News: Jones in high demand, but Cooper not? Cowboys’ Dak contingencies

Also, backup plans for Dak Prescott, Michael Bennett eyes a Seattle return, Jaylon Smith talks business, and how coronavirus impacts Dallas.

Several Cowboys players are inching closer to new contracts, but some of them may be signed by other teams. Michael Bennett might be on his way out of Dallas, Byron Jones is a red-hot commodity, Amari Cooper may not be as sought-after as anticipated, and Robert Quinn’s status is a genuine wild card. And as Prescott Payday Watch drags on, some talking head-types are starting to kick around their thoughts on what the team should do if the starting quarterback holds out in a deal dispute.

All that, plus news on how the coronavirus is affecting team business, Blake Jarwin may be called on to step up, Jaylon Smith talks business, a Dallas wideout is in legal trouble, more mock drafts… and DeMarcus Ware shows he still has legitimate hops. Here’s the News and Notes.

Reports: Some teams expect Byron Jones to become the highest-paid defensive back in NFL history :: Blogging the Boys

Someone is about to break their piggy bank wide open for the Pro Bowl cornerback, but it almost certainly won’t be Jerry Jones as Byron Jones is expected to ink a deal worth between $16 and $18 million per season.


‘GMFB’: Cowboys’ contingency plan if Dak Prescott holds out :: NFL.com

The Good Morning Football crew do a round-table discussion on what Plan B might look like if Dak Prescott gets into a training camp staredown with the owner.


Why drafting Jalen Hurts would make sense for the Cowboys :: ESPN

The Get Up cast think drafting Heisman Trophy runner-up Jalen Hurts could be an interesting backup strategy for Dallas.

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Cowboys may need to cross Michael Bennett off return-pending list :: Cowboys Wire

A veteran player returning to the team he had the most success with for one final tour of duty is nothing new.


Cowboys positional review: Is this the year TE Blake Jarwin sees a larger role? :: The Athletic

Jason Witten’s 2019 stat line looked awfully close to the one he posted the last year he played while Blake Jarwin’s 2019 numbers, were nearly identical to the ones he compiled the year Witten was gone.


Why the Cowboys want ‘real deal’ Quinn back :: The Mothership

Sacks don’t tell the whole story for defensive ends (see: DeMarcus Lawrence), but the Cowboys would be hard-pressed to easily replace the 11.5 of them that Robert Quinn produced in 2019. To hear both Quinn and Jerry Jones tell it, neither wants the team to have to try.


Dallas Cowboys: 3 lower-cost options to replace Robert Quinn at DE :: Sport DFW

On the other hand, if Quinn’s resurgence last season pushed his price tag beyond what the Joneses are willing to pay, there are more budget-conscious choices on the market.


Cowboys WR Ventell Bryant arrested on DUI charge in Florida :: Cowboys Wire

After admitting to “several margaritas” during a traffic stop in Tampa for operating without headlights, the 2019 undrafted free agent was charged by police with driving under the influence.


Could demand actually be lower than expected for Amari Cooper? :: Blogging the Boys

“What if Amari isn’t as valued around the league as we all thought?”


Dallas Cowboys’ Jaylon Smith: Invest in minority businesses to close income gap :: USA Today

The Pro Bowl linebacker tackles a different opponent in a column he’s written for USA Today, exploring the serious income disparity problem that many kids growing up in neighborhoods like Smith’s hometown face.


Different perspectives: Two complete 7-round Cowboys mock drafts :: The Athletic

More mocks! Jon Machota and Saad Yousuf each take a stab at filling out the Cowboys roster with seven rounds’ worth of college talent. Defensive tackle Javon Kinlaw and cornerback Damon Arnette appear on both mocks, but it’s not all defense.


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Report: Cowboys likely to use 2nd-round tender on TE Blake Jarwin, Witten heir?

Dallas is preparing for the start of the league year by making a decision on a guy who should be a key part of the offense moving forward.

While there may not be a definitive answer on whether or not the Dallas Cowboys are going to bring back veteran TE Jason Witten, it appears they are serious about investing in his understudy from 2019. Blake Jarwin was supposed to be the key figure in the club’s rotation at the position when Witten came out of retirement, but the Jason Garrett-favorite bullied his way into a much higher snap count than anticipated.

