reinstatement, Michael Gallup’s 3rd-year forecast, and how the defensive front might improve.

Cowboys fans may have been cheated out of seeing their team play the Hall of Fame Game and a couple alums get enshrined in Canton this weekend, but one outlet is forecasting which current Dallas players might just receive bronze busts in the future, when their playing days are done.

In other news, lots of talk about the wideouts as Michael Gallup goes under the microscope entering his third season, Amari Cooper and Co. could hold the key to the team’s success this year, and Ezekiel Elliott dispels the notion that the group’s 1,000-yard-times-three expectations will put a dent in his workload. Randy Gregory is frustrated about his reinstatement status, the defense could be in for a big boost in 2020, and the coronavirus has not only made this year’s practice squad assembly more interesting… it’ll also have players self-policing their own teams anonymously as clubs navigate COVID-19 protocols. That’s all on tap in this edition of News and Notes.

Projecting future Hall of Famers for all 32 NFL teams :: ESPN

On the eve of what was supposed to be Hall of Fame Weekend, Bill Barnwell says Ezekiel Elliott, Zack Martin, and Tyron Smith are “likely” to eventually get gold jackets. Dak Prescott and Amari Cooper are “in the running.” DeMarcus Lawrence, Leighton Vander Esch, and Gerald McCoy could make it to Canton, too.


3 ways Michael Gallup can have his best season yet :: Inside The Star

Michael Gallup took a huge leap in 2019 with over 1,100 receiving yards. With improvement in a few areas and added firepower around him in the form of CeeDee Lamb, he can be even better in 2020.


Building the Cowboys’ practice squad is much more interesting than in the past :: Blogging The Boys

With COVID-19 testing and new rules set in place, the building of practice squad rosters has become more intriguing.


Cowboys DE Randy Gregory vents on being stuck ‘in limbo’ over reinstatement :: Cowboys Wire

The suspended defensive end took to Twitter to voice his frustration over his reinstatement status, blaming “Covid and testing” as the reason he hasn’t been able to prove he’s complying with the NFL’s substance abuse policy.



Understanding the Cowboys defensive tackle position group and how we could see a surprise :: Blogging The Boys

Limited roster spots have made things interesting when it comes to the question of who will make the Cowboys roster as defensive tackle.


The Dallas Cowboys defensive line better than last season? :: The Landry Hat

The Cowboys beefed up their defensive front by adding veteran help in free agency and young talent in the NFL Draft. These additions could make them even more formidable than they were in 2019.


NFL history says Cowboys will be successful if wide receivers meet expectations :: The Athletic

Amari Cooper thinks the Cowboys can be the sixth team in NFL history with three 1,000-yard receivers. With the previous five teams all finishing with winning records, the odds of success are in the Cowboys’ favor if they achieve this milestone in 2020.


Elliott defiantly rejects idea Cowboys WR trio will steal his touches :: Cowboys Wire

One NFL reporter wondered on social media what three 1,000-yard receivers would mean for Elliott’s workload in 2020. Elliott put a stop to the pot-stirring speculation, tweeting, “We all gonna EAT.”


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Elliott defiantly rejects idea Cowboys WR trio will steal his touches

The Dallas RB took to Twitter to quash any perceived drama over whether he’ll still see a heavy workload under coach Mike McCarthy in 2020.

Amari Cooper this week set the bar awfully high for himself and his pass-catching cohorts in Dallas. If he, Michael Gallup, and rookie CeeDee Lamb follow through on what Cooper called “the expectations” for all three to notch 1,000-yard receiving seasons, it would mark just the sixth time in league history a trio of teammates has accomplished the feat.

Cooper may have raised a few eyebrows by saying it out loud. But running back Ezekiel Elliott was quick to smack down the attempts by one reporter to raise questions about what that might mean for the team’s rushing attack.

ESPN’s Ed Werder, a longtime Cowboys insider, wondered via Twitter what a pass-heavy gameplan- the kind that might produce three 1,000-yard receivers- would leave in terms of touches for Elliott, who’s averaged 20-plus carries per game in each of his last three seasons.

The two-time rushing champ, though, does not seem to be concerned about his workload taking a nosedive simply because there’s a wealth of WR weaponry in the Dallas huddle.

A few things to consider. First, with Brett Favre and Aaron Rodgers on the roster, it’s no wonder the Packers were a pass-first team, especially when the best backfield options were the likes of Ahman Green, Ryan Grant, and Eddie Lacy. Fine rushers, all, but none of them realistically approach Elliott’s caliber. McCarthy “putting his full faith in the QB” during his Green Bay tenure is, then, completely understandable. It’s sound strategy. But it doesn’t automatically follow that he’ll blindly force the same philosophy in Dallas.

