Where Chargers’ Easton Stick ranks among all backup quarterbacks in NFL

CBS Sports ranked all 32 backup quarterbacks heading into the 2023 season.

CBS Sports’ Cody Benjamin ranked all 32 backup quarterbacks heading into the 2023 season.

Chargers’ fifth-year signal-caller Easton Stick was near the bottom of the crop, checking in at No. 25 overall.

49ers’ Trey Lance and Sam Darnold were No. 1. Panthers’ Andy Dalton was No. 2. Ravens’ Tyler Huntley was No. 3. Commanders’ Jacoby Brissett was No. 4. Falcons’ Taylor Heinicke rounded out the top five.

Here is what Benjamin had to say about Stick’s ranking:

Entering Year 5, Stick has thrown just a single NFL pass. But the former NDSU title-winner has always had respected pocket movement and leadership, and he’s drawn positive spring reports taking over for the departed Chase Daniel.

Los Angeles and Stick, the team’s 2019 fifth-round pick, agreed to a one-year deal to bring him back earlier this offseason.

Even though Stick has only taken two snaps during the regular season, which came in 2020, he has flashed athleticism during the preseason, the coaches have praised his ability to run the practice scout team, and he has a close relationship with Justin Herbert.

Stick has played ten preseason games, with 144 passes attempted.

The Chargers are hoping Stick does not have to make regular-season appearances because it would take a huge toll on the team if Herbert were to miss time due to any circumstances.

Cowboys News: Dak looking to dial back stats, Canady and Joseph look to step up at CB

Dak Prescott’s shoulder dominates news as he focuses on Tampa, Maurice Canady and Kelvin Joseph are making moves, Dalton Schultz’s injury. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Dak Prescott may not be leading the Cowboys offense as he continues to rest his right shoulder, but the quarterback is still in the driver’s seat as far as headlines. Prescott maintains that all the hand-wringing over news of a follow-up MRI is baseless and that he’ll be good to go for Tampa Bay on September 9th, but he does admit that he’s had to fall back into the mental-prep mode that got him through his recent ankle rehab. And he’s also decided that if he gets off to the kind of statistical start he did last year, it’s probably bad news for the team.

And what about the guys backing Prescott up? One outlet is openly questioning the wisdom of rolling into the 2021 season with only the committee of Gilbert/Rush/DiNucci behind him. Elsewhere, CeeDee Lamb is focused on development beyond making highlight-reel grabs, and cornerback/rapper Kelvin Joseph is searching for a drop-the-mic moment this preseason. Kellen Moore talks about how he’s hoping to use his stacked offense, Dalton Schultz tweaks an ankle, Maurice Canady is making a strong first impression a year after signing, and a former Cowboys comeback story looks like it’s ending before it even got started in Seattle. Here’s the News and Notes.

Cowboys QBs evenly mediocre; McCarthy stresses ‘good things that we can learn from’

Dak Prescott’s trio of backups had similarly flat stat lines Thursday night, as Mike MCarthy looks to build tape for the team to study.

Cowboys fans knew they wouldn’t be seeing Dak Prescott make his return to real game action on Thursday night in Canton. But if they were hoping to come away from the Hall of Fame Game with a better sense of who Prescott’s primary backup would be for the 2021 season, a lackluster performance from all three passers provided no real clarity.

Garrett Gilbert, Cooper Rush, and Ben DiNucci came out of the 16-3 loss with strikingly similar stat lines, with no one doing much to distance himself from the competition.

One year ago, Gilbert was in Cleveland, gunning for a spot on the Browns’ roster. He was cut before the season opener and signed by the Cowboys in October after Prescott’s ankle injury. He took the first offensive snaps for Dallas, finishing the evening 9-of-13 and 104 passing yards.

“I thought Gilbert did a really good job,” Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy told reporters afterward. “I’m sure there’s a decision or two that we’ll look at that he may want back. But I thought he was very productive in his work.”