On a play-by-play basis, though, Jarwin was a much bigger offensive threat in 2019, averaging almost 3.5 yards per reception more than the future Hall of Famer. With a new coaching regime in house, Jarwin supporters hope he will get a chance to shine more as a passing-game weapon and it appears the front office will work towards that goal. The most important of the team’s three restricted free agents (RFA), ESPN’s Todd Archer is reporting Jarwin will be given a second-round tender.

DT Daniel Ross and QB Cooper Rush, who Archer indicates the club will original-round tender, are the others.

As Archer reports, the $3.3 million is the tender amount Jarwin will be paid if no other team signs him to an offer sheet. RFAs can negotiate deals with any of the other 31 clubs. If they come to an agreement, the original club has the right of first refusal. Based on which of the three tender amounts (original round, second round and first round), the original team will be awarded the signing team’s pick for that round in the upcoming draft if they refuse to match the offer.

As an undrafted free agent, the Cowboys would receive no compensation if they placed the cheaper ($2.1million), original round tender on Jarwin. The first-round tender would pay Jarwin almost $4.7 million in 2020, a high sum for a player who established career highs of 31 receptions and 365 yards in 2019.

Therefore the only real choice was the second-round tender.

Jarwin is a better receiver than blocker, but was often cast in the latter role due to Witten’s presence in 2019. Under Mike McCarthy, it remains to be seen how big of a priority the tight end position will be moving forward. During his decade-plus stint in Green Bay, there were several iterations where the position was important, but over the last five-to-six campaigns it was less so.

Dallas could still look to sign another free agent, or draft a player at the position to augment Jarwin and potentially look towards the future, though Archer reports the club did start working on a potential long-term deal with Jarwin during last week’s combine. The club also has Dalton Schultz, a fourth-round pick from 2018 at the position.

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Jason Witten: Coaching in future, ‘right now I want to play’

The future Hall of Famer spoke definitively of his plans to play a 17th NFL season, but realizes it may have to be with a new team.

Jason Witten is hoping the 17th time’s a charm.

Speaking in the most definitive terms yet since the season ended, the legendary Cowboys tight end confirmed that he intends to suit up for another NFL campaign. And while he made no bones about the fact that he wants it to be for the only team he’s ever played for, he was also crystal-clear in acknowledging that his 17th year may see him wearing a different uniform.

Witten was at The Star in Frisco on Tuesday to present the third annual Jason Witten Collegiate Man of the Year Award. This year’s winner was junior offensive lineman Trey Smith, from Witten’s alma mater of Tennessee.

But unsurprisingly, the eleven-time Pro Bowler, who will turn 38 in May, was also asked about his future. Witten is set to become a free agent next month, and has been eyed as a strong coaching candidate in the league.

“Coaching is in the future, but right now I want to play while I can,” Witten said via the team website. “We’ll see where that takes place.”

Witten playing for another team? It’s unthinkable to most Cowboys fans. He admits that the notion is “strange” for him, too.

“Anytime you explore that option, you want to find somewhere that’s the right fit, somewhere you have a chance to win, and somewhere you can help contribute,” Witten explained. “I haven’t allowed my mind to go there because I’m hopeful, like anybody, I finish here with a star on my helmet.”

The 16-year veteran undoubtedly showed his age in 2019 after a one-year retirement. The expected timeshare at tight end with Blake Jarwin and Dalton Schultz never really materialized, with Witten playing over 75 percent of the offensive snaps. But Witten will no longer be able to count on Jason Garrett’s loyalty keeping him on the field. New head coach Mike McCarthy is unlikely to let Witten dominate the snap count in the same way… and, in fact, may not even keep him on the team at all.

Witten knows that, for the first time in a very long time, his employment with the Cowboys depends purely on a coach’s decision.

“It’s been a little bit, taking a little longer than I hoped for. But I just think with so many changes happening inside the building, [we’re] just working through that. ”

Witten had a “really good visit” with McCarthy shortly after his hiring was announced, but the two have not spoken since. The tight end has, though, been in “constant communication” with Jerry and Stephen Jones. Witten knows that the front office has several big-ticket deals to juggle this offseason, but he also knows that a go/no-go call on his 17th season in Dallas will have to come soon.

“It’s our hope to have those talks soon after the combine ends, before free agency.”

Witten told media that he took a step back and “unemotionally” examined the Dallas roster in determining if a 17th season with the current group would be worth the grind.

“It’s a good football team,” Witten concluded. “It’s got a lot of guys who have a lot of sweat and time together… [I] think that I can help them in a lot of ways.”