But even if McCarthy does go with an all-out air raid, that’s not to say Elliott won’t still rack up his numbers. Of the five previous squads to feature a trio of 1,000-yard receivers, two also had a rusher hit the milestone, as The Athletic‘s Jon Machota pointed out.

Legendary offenses find a way to spread the ball around, and Dallas’s offense has all the ingredients to be just that.

Finally, it’s not like the Cowboys didn’t come really close to pulling off this exact feat just last season. In 2019, both Cooper and Gallup topped 1,000 yards. In fact, each finished with over 1,100. Randall Cobb totaled 828, falling just 172 yards short of the magic benchmark. That’s over 3,000 yards distributed among three guys. And yet, Elliott still ended up with 1,357 on the ground.

While Cooper, Gallup, and Lamb could mathematically all be 1,000-yard men and still leave more than enough meat on the bone for Elliott, the triple-1K crown isn’t something that fans should necessarily want to see.

Cowboys staff writers debated the notion on the team website. All admit that it’s certainly possible, given the talents of the players in question. But while it would likely be fun to watch, it may not be desirable. In fact, if it does happen, it could mean that the season is not going as hoped.

Writes David Helman:

“Dak Prescott’s favorite guy is the open guy. He’s going to throw a lot of balls to running backs, and the (hopeful) emergence of Blake Jarwin is another thing to consider.”

From Rob Phillips:

“[I]f the Cowboys have more success as a team, play with more leads, Elliott and Tony Pollard will have more chances to grind out yards. The offense played from behind a lot last season. That’s a big reason why quarterback Dak Prescott had at least 40 pass attempts in seven of the 16 games.”

And according to Nick Eatman:

“Honestly, if things go right, they probably won’t even have two [1,000-yard receivers]. Again, that’s a good thing. If this team is going to be a 10-11-12 win team, they need to be running the ball and running out the clock in the fourth quarter, not passing the ball around. Is it possible? Yes, but it’s not a good thing.”

But for now, the lawfirm of Cooper, Gallup, and Lamb should absolutely have their sights set on 1,000 apiece. In fact, so should Jarwin. And Elliott should go ahead and get his “Feed Me” bowl all cleaned up and ready for another big helping of touches. And, heck, why not let 2020 be the year that Pollard breaks out, too?

There are boatloads of yards to go around for this season’s Cowboys offense. Let the opposing defenses be the ones to try to guess which playmakers are going to be the ones to get them on any given week.

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Cowboys News: Top-5 offense, possibly best NFL WR group in over decade, uni watch

Dallas Cowboys news for August 4, 2020.

A lot of eyes will be on the Dallas Cowboys receiving group in 2020. Michael Gallup is often considered one of the best breakout candidates for next year. CeeDee Lamb was one of the most electric college players ever, and it still feels like a dream he slid to Dallas in the draft. Amari Cooper is coming off his best season as a pro, and the quiet superstar spoke out about his expectations for the talented trio.

There is still so much up in the air about the 2020 NFL season. Covid-19 opt-outs have made keeping up with your teams salary cap space more confusing than usual, but don’t fear, as our own K.D. Drummond delivers you some math on the matter. It’s unclear if fans will be allowed at the stadiums, but ESPN speculated on the live fan conundrum based on the current gathering laws of each state.

Amari: ‘I Know I’m Going To Be Ready’ :: The Mothership

Amari Cooper had a big decision to make in free agency this off season. The star wide receiver could have took  a higher annual salary to jump ship, but his love for the Cowboys and their culture led him back to Dallas. Hear what Cooper has to say about this decision, his readiness for the upcoming season, and more.


Cowboys won’t profit much as NFL adds Covid cap space to 32 teams :: Cowboys Wire

Our own K.D. Drummond examines just how much of an impact opt-outs and the new Covid-19 salary cap modifications have on the Dallas financial situation.


Why Cowboys receiver Michael Gallup will be the next Chris Godwin and break out in 2020 :: CBS Sports

Chris Godwin went from a solid, under-the-radar, receiving option to a household name and one of the best receivers in the league in his third season. Many believe that despite already having his breakout season last year with a 1,000-yard campaign, Gallup is ready to completely blow up, the way Godwin did in his third year.


This, good. This, not so good.


Name To Know: An Intriguing Candidate At CB :: The Mothership

Daryl Worley has a huge opportunity in front of him in Dallas. The four-year veteran has a real chance to start at one of the corner spots, and his size and versatility could allow him to slot into any spot in the Cowboys secondary.