For Gilbert, who started Week 9’s meeting with the Steelers last season (and nearly engineered a Cowboys upset win), it was a chance to knock off the rust… and get the rust knocked off of him.

“Fun to go get hit every once in a while. It’s been a while,” the 30-year-old said, “so it’s nice to get knocked down and be able get back up again. I enjoyed that.”

He enjoyed it so much, he took two sacks in his limited action, while driving the offense to its only points, a short field goal by Hunter Niswander.

“We moved the ball really well,” Gilbert commented, “but then got down to the red zone and kind of got stalled out a couple times. Got to do a better job on third down, situationally, in order to finish off those drives and get ourselves some points.”

McCarthy wasn’t as concerned about the final score as he was with getting a read on several players and personnel packages. But the team’s timeshare approach to the quarterback position was- by his own admission- as much about not wearing out any arms before Saturday’s joint practice with the Rams.

“This is a three-day window for us,” McCarthy said. “We’ve got a lot of work; we had tonight’s game, and then we flip around Saturday and we’ve got the Rams for intersquad practice. So the way we played our players was really with both the game tonight and the practice Saturday in mind. I’m very hopeful and confident that’ll we’ll come out of both of these opportunities with a lot of great tape and a lot of things we can build off of.”

In relief of Gilbert, Rush went 8-of-13 and recorded 70 passing yards.

“Cooper did a nice job,” McCarthy noted. “Took a couple hits, threw in the face of a couple hits. Obviously, we had plenty of pressure to deal with tonight, so that’s great work for the quarterbacks. These are a lot of good situations that we had tonight.”

McCarthy has emphasized situational football thus far in training camp, so putting his players in a variety of different scenarios all goes toward building more tape that the team and coaching staff can study moving forward.

“Definitely there’s going to be a lot to correct, but these are good things that we can learn from and build,” the coach expained. “I think the fact that we have tonight and then Saturday work against the Rams back-to-back? I think come this time Monday, we’re going to feel pretty good about where we are.”

Cowboys fans may not have felt quite so good about DiNucci’s second-half outing. He finished 7-of-17 and 89 passing yards with one interception.

“I think the [play] that sticks out is the turnover; it’s going to be highlighted,” the 2020 seventh-round pick said. “I got hit when I was throwing and the ball sailed a little bit. That’s on me; that’s easily correctable. It’s not like I made the wrong read. Just got to bring the ball down a little bit.”

DiNucci seemed to go to his sidearm slinging/throwing motion frequently throughout the night, whether it was truly necessary or not. It’s hard to imagine coaches won’t spend some time with him on his mechanics in the coming days and weeks; even McCarthy struggled to find the right word when reviewing his project’s performance.

“I thought DiNucci made some throws off his back foot that were, you know… unique.”

On the plus side, the 24-year-old out of James Madison added 34 ground yards to his stat sheet on just two scrambles. He was the team’s second-leading rusher for the game.

“I kind of pride myself on that,” he explained. “In today’s day and age, you need to be able to be athletic to play quarterback for when the pocket breaks down, or some of those nakeds or designed runs are called. Being able to use my feet, be smart about it, get as many yards as I can and get down, that gets me in a groove as well. Being able to use my legs, I think, keeps the defense honest. It’s all positives for me.”

But whether it’s enough to push him up the depth chart remains to be seen. With the club taking a slow and methodical approach with working Prescott back into live action, DiNucci, Rush, and Gilbert should all gets reps against the Rams on Saturday and then again August 13th when the Cowboys travel to Arizona.

Each of them is likely living by the mindset Gilbert explained to the media after Thursday’s opening exhibition:

“My job remains the same: I’m going to go out there every day and be the best quarterback I can be for this football team and let the chips fall where they may.”

After the team’s first game action in 214 days, it’s impossible to tell where those chips will land for any of the Cowboys’ backups.

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Dak Prescott is back, to do ‘most of the work’ in Cowboys camp, per McCarthy

The Dallas head coach believes his starting QB will be medically cleared to participate fully in next week’s training camp sessions.

