Emmitt Smith dishes on Elliott, Cowboys’ rough year on defense, talks McCarthy’s future

The NFL’s all-time rushing leader thinks his former team is close to returning to championship form, but needs to address a few key issues.

Emmitt Smith is the last Dallas player to score a touchdown in the Super Bowl. He went to three of them with the Cowboys of the 1990s. And he believes that despite a disheartening 6-10 campaign this season, the Cowboys of the 2020s are on the doorstep of returning.

“I don’t think we’re far away from becoming a very, very good team,” Smith says. “I really don’t.”

The league’s all-time leading rusher sat down recently with fellow Pro Football Hall of Famer Morten Andersen on the ex-kicker’s podcast, “The Great Dane Nation Podcast.” Over the course of a wide-ranging conversation, the eight-time Pro Bowler was asked if Dallas fans have already seen the best that current Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott has to offer.

“I don’t think you have,” Smith said of the five-year veteran who has won two rushing titles. “I think with Ezekiel Elliott, many people forget that Zeke had COVID-19 before the season even got started, and no one knows what COVID-19 will do to your body until you go through it. If you look at his body and play through the first five, six weeks of the season, his body structure, his weight looked a little bit different than the latter part of the season. Physically- you just look at him- he looks a lot leaner in the latter part of the season than he did in the first part of the season.”

Elliott had a down year, failing to crack 1,000 yards on the season and not topping 100 yards in a game until Week 11. He found the end zone as a rusher just six times and posted his lowest yards-per-carry tally of his career. Of arguably more concern, though, were the six fumbles he had in 2020, including five in the team’s first six games.

“Now, in the first part of the season, obviously, he had some fumbling issues,” Smith told Andersen. “Granted, they get paid on the other side of the ball like we do; not to make any excuses, but I do believe that Zeke will be better for what he has gone through this year. He will prepare and probably start to take care of himself differently for what he has gone through this year. And I think with Tony Pollard, there’s a great one-two punch.”

But the 2020 Cowboys took more punches than they delivered. And that, Smith says, is the far bigger obstacle to the team’s chances of returning to championship form.

“Defense. Defense!” the Super Bowl XXVIII MVP stressed. “We couldn’t stop a soul. We couldn’t get off the field on third down. And I understand early in the season, when we turn the ball over, the defense is out there quite a bit, and I understand that piece. But still, our defense was so much more solid last year, and I think that’s a product of the defensive change versus the players. I think you’ve got players that [are] not suited quite nicely for this style of defense. And so when you bring in new coordinators, do your players actually fit your style? And do your players actually understand your style and understand your defense totally? And do they have the discipline to make the fits work? Or are they creating more issues? And I saw our defense creating more issues, running out of zones and creating bigger zones for guys to run the ball with. That’s a problem. And that has to get corrected this offseason.”

Head coach Mike McCarthy has already taken steps toward that end, replacing defensive coordinator Mike Nolan with former Falcons coach Dan Quinn. Defensive line coach Aden Durde and secondary coach/defensive pass game coordinator Joe Whitt Jr. will also look to revamp the Dallas defense in McCarthy’s second season.

Smith’s coach, Jimmy Johnson, took the doormat Cowboys from worst in the league to the division round of the playoffs in just his third season. The Hall of Famer believes McCarthy may be on a similarly short leash when it comes to securing his place in Dallas.

“I think this year was an experimental year for Mike McCarthy,” Smith said, “to see exactly what he had: coaching style, defensive-wise, player- or personnel-wise, and all those kind of things, including coordinator-wise. And I think if he wants to right this ship, he’d better make some significant adjustments this offseason.”

The club will have the opportunity to do that with new talent come April. The Cowboys are projected to have a total of ten picks in the upcoming draft. And Smith emphasizes using those picks wisely to shore up the underachieving defensive unit.

“I think it begins with the draft. Drafting defensive players,” Smith posited. “Because think about it, Sean Lee is getting a little long in the tooth. No disrespect to Sean Lee; he’s going to give us his effort. Leighton Vander Esch obviously has sustained a number of injuries over the last two years; don’t know how long and productive he will be. Jaylon Smith is going to give us his all. These guys, they’re going to fight. They’re going to do what they’ve got to do, but you’ve got to bring in some guys to replace and back these guys up. You just cannot depend upon them all season long.”

Few players were as dependable as Smith. Over his 15 seasons as a pro, Smith missed just 11 games due to injury, and most of them came in his final two years as an Arizona Cardinal. So the workhorse knows how to maintain a long career as an NFL running back.

Smith believes that Tennessee’s Derrick Henry is currently the best rusher in the sport, but has solid advice that Elliott- who missed the first game in his career due to injury in Week 15- could no doubt benefit from, as well.