Amari Cooper: Cowboys ‘expectations are for 3 1,000-yard receivers’ :: Cowboys Wire

There might not be a more exciting position group in all of football than the Dallas Cowboys pass catchers in 2020. Michael Gallup broke out last year, but is expected to take another huge step. CeeDee Lamb was the steal of the NFL draft. Their leader, Cooper, expects the trio to put up big numbers this season.


Ranking Every Offense from 1 to 32 :: The Athletic

The Cowboys offense, despite putting up incredible numbers last year and  losing a few big names in the off season, expects to be just as good, if not better in 2020. Sheil Kapadia recently ranked the Dallas offense as the fourth best in the entire NFL.



Will there be fans at NFL games in 2020? Where all 32 teams stand for the regular season :: ESPN

No one knows if fans will be allowed at NFL stadiums in 2020, but this ESPN article projects how each team will handle fans based on what we know about the regulations each state has in place.


NFC East’s most interesting 2020 additions: New Cowboys coaching staff, Eagles star corner and more :: CBS Sports

Jared Dubin of CBS Sports takes a look at the biggest change for each team in the NFC east. Even though the Cowboys had a plethora of player changes, the mostly-new coaching staff, including Mike McCarthy, is undoubtedly the biggest change in Dallas.



Sewo Olonilua path to making Cowboys roster paved with opportunity :: Cowboys Wire

Mike McCarthy usually kept, and used, a fullback during his time in Green Bay, and Cowboys fullback Jamize Olawale recently opted out of the 2020 season. Former TCU lead-blocker Sewo Olonilua, as the only current fullback on the roster, has an excellent chance to play a somewhat significant role in the upcoming season.


20Q: Will LVE & The Linebackers Bounce Back? :: The Mothership

The Cowboys linebacker group is as talented as any linebacker room in the NFL, but Jaylon Smith and Leighton Vander Esch had too many underwhelming performances a year ago. Cowboys staff writers gives their opinions on how the talented duo will bounce back.


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Amari Cooper: Cowboys ‘expectations are for 3 1,000-yard receivers’

The Cowboys star receiver is ready for a new season, welcoming of his new amigo and not touching another man’s money.

Thanks to the coronavirus pandemic, it has been difficult, near impossible to get the usual interactions from NFL players and staff. The Dallas Cowboys, with some of the most high-profile coaching hires and free agent decisions of any club in the league, have felt like a vast wasteland of mute as fans have feened for the slightest bit of relevant information about the coming season.

With players reporting to camp, clearing Covid testing and getting to conditioning work this week, it seems things are loosening up a bit. So much so, that the normally recluse Amari Cooper, WR1 for the Cowboys, spent some time on a conference call with local media on Tuesday afternoon. Among several topics discussed were the on-field changes coming to an attack that led the NFL in yardage in 2019 and finished sixth in scoring.

Dallas added wide receiver CeeDee Lamb out of the University of Oklahoma with their first selection in April’s draft. His availability at No. 17 was a shock to most, including Cooper, who co-signed the team’s decision to add to a strength.

Joining Cooper and Michael Gallup, as well as the ever-present run-game dedication to Ezekiel Elliott, should put Lamb in a position to thrive as a rookie, where he may have been facing a steeper learning curve in a less-potent offense.

Lamb, who will likely ascend to No. 1 status in the near future, will play his rookie season matched up against opponents lesser-talented defenders. Cooper thinks the attack will be good enough to allow for another 1,000-yard receiver after both he and Gallup surpassed that threshold in 2019.

As Dallas Morning News’ Michael Gelkhen points out, that’s only happened five times in league history, most notably in 2008 when Larry Fitzgerald, Anquan Boldin and Steve Breaston pulled off the feat. Cooper says (via NFL Network’s Jane Slater) that Lamb is “fundamentally sound” and a “quick learner”.

The offensive personnel may have missed the offseason work that every team had to shun due to the shutdowns, but that doesn’t mean there hasn’t been work put in. The team has gathered over the last month with quarterback Dak Prescott to get repetitions in ahead of the August 17 first allowed day of team-orchestrated practices.

Of course the main ingredient missing from those souped-up backyard football sessions is the coaching staff, which is one of the bigger question marks facing the 2020 edition of the Cowboys. Offensive coordinator Kellen Moore returns for Year 2, but has a new boss in head coach Mike McCarthy.

McCarthy is an offensive-minded coach, so even though he retained Moore, the expectation is that there’s plenty McCarthy will want to have an imprint on. Early in the process, it was reported the club would maintain the verbiage used by Moore, to ease the conversation conversion between he and Prescott during the games.