The weekend was for the rookies at The Star in Frisco. Thirty-one players consisting of the Cowboys’ draft picks, undrafted free agents, tryout invitees, and practice squad/futures contract guys went through the offseason’s first work sessions with Dallas coaches at the team facility.

And while a couple quarterback prospects were in attendance and participating with the crop of newbies in these early drills, the veteran starter looks to be inching closer to his return to the field. Dak Prescott is right on track in his injury rehab, according to head coach Mike McCarthy, and should be medically cleared to start training camp with the rest of the team.

“I have no reason not to think that,” McCarthy told reporters over the weekend after one of the team’s minicamp sessisons. “I think this week and Phase Two [of the team’s offseason program] will be a nice step in that direction.”

Prescott suffered a compound fracture and dislocation of his right ankle in October of last year, then underwent a subsequent cleanup surgery in December. He has maintained that his recovery has been ahead of schedule, with McCarthy echoing that sentiment whenever asked.

The team has seemed to show faith in that diagnosis, letting last year’s backup Andy Dalton leave as a free agent and electing to not take a passer in this year’s draft. Garrett Gilbert, Ben DiNucci, and Cooper Rush remain on the roster, but the Cowboys brought in former Ohio State quarterback J.T. Barrett and Illinois State alum Brady Davis for the weekend work.

“Gives you a chance to look at the young prospects,” McCarthy said of the quarterbacks’ presence at minicamp. “”It’s just part of the evaluation. J.T. was in here last week and had an excellent workout. I’ve had a chance to watch him through college and his time down there in New Orleans [on the Saints’ practice squad]. And Brady has a neat story; I thought he clearly took a jump from yesterday’s work to today’s work.”

It could be a crowded field jockeying for the clipboard duties behind Prescott, but McCarthy expects his starter, fresh off signing his mega-contract in March, to be physically ready to handle the majority of his responsibilities come OTA workouts, which are slated to begin for the Cowboys on May 24.

“I think he’ll do most things,” McCarthy said. “There’s a plan in place that’s coordinated with [athletic trainers] Britt [Bowman] and Jim [Maurer] in the training room. But I know he feels really good. He’s had some excellent workouts here in the last couple weeks. I see him doing most of the work.”

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USA TODAY backup QB rankings puts Saints on top of the NFL

The New Orleans Saints have a depth chart stocked with backups like Jameis Winston and Taysom Hill, which USA Today ranks best in the NFL.

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Drew Brees is one of the best quarterbacks in the NFL right now, and it’s fair to say that Jameis Winston has stronger qualifications than any backup quarterback around the league. With Taysom Hill in the mix, the New Orleans Saints have an argument to make for the NFL’s strongest set of passers among their peers.

And at least one ranking agrees with that. USA Today’s Nate Davis ranked the Saints depth chart at quarterback higher than any other team in the NFL, just ahead of the Dallas Cowboys tandem of Dak Prescott and Andy Dalton:

1. New Orleans Saints: Jameis Winston’s arrival makes this the first team to have a pair of 5,000-yard passers on its roster. Winston, who led the NFL in passing yards (5,109) in 2019 has obvious flaws in his game, namely his proclivity for turnovers (league-worst 30 INTs in 2019). But given time to re-calibrate his estimable tools under Sean Payton’s watch, maybe it’s Winston – and not highly compensated gadget guy Taysom Hill, who threw six passes last year – who emerges as Drew Brees’ eventual successor.

In an ideal world, we’ll never get a look at Winston running the Saints offense — at least this year. That would mean Brees has missed time with a maybe-significant injury, which wouldn’t be great. The chances of the Saints rattling off five straight wins again after pulling off that trick last year with Teddy Bridgewater under center are not high.

Still, Davis is right to point out that this could be more of a long-term investment than it first appears. Winston’s year on the depth chart should put him on similar footing to Hill in 2021, should Brees step away from the game, allowing the Saints to have a true starting competition between a pair of experienced options. And as seen up and down this list of backup situations around the NFL, that’s an outlook that most teams might envy.