“Take care of your body. Make sure you’re getting your massages twice a week. I recommend you get a massage on Monday after a game and on Friday before the weekend comes. Make sure you’re drinking plenty of water and hydrating,” Smith suggested. “Get your proper rest. Now, once the season is over, make sure you get some rest as well. And don’t rest long; I mean, rest two weeks or something like that. Then make sure you’re doing some hot yoga or some things, light things that are not so taxing and draining on your body physically. But it’s giving you the foundation that you need to continue to build upon these building blocks that you’ve already established. Find a good chiropractor, to make sure that your body is aligned and functioning properly.”

Smith admits he enjoys acting as a mentor for today’s crop of players, just as older Cowboys legends like Roger Staubach did for him in his day.

“Lean on me. That’s what I’m here for.”

It’s been a quarter-century since Smith plunged into the end zone in the final quarter of the Cowboys’ most recent Super Bowl appearance. Maybe leaning on him now will indeed help the current squad get back there.

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News: Potential trade targets, free agents, how to fix the Cowboys

Also in the news, Jerry Jones boasts about his attendance record, and why Will McClay hasn’t taken a GM job with another NFL team.

The big wheel of the Dallas Cowboys keeps turning. There’s no playoff game to prepare for, so thoughts have already shifted to the 2021 season. And that opens up all kinds of possibilities. Which draft picks to zero in on, what veterans on other rosters to go after in a trade, who among the team’s own free agents to retain… it’s all on the table once again.

There’s still plenty of rehashing of 2020 to do, including lots of suggestions on how to fix the many things that went wrong this year. But there’s good news, too: a rookie is singled out ahead of his peers, a monster performance ranks among the season’s best, and more than one Cowboy showed out with a surprising season. All that, plus back in the weeds with the Dak Prescott contract saga, Jerry Jones finds something to brag about, and a look at why one of the most well-respected front office guys in the league hasn’t jumped ship to be a GM somewhere else. That’s coming right up in News and Notes.

Cowboys’ Jerry Jones talks defensive regrets and promises change in candid interview

The Cowboys owner admitted he’d like a do-over on the team’s 2020 defense, and promised to do some changing himself after a down year.

Entering the final quarter of a horrendous season has kickstarted a season of serious self-reflection for Cowboys players and coaches. Even owner Jerry Jones is looking around and taking stock of what he sees at team headquarters at the tail end of a disappointing year. And according to comments he made Friday morning on Dallas radio, the 78-year-old billionaire isn’t above also doing a little finger-pointing at the man in the mirror.

Speaking on 105.3 The Fan, Jones made a sobering admission about the team’s historically bad defense, manned up to his own role in the Cowboys’ 2020 failures, and suggested that the offseason would see repercussions coming for some within the organization… with one notable exception.

Jones is well aware that he is catching much of the flak for the Cowboys’ abysmal season, especially after revamping almost the entire coaching staff and overhauling significant chunks of the roster in hopes of reaching the Super Bowl for the first time in a quarter-century.

“You think anybody is talking sweet about me right now?” Jones asked hosts Kevin Hageland and Cory Mageors. “The one that should and does get heat in various forms. You don’t get a chance, when you don’t do it right, to touch that Lombardi Trophy. Do y’all have any idea how much I’d write a check for if I knew for sure I could get that Lombardi Trophy?”

Jones says he’s heard the buzz that grew even louder this week about the team’s perceived lack of effort and heart that’s brought them to the brink of being officially eliminated from postseason contention. But he cautions that not every player on the roster should be painted with the same brush, even though their 3-9 record has certainly been a collective letdown.

“When you have ups and downs and you don’t win, you can see people criticizing, quote, ‘Heart, effort.’ You can see that,” Jones said. “You can hear it if you want to listen to it. And that’s fair to say it. But, boy, I see guys trying to work the problem, trying to get better.”

‘I’d like to start again on how we approached our defense’

Normally the first and loudest to spin things in a positive light, Jones then took off the rose-colored glasses and was frank about the catastrophic shortcomings of the Dallas defense in Mike Nolan’s first year as coordinator.

“We’ve got, like anybody, you’ve got a lot of do-overs. I’d like to start again on how we approached our defense this year. I’d like to start that over again. I’m sure everybody else would, too.”

“I’d start right there, the first day,” Jones continued. “I would really make sure that any changes we were making, I would want to make sure that we did it in the same way that we didn’t make changes on offense, because we didn’t think that we had the situation or we had the time to make those changes and [have] it really be effective.”