However it appears that may not be the case.

 

 

As for the other facet of the offseason, Cooper was able to cash in on his contract situation. After being acquired in the final season of his rookie deal when Dallas traded for him in Week 8 of the 2018 season, Cooper played on the fifth-year option in 2019. Dallas chose to use the franchise tag on Prescott and not him, leading him to the open market.

Cooper chose to stay in Dallas for five years, $100 million total instead of signing somewhere else for better money. Once the Cowboys were in the right ballpark, Cooper indicates the decision was easy to stay.

While Cooper received his long-term assurances, Prescott was left to play under the franchise tag which will pay him almost eight times as much as he’d made in his career to this point, but doesn’t have the injury protection afforded in a multi-year contract. Cooper wouldn’t bite the bait the media was putting out for him, following the tried and true edict of never watching another man’s pockets.

Cooper and the Cowboys will have four weeks of padded practice to put together their attack plans for the September 13 season opener against the Los Angeles Rams. The club will look to bounce back from an 8-8 season and return to the playoffs in search of the franchise’s sixth Lombardi.

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Michael Gallup a dynamic slot option, Cooper dominant outside

Comparing WR production from both the slot and wideout positions show the Cowboys excelled in 2019, and could be poised for a bigger 2020.

As long as the season doesn’t get grounded, the airshow in Dallas should be a blast to watch. Quarterback Dak Prescott is coming off his best statistical campaign and will be playing on what amounts to a one-year “prove-it” deal that should directly forecast his post-2020 payday, whether that ultimately comes with the Cowboys or someone else.

But oh, those wide receivers. Amari Cooper reignited his career after being traded out of Oakland, blossomed in his first full season as a Cowboy, and earned himself an elite five-year deal from the team. Michael Gallup’s star continues to climb; in his second pro season, he doubled his rookie receptions, more than doubled his yardage, and tripled his touchdowns. And then Dallas inexplicably had CeeDee Lamb fall into their laps in the first round of April’s draft.

The Cowboys’ passing game could provide legitimate fireworks in 2020. But even looking back at the 2019 numbers is good for a few oohs and aahs.

Bryan Knowles and the crew at Football Outsiders took a deep-dive look at wide receiver play, specifically the difference in production when players line up wide versus in the slot. Overall, their data shows that throwing to the slot is “notably more effective” than throwing out wide. Leaguewide, 56.9% of targets went to slot receivers in 2019; that’s up from 51.8% just three years prior.

Interestingly, though, Dallas was just one of three teams (along with Tampa Bay and Carolina) who bucked that trend and threw more passes to their wideouts than slot guys last season.

For the 2019 Cowboys, that slot role was filled by Randall Cobb. Cobb saw 98.8% of his targets in the slot, being thrown to just once all season when lined up wide. His 81 slot targets put him in 13th place among all receivers.

How did Cobb do with those targets? Football Outsiders uses a metric called Defense-adjusted Value Over Average (DVOA), which “measures a team’s efficiency by comparing success on every single play to a league average based on situation and opponent.”

Cobb’s slot DVOA in 2019 was 6.0%. He bettered the league average on those 81 balls by just six percent, which may help explain why Dallas chose not to bring him back for the 2020 season.

So where does the slot action go now? For one, the rookie from Oklahoma is expected to wreak havoc from the interior as a Cowboy. One doesn’t have to watch much of his college tape to suspect that the 6-foot-2-inch Lamb could prove to be a significant upgrade at that position over Cobb and even Cole Beasley before him. (Read more on what Cowboys Wire had to say about Lamb here.)

But the stats show that Gallup is also more of a force to be reckoned with than one might first think, even lined up inside. Known for his acrobatic sideline grabs and as a deep threat, Gallup put up a 27.3% slot DVOA, meaning he performed 27.3 percent better on his slot targets than the expected average. That’s 14th place. His 22 slot targets- where he lined up 19.1% of the time- may represent a smallish sample size, but Gallup made the most of those balls; his DVOA is better than a lot of recognized slot terrors, including Julian Edelman, Adam Thielen, JuJu Smith-Schuster, and Cooper Kupp.

Hard to believe an 1,100-yard guy could be flying under the radar. But if the Cowboys choose to utilize Gallup more often as a slot secret weapon, he may be soaring into the end zone even more often.

It’s one thing for a receiver to excel either in the slot or lined up wide, but it’s also worth looking at who does particularly well at both. The tell here is a positive DVOA score at both positions. Compile a list of the players with double-digit DVOA marks in both categories, and one finds guys like Mike Evans, Michael Thomas, Chris Godwin, Tyrell Williams, Calvin Ridley, Mike Williams, Stefon Diggs, Tyreek Hill, DeVante Parker, and Kenny Stills. Michael Gallup is on that list, too.