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Cowboys News: Drafting QB possible, Blake Jarwin ready to ball out

Also, the team talks to backup QBs, more support for a Jamal Adams trade, Henry Ruggs interviews, and Roger Staubach’s final comeback win.

The Cowboys’ new tight end is ready to step up and show the lessons learned under a recently-departed legend. And a former superstar receiver is ready to step up and show that he’s not quite done building his legend yet… but a budding talent at the position may be ready to step up and steal some of the spotlight.

That’s a lot of stepping up. We’ll also take a step back to look at why the Raiders took a chance on Jason Witten, relive the final comeback in the career of Captain America, and wonder what the 2020 season might look like in empty stadiums. Plus, an energized Mike McCarthy is ready to get back to work. So are Aldon Smith and Randy Gregory, though they’ll all have to wait a while longer. That and more is ahead in this edition of Cowboys News and Notes.

Blake Jarwin eager to show what he learned in Jason Witten’s shadow :: ESPN

The fourth-year tight end isn’t allowed in the team facility, so he’s working on his game using decidedly old-school methods. And he talks about his old-school mindset to the starting role, one he learned from the 16-year veteran he just replaced.


Raiders’ Mike Mayock explains decision to sign Jason Witten, but final stint with Cowboys casts some doubt :: CBS Sports

As the Raiders look to create a new team culture in the Las Vegas desert, their GM describes their newly-signed 37-year-old tight end as “the quintessential culture guy.” But given Witten’s decline in Dallas over his last four seasons, what he’ll bring to the actual playing field for the silver and black falls into more of a gray area.


Is ex-Cowboy Dez Bryant ready to make his NFL comeback? The trainer of star wide receivers thinks so :: Dallas Morning News

David Robinson has been training wide receivers for 15 years. Robinson talks about how Dez Bryant is different these days and says he’s “about 80-90 percent where he needs to be” for a return to the NFL.



Reinstatement delayed: Cowboys won’t know Gregory, Smith fate pre-draft :: Cowboys Wire

Dallas could be fielding a new version of the Doomsday defense if Randy Gregory and Aldon Smith are both reinstated by the league, as the club expects. But it hasn’t happened yet, and it won’t happen before draft weekend. That uncertainty may color the team’s decisions once they find themselves on the clock.


Why a trade for All-Pro safety Jamal Adams suddenly makes sense for the Dallas Cowboys :: Blogging the Boys

This, of course, is well-covered ground. But the unrealistic pipe dream from last season is gaining traction as a viable option that makes a ton of sense.


Mike McCarthy rejuvenated in return to coaching with Cowboys :: Fort Worth Star-Telegram

He spent his off-year working from home, getting ready for a coaching comeback. Now the new Cowboys skipper is having to work from home again due to coronavirus restrictions, but Mike McCarthy says his mind “is flying 100 miles an hour” as he prepares for the upcoming season.


Report: Playing in empty stadiums is a possibility for NFL’s 2020 season :: Cowboys Wire

The league has reportedly been working on contingency plans for playing on this fall during the COVID-19 pandemic, although it could mean a shortened season, sequestering teams in hotels, or even playing in empty stadiums.


Doc of the Day: Roger Staubach’s Last Rally :: The Mothership

In what turned out to be his final NFL win, Captain Comeback lived up to his nickname with a pair of touchdown passes in the final five minutes to stun the Redskins in the 1979 regular season finale. Enjoy this mini-movie exploring what Staubach called “absolutely the most thrilling sixty minutes I ever spent on a football field.”


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Cowboys News: 2020 breakout candidates, Dak backups, Aldon Smith is huge

Also, small-school studs, draft day prospects via video chat, Jerry Jones tops another list, and should players be working out together?