In other words, the Cowboys offense was left largely intact. Some of that was due simply to the retention of Kellen Moore as coordinator. But little else was altered, thanks to the scrapping of minicamp, the nixing of preseason games, and the virtual nature of offseason work that kept McCarthy and his new staff from even meeting their players face-to-face until the regular season was looming. They didn’t re-invent the wheel because they were already racing the car.

Defensively, however, the team tried a total rebuild. Nolan’s seismic shift in his unit’s core scheme- with minimal time to make the switch- resulted in a Cowboys defense that’s been more porous than any in franchise history.

Everything changed except the players. It’s as if Nolan took over a kitchen stocked with everything he’d need to make wedding cakes. But he insisted on making chicken pot pies instead, using the same ingredients.

‘You’ve got to make changes’

Jones reminisced about a time the team underwent a similar evolution, just before the 2005 draft.

“We went from a 4-3 to a 3-4 defense. But when we did it, it was very reluctant. Lot of reluctance on making that move by our head coach. His name was Bill Parcells. So he had a tough time buying into drafting DeMarcus Ware. He wanted to draft [Marcus] Spears because Spears fit both ways, 4-3 or a 3-4. DeMarcus Ware was principally going to the 4-3. All we did was turn around and have the greatest draft, probably, we’ve ever had on defense and drafted Spears and Ware and [Jay] Ratliff and [Chris] Canty. And we were able to make the move right then and there. Had we not drafted those guys, that would have been a tough move, and probably, we wouldn’t have gone into it as completely. That’s speculation. But there’s a case. You’ve got to think about the personnel when you talk about changing your scheme.”

The Cowboys didn’t do that. Not really. Sure, they brought in a few hired guns in Gerald McCoy, Dontari Poe, and HaHa Clinton-Dix to theoretically help make the transition to Nolan’s new plan. McCoy was lost for the season within the first few days of practice. Clinton-Dix was cut before opening day. Poe lasted seven games.

The remaining players have struggled to adapt to the new direction. Dallas is in the bottom ten leaguewide in total yards allowed. They are tied for second-worst in takeaways. They rank dead last in both rushing yards allowed and points allowed.

“We’ve obviously done some things, we’ve changed, and we’re having a hard time getting those in place to be a good defense. You’ve got to make changes,” Jones admitted.

You’ve got to make changes.

That’s a startling and ominous declaration with four games to go. Jones was then asked if that need for change extends to the coaching staff who hasn’t even been in place a full year.

“Every bit of it,” Jones interrupted before the question was fully out. “Every bit of it. And then right past that, go right to your general manager. Right past that, go to your general manager. Because coming through the door, the GM was eye-to-eye hiring the head coach, talking about how we were going to approach when he walks through the door and where he was going to go from there. That’s what you do. That obviously didn’t work for us this year.”

Whoa.

Jones just threw himself under the bus as the team’s general manager. He’s roundly criticized for being too involved in the football operations; many wish he would just be the mysterious man in the luxury box who writes the checks and leaves the Xs and Os to someone else. But as self-appointed GM, too, Jones has nowhere to hide.

‘I will change. I can change.’

Jones has always relished his dual role within the organization. Faced with the reality of a season so bad that the networks are dumping Cowboys games from their primetime slots, though, Jones has no choice but to take a long, hard look at the mess that 2020 has become in Dallas… and fess up to being solely responsible for allowing it to happen.

“There’s nobody in any better shape to take any part of it and use it to try win the ball games,” Jones said on-air. “Not only the selection of the head coach, but the players that are playing the game, and the coaches that are coaching them. All of that has to have my approval. So you start right there. And I accept that.”

It would have been a fine place to end the interview, with Jones solemnly taking his lumps for an organization in disarray. And the K+C Masterpiece hosts tried to end it there. But Jones jumped back in as the jocks were attempting to sign off, making it plain that, just in case any fans actually believed this unmitigated disaster of a season would be some sort of last straw that not even Jones would be able to ignore, he would, in fact, continue to be both owner and general manager of the Dallas Cowboys.

“When you work for yourself, there’s no firing him. You’ve got to change him. And he’s got to change the direction he’s going,” Jones cryptically offered. “I’ve worked all my life for myself, but I’ve had to change direction many times. So I will change. I can change.”

Change is coming to the Cowboys. That much seems assured. Exactly what– and who else– Jones will change remains to be seen.

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Cowboys defense historically bad; DeMarcus Lawrence: ‘I call it soft’

Dallas has set the wrong kind of records in 2020 for points allowed and rushing defense; the star DE harshly assessed his unit’s play.

It’s a brand new season. We’re just starting out. Lots of new faces. A revamped coaching staff. We got out to a slow start. We had a shortened training camp. There were no preseason games. We’re still getting on the same page. It takes time. Still getting up to speed. That team pays their players, too. Every game in the NFL is a battle. Any given Sunday. Blah blah blah.