Not bad company for a youngster who isn’t even WR1 on his own team.

Now then, about Amari Cooper.

The FO piece also tracks a stat called Defense-adjusted Yards Above Replacement, or DYAR. This metric takes into account how well a player performs compared to the player(s) who would theoretically take his place in the lineup.

Using a hypothetical running back who logs 300 carries a season, the site explains DYAR thusly:

“When a player is removed from an offense, he is usually not replaced by a player of similar ability. Nearly every starting player in the NFL is a starter because he is better than the alternative. Those 300 plays will typically be given to a significantly worse player, someone who is the backup because he doesn’t have as much experience and/or talent. A player’s true value can then be measured by the level of performance he provides above that replacement level baseline, totaled over all of his run or pass attempts.”

From the slot position, Tyler Lockett, Chris Godwin, and Michael Thomas lead the way. Each racked up over 300 yards more than their replacements likely would have in the same situations.

For true wideouts, nobody did it better than the Cowboys’ Cooper. The four-time Pro Bowler had 290 DYAR, a full 65 yards more than the Falcons’ Ridley in second place and 74 more than the Saints’ Thomas in third.

In terms of DVOA, Cooper bested the average by 32.0%. That’s eighth overall. (By way of comparison, Ridley scored 34.3% on 20 fewer catches, and Thomas notched just 16.3% but had ten more receptions than Cooper.)

Bottom line, Cooper is a stud. Says Football Outsiders:

“The Cowboys were one of the three teams who threw wide more than to the slot, and one of the major reasons was Amari Cooper, who has been a more natural fit for Dallas than he was in Oakland. Remember, too, that Cooper was hampered by knee and ankle injuries over the last seven weeks of the season; Cooper had 215 DYAR and a 41.1% DVOA out wide over the first ten weeks. You can understand why the Cowboys would be eager to lock Cooper up to a long-term extension, if not so much why they weren’t excited to lock the other half of that passing combo up to a similar deal. With the franchise tag already used on Dak Prescott and more than 70% of Dallas’ wide passing DYAR at any position going through Cooper, Jerry Jones almost had to write Cooper a blank check, which is why he is now the second-highest-paid receiver in football.”

Three wide receivers who can torch secondaries on the outside, and all three can slide in to work the slot. The writing is on the wall, and it’s forecasting big things for the Cowboys’ air attack in 2020.

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NFL Top 100: Cowboys WR Amari Cooper is a Top 50 talent

The Dallas Cowboys now have four members of the NFL’s top 100, with 48 slots remaining. Wideout Amari Cooper joins LB Jaylon Smith (No. 88), LT Tyron Smith (No. 76) and RG Zack Martin (No. 55) as the members of the 2019 team who have been honored by …

The Dallas Cowboys now have four members of the NFL’s top 100, with 48 slots remaining.

Wideout Amari Cooper joins LB Jaylon Smith (No. 88), LT Tyron Smith (No. 76) and RG Zack Martin (No. 55) as the members of the 2019 team who have been honored by their peers so far.

Cooper had an extraordinary start to the 2019 season that would’ve ended up ranking him higher if not for his fade down the stretch.

Player through a myriad of lower-body injuries, Cooper put together the best season of his five-year career, amassing career bests with 1,189 receiving yards and  eight touchdowns. He started all 16 games for the first time in his career.

Cooper had four 100-plus receiving yard games in the first nine contests of the season, including a dazzling 226-yard performance in Week 5 against the Green Bay Packers. A rainy-day game against the New England Patriots was the low point when he was held without a catch on two targets. Cooper never surpassed 90 yards in a game down the stretch of the season as Dallas finished 8-8 and out of the playoffs.

The season highlighted a weird trend for Cooper that sees a big discrepancy in his performance in front of the home crowd and on the road.


Related: Amari Cooper has the road yips, and it’s not something new


Even with the road woes, though, Cooper is one of the league’s preeminent talents at the position. The Cowboys, who traded their 2019 first-round pick in the middle of the 2018 campaign to acquire him, signed him to a five-year, $100 million deal this past offseason to ward off the higher bidding Washington franchise.

Together with second-year receiver Michael Gallup they formed one of the leagues 1,000-yard receiving duos. This past offseason, Dallas drafted Oklahoma’s CeeDee Lamb to join the team and take the offense to new heights under new head coach Mike McCarthy.

Cooper could see an improvement on the ranking made by his peers in 2020.

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