To hear one NFL coach tell it, Dallas came a lot closer to losing wide receiver Amari Cooper than Cowboys fans probably want to hear. And to hear one NFL insider tell it, the league should come down like a hammer on its quarterback’s workouts with an ex-teammate on the comeback trail.

The club has released more footage from virtual interviews with a pair of draft prospects, the new defender has kept himself in shape after four years away, and the team owner tops another list. Plus a tech tweak for draft day, a deep dive into the defense, a backup plan at quarterback, a big day on a bum shoulder for the rushing king, and a shout-out to the small-school studs. All the Cowboys news that’s fit to link, coming right up…

Cowboys almost got sniped on Amari Cooper by Redskins, who were in pursuit ‘up to the very end’ :: Yahoo Sports

All’s well that ends well, but Dallas nearly lost its WR1 to their rivals from DC. New Washington coach Ron Rivera has revealed that the club was playing legitimate hardball in an attempt to lure the four-time Pro Bowler away.


Florio: Dez-Dak workouts violate stay-at-home orders, NFL should ‘do something’ :: Cowboys Wire

During these strict shelter-in-place times, should Cowboys fans be bothered by the joint workouts between free agent receiver Dez Bryant and Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott? Mike Florio of ProFootballTalk is, and he’s calling for the league to take action.


New Cowboys pass rusher Aldon Smith up to nearly 290 pounds after four-year hiatus from NFL:: CBS Sports 

The Cowboys new edge rusher is up to a “monstrous” 287 pounds- but with very low body fat- after four years away from football.


WATCH: CB Kristian Fulton interview released in Cowboys draft prep video:: Cowboys Wire

The Cowboys have an interview with early-round talent Kristian Fulton out of LSU.


Cowboys Looking To Strike D-Line Gold Again:: The Mothership

After veterans contributed mightily on the defensive line in 2019, the Cowboys look to get more of the same from Gerald McCoy, Dontari Poe, and Aldon Smith.



Ultimate mock draft: All 32 NFL teams will test virtual tech :: Cowboys Wire

In preparation for what will surely be the strangest NFL draft in league history, each team will do a trial run of the technology needed to make actual shelter-in-place picks on April 23.


There’s a new richest man in Dallas in Forbes’s annual billionaires ranking:: Dallas Morning News 

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones is the new top dog in Dallas in the financial magazine’s latest billionaire rankings.


Why the Cowboys were right to let Byron Jones leave in free agency:: Blogging The Boys 

Byron Jones is a top-tier corner, but were the Cowboys right in letting him leave?


Best small-college studs ever for all 32 NFL teams: Payton, Rice, McNair and more :: ESPN

Shopping for collegiate talent from the powerhouse programs is easy. But sometimes the brightest stars turn out to be the ones who were hardest to find on a map. This fun list looks at each team’s best small-school gem. The Cowboys had several Hall of Famers to choose from, but in the end, Todd Archer picked the pride of Sonoma State who went to eleven Pro Bowls in 12 seasons.


Cowboys 2020 Draft Breakdown: Defensive Edition:: Inside The Star 

A breakdown of what the Cowboys need defensively based on their current roster.


25 possibilities to backup Dak Prescott in 2020 come from all over :: CowboysWire

A comprehensive look at the veteran free agent market at QB, draft possibilities and veterans who may shake free after or during the draft.


Cowboys poised for breakout seasons in 2020: Blake Jarwin, three others set to make the leap :: CBS Sports

Patrik Walker looks at four players ready to have big seasons and emerge from the shadows; two on each side of the ball.


Doc of the day: Emmitt Smith’s greatest moment :: The Mothership

Hit the rewind button for a dramatic look at the defining moment of the rushing champ’s career, when he carried the 1993 squad to a season-ending overtime win and division title… all with a separated shoulder practically hanging out of his torso.


 

News: Byron Jones to stay or go, Cowboys comp pick scenarios

Also, Jerry Jones wants to “make a splash” at the 2020 Draft, Dez Bryant wants to come “home,” and a look at college’s top wide receivers.