The honeymoon in Dallas is officially over. Although an opening-day loss to the Rams could be chalked up to growing pains, and the next week’s win over Atlanta could be called a fluke, and the Week 3 result in Seattle could be forgiven as a close loss to a superior team, there seems to be a far simpler explanation for the utter disaster that played out in Arlington against Cleveland on Sunday. Cowboys defensive end DeMarcus Lawrence summed it up quite aptly.

“In my own words, I call it soft,” Lawrence told reporters during a postgame conference call.

Soft, indeed. The Dallas defense let the Browns literally run all over them, allowing 307 rushing yards on the day, the highest total in franchise history. And that wasn’t even to Cleveland’s top ground threat, Nick Chubb; he left before halftime with an injury.

The Browns’ leading rusher on the afternoon? Undrafted free agent D’Ernest Johnson. An AAF refugee. A guy who, as the Fox broadcast team breathlessly mentioned several times, was working on a fishing boat while waited for a break with a team.

On Sunday, he gashed Dallas for 95 yards on 13 carries, an average of 7.3 yards per attempt.

“You give up 300 yards rushing, that’s just poor,” Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy said in his remarks after the game. “That’s poor run defense. There’s no way around it.”

The whole McCarthy era in Dallas is off to a historically poor start. The Cowboys defense has given up 146 points through four games, the most since the team’s first year in existence, a season the expansion club went 0-11-1.

As flat-out bad as the defense was in the Week 4 outing, McCarthy was ready to shoulder much of the blame for the team’s dreadful 1-3 start as he addressed the media after his first career loss at AT&T Stadium.

“It ultimately falls at my feet,” McCarthy said. “It’s my responsibility. The application of details did not exist today in certain spots of the game. There was a lot of good football that will totally go unrecognized. That’s what happens when you lose. What I don’t like is the pattern of the four games that we’ve played. The points are outrageous, time of possession is totally lopsided, and we’re minus-seven in the turnover ratio. That’s not a winning formula.”

New defensive coordinator Mike Nolan will be the subject of heavy- and deserved- criticism from fans and media this week, but McCarthy sounds like a man determined to stick with the current game plan on that side of the ball.

“We’re in a scheme change from the prior scheme here, and we’re not off to a good start,” McCarthy admitted. “The worst thing we can do is narrow everything down and be a one-call defense. I refuse to do that. That’s not the path. We have a defense that fits our players.”

Lawrence brushed off questions about the defensive scheme.

“It’s not my job to think about what’s right or what’s wrong [in term of scheme]. My job is to go out there and try to make as many plays [as possible] to help my team win the game. I don’t feel like I’m doing that right now, and I’ll get back to it.”

Over his four-minute Q&A session with reporters, the two-time Pro Bowler repeatedly came back to his original assessment of the Dallas defense.

“We came out of the gate soft. In different words, I could call it something else. It’s just all about having some grit, playing balls to the wall, going out there and giving it everything you’ve got.

“We’ve got to hold ourselves to a higher standard. We’ve got to play together as one, and I don’t feel like we’re holding ourselves accountable, including myself. I call that [expletive] soft.

“We’ve just got to do a better job preparing and really come with our full hearts in the game, play this game for 60 minutes straight. It’s just all about throwing down and really showing that you’re a real man out there and playing together.

“Growing up and playing like real men out there, and not like kids. We’ve got to attack people before they try to attack us. I feel like we’re doing a lot of catching, and we’re going to get better from it.”

A flawed scheme that doesn’t maximize the players on the roster is one thing. Lawrence questioning his defensive mates’ toughness, heart, and grit points to a far more troubling and deeper issue.

Turning the ship around will require a new level of effort from both players and coaches. Lawrence suggested that perhaps too many people thought overhauling the staff was all it would take for the Cowboys defense to suddenly become an elite unit.

“If you think you’re going to sit here and get a whole new coaching staff and win every game and shoot for the stars, you’ve got a big surprise coming,” he explained. “That was our surprise. We’ve got so much talent. But without that grit, without that toughness, talent don’t mean nothing in the NFL. It’s all about us coming together, figuring it out, and getting better from it.”

That process starts- once again- on Monday. McCarthy has expressed satisfaction with how the team prepares during the week, but the guys who show up on Sunday wearing the Cowboys’ uniforms sure haven’t looked ready to play at a high level.

“You’re always prepared,” the coach said. “But at the end of the day, there’s a difference between being prepared and how you perform.”

Agreed. And now, four rough weeks in, things like benefit of the doubt, grace periods, excuses, and time are already running out for McCarthy, his new staff, and his defensive players.

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