Byron Jones was a hot topic on Thursday. One outlet is imploring the Cowboys to re-sign him, while another says it’s time to let him go. A radio guy out West thinks he knows where Jones will wind up, and a draft expert makes a guess on what Dallas will do to fill the void Jones leaves behind.

Meanwhile, two of Jones’s defensive back mates just got hefty raises, DeMarcus Lawrence ranks toward the top of his class even without sacks, and Dez Bryant’s touchdown stats make a case for him coming “home.” All that, plus looking ahead to the draft with wide receivers, backup quarterbacks, and punters. That’s right: punters. We’re hitting all the News and Notes this time out.


NFL free agency: 9 guys who MUST be re-signed by current team :: NFL.com

Two members of the Cowboys make this list of free agents who must be retained. One of them is obvious: quarterback Dak Prescott. The other one, surprisingly, isn’t wide receiver Amari Cooper. Instead, it’s cornerback Byron Jones. It has felt for quite some time that Jones wouldn’t be returning to Dallas, as the team has its hands full with contracts coming due.

Adam Schein posits that Jones should be a higher priority than Cooper, though opinions differ widely there. The Cowboys offense has been a different animal with a true No. 1 receiver in the fold; finding someone to fill his shoes seems a difficult ask.

–TT


Cowboys free agents most likely to depart: Byron Jones is talented, but Dallas has other roster needs to address :: Dallas Morning News

On the other side of the Jones coin is this argument from Calvin Watkins, who says the numbers simply don’t add up in a way that keeps him in the silver and blue. Yes, Jones was the team’s best corner in 2019, missed only one tackle all season, and often forced opposing passers to look elsewhere with their throws.  But with zero interceptions logged, the $12 million average salary, or more, Jones will likely command is just too much buck for not nearly enough bang.

–TB


2021 Compensatory Draft Picks: 14 Cowboys most likely to qualify :: CowboysWire

In a few weeks’ time, Dallas will officially be awarded a fifth-round compensatory pick for losing Cole Beasley in 2019 free agency. Meanwhile, Dallas’ group of 25 unrestricted free agents means that there will be an abundance of opportunities to earn extra picks in the 2021 draft, if they play their cards right.

This is a look at how comp picks are awarded, how teams can play the game based on when they sign qualifying free agents, and a breakdown of the 14 Cowboys prospects who should qualify for the formula, and a prediction on what salaries they will see in free agency, hence what round draft pick they’d be worth.

–KD


Rumor Mill: Broncos poised to make Cowboys’ CB Byron Jones ‘top target’ in free agency :: Mile High Huddle

So where might Jones wind up? There’s buzz that the Broncos could be among the active suitors courting the former first-round pick. According to a tweet from tapped-in Denver radio host Cecil Lammey, “There have been rumblings since the Senior Bowl” that Jones could be a “top target” for Vic Fangio’s staff. Broncos cornerback Chris Harris Jr. is potentially on the outs in Denver, making a young talent like Jones a valuable asset for GM John Elway to consider pursuing.

–TB


Tony Pauline Mailbag: Are the Dallas Cowboys planning ‘a big splash’ in the NFL Draft? :: ProFootballNetwork

And if Jones does depart, where do the Cowboys turn at cornerback? Tony Pauline has a theory. He says team owner Jerry Jones “wants to make a big splash in the draft,” according to one team insider. Trading up from the 17th pick to select Ohio State corner Jeffrey Okudah- the highest-rated defensive player not named Chase Young- would certainly qualify.

With Byron Jones perhaps already packing his bags and former Cowboys corner Morris Claiborne now wearing a Super Bowl ring that he earned with the Chiefs, the Dallas brass may feel the time is right to shore up the CB spot in a big way.

–TB


The NFL’s top 10 DEs entering 2020: Where does Cowboys’ DeMarcus Lawrence rank among the best? :: Dallas Morning News

Spoiler alert: Lawrence is, in fact, among the best in the business at edge rusher. But he doesn’t place as high as Cowboys fans would like, especially after signing a record contract last offseason.

In Lawrence’s case, though, sacks (or a lack thereof in 2019) don’t tell the whole story. His run-stop percentage, pressures despite a high double-team rate, and elite scores in ESPN’s Pass Rush Win Rate metric- all while coming off a major shoulder surgery- prove that Lawrence not only deserves his top-10 status… but could easily surpass it in 2020.

–TB


Defensive backs Xavier Woods and Jourdan Lewis will receive raises :: CowboysWire

Thanks to the proven-performance escalator available to players drafted in the third through seventh rounds, Woods and Lewis will earn an extra $1.5 million (or so) in 2020, according to Todd Archer. The big-time bump comes after both players logged more than 35 percent of the snaps on average in their first three seasons.

As per Over The Cap, Woods made $645,000 last year; Lewis earned $675,000. Both will see their take-home jump to $2.14 million next season.

–TB


2020 NFL Draft Digest No. 3: Incredible wide receiver group could reinforce Cowboys offense :: The Athletic

Just three wide receivers averaged one catch per game for the Cowboys in 2019. Reliable depth at the position, then, is a legitimate concern. And with Amari Cooper and Randall Cobb currently out of contract, it’s no stretch to think that, depending on how things unfold, Dallas could be looking long and hard at bringing in a rookie target for Dak Prescott, maybe even in the first round.

Bob Sturm breaks down Alabama’s Jerry Jeudy, Oklahoma’s CeeDee Lamb, TCU’s Jalen Reagor, Alabama’s Henry Ruggs, and Colorado’s Laviska Shenault. Of that bunch, the top grade ultimately goes to the “scary” player who plays with “lots of nitro” and managed to put up All-American credentials with a different quarterback in each of his three seasons. (That theoretically means he’d excel out of the blocks with Prescott and then somehow get even better as their chemistry develops.)

–TB


Dez Bryant misses scoring TDs, will he get chance to flash again ? :: Cowboys Wire

“That’s home,” Dez Bryant told Fox 4’s Mike Doocy this week when asked about his wish of a return to the Dallas Cowboys. “I miss scoring touchdowns.”

The numbers indicate that Bryant has been among the best at it over the past decade. His TD-catch rate from inside the 20-yard-line is seventh among all players over that span, and among players with 100 red zone targets, he ranks third. Of the top 11 pass-catchers listed, Bryant is the only wide receiver; the rest are tight ends. He has been positively lethal… but will the Cowboys offer him the chance at a killer comeback?

–TB


The Dallas Cowboys backup quarterback position needs to be addressed :: The Landry Hat

A Dak Prescott holdout over his contract situation would immediately thrust his understudy into the spotlight. But even with Prescott locked in on the payroll, the backup QB is always one nasty hit away from suddenly being The Guy. (Dallas and Prescott know this all too well.)

So, Cowboys Nation, how are you feeling about Cooper Rush taking the reins? The team signed Northwestern alum Clayton Thorson to a reserve/futures contract, but Angel Torres suggests that Dallas might be well served to look to another proven SEC passer to be Prescott’s reliever. Georgia’s Jake Fromm is no stranger to big games; he led the Bulldogs to a Rose Bowl, two Sugar Bowls, and a National Championship in three college seasons.

–TB


Five college punters to know in the 2020 NFL draft class :: Blogging the Boys

Don’t laugh; the punt game is suddenly a sore spot for the Cowboys after Chris Jones finished dead last in the league in yards per punt in 2019. With John Fassel now on the staff in Dallas, there’s bound to be turnover among the specialists. And while there are always journeyman legs to be found before camp, the team may choose to utilize a late-round draft pick on a talented collegiate.

On this list of field-flippers is a punter who set an NCAA record in 2019 for most yards per punt in a game (five or more attempts). He averaged 63 yards per punt in that game; three of his five punts were in the 60-yard neighborhood, and one traveled a whopping 75 yards.

–TB


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