To chase the Super Bowl ring that has eluded him in what is a slam-dunk first-ballot Hall of Fame career, Big Witt is ready to spend another season’s worth of sweat and time. Of that he is sure. He is, however, less sure where he’ll be doing it.

“Of course, I want that to be with the Dallas Cowboys. I’ll always be a Dallas Cowboy… There’s nothing I want more than to win a championship here.”

3 free agent tight ends the Texans should consider signing

The Houston Texans have young tight ends on the roster, but availability has been an issue. Here are three tight ends the Texans need to think about.

The Houston Texans have three young tight ends on the roster in Jordan Akins, Jordan Thomas, and Kahale Warring. However, availability was an issue for Thomas, who missed 11 games for Houston, and Warring, who had his 2019 obliterated as he was placed on injured reserve before his rookie season began.

Houston was fortunate they signed Darren Fells to a one-year contract, and that he produced for the Texans’ passing game in 2019. However, they need to make decisions about their roster as free agency approaches. Here are three free agent tight ends the Texans need to consider when free agency opens up at 3:00 p.m. Central Time on March 18.

1. eric ebron

texans-s-tyrann-mathieu-colts-te-eric-ebron
(AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

It isn’t just that he killed the Texans defense in 2018; it’s that in the same year he set the Indianapolis Colts’ franchise record for touchdown receptions by a tight end with 13. Even though Ebron is a Detroit Lions bust and he had a significant drop in production in 2019 with just three touchdowns, much of that can be attributed to the loss of Andrew Luck under center. Quarterback Deshaun Watson helped Fells catch a career-high seven touchdown passes ⁠— not bad for the 33-year-old. What could Watson do with Ebron?

News: Smith, Dorsett familiar with Jason Witten’s plight as long-time Cowboys

The Dallas Cowboys will have plenty of decisions to make in free agency in 2020. Jason Witten’s future still undecided. Early 2020 MVP Odds

In just over a month, America’s Team will be faced with plenty of big decisions in pursuit of their sixth Super Bowl. The decisions are and will be polarizing but pivotal to success in 2020.

If defense wins championships, the Dallas Cowboys may have to brace themselves to enter 2020 without one of their key members of the secondary. NFL.com ranks the 2019 rookie groups in the NFC East. Legends Tony Dorsett and Emmitt Smith weigh in on the big decision Jason Witten will face. Everyone knows that you need plenty of salary cap space to make significant moves in the off-season. Is the team ready to free Blake Jarwin? All this and more in this edition of News and Notes.


CB overview: How it might look without Jones :: The Mothership

The team’s website takes on a position-by-position breakdown of the Dallas roster, including one of 2020’s major question marks. Al Harris, one of the Cowboys’ two new defensive backs coaches, will likely work with cornerbacks and says he is focused on looking for “football players.”

Byron Jones fits that bill, but his future with the club is in doubt. It’s looking increasingly probable that Jones will test the waters of free agency, and while the team would like to retain the Pro Bowler, they probably won’t break the bank to do it. Letting Jones walk might bump cornerback up the priority list come draft day.

–TB


32 NFL players who could use a fresh start this offseason, from QBS to injured stars :: ESPN

The Worldwide Leader asked its NFL Nation reporters to toss out one name from each roster of a player who could benefit from a change of scenery. Maybe it’s a big name in need of a second act, maybe it’s a diamond in the rough who’s lost in the wrong system, maybe it’s in the best financial interest of the team or the player to move on.

For Dallas, it’s lack of production. Todd Archer says wide receiver Tavon Austin simply hasn’t contributed much over two seasons as a Cowboy. With only so many touches on offense to go around, Austin needed to make his mark on special teams. Thus far, he hasn’t. Archer speculates that the team could find someone younger or cheaper (or both) to do so moving forward.

–TB


NFC East rookie grades: QBs power Giants’, Redskins’ classes :: NFL.com

Final grades have been handed out for each 2019 rookie group in the NFL. The Cowboys finished at the bottom of the class in the NFC East.

From the disappointing first year of Trysten Hill, the injuries that kept Connor McGovern and Jalen Jelks off the field entirely, and Mike Jackson and Mike Weber ending up with new clubs, the Cowboys’ 2019 draft class earned a collective C-minus. That mark ranked Dallas well below all their divisional mates.

The lone bright spots? The promise shown by Tony Pollard in a light-duty role and the free agent signing of undrafted offensive lineman Brandon Knight, who was the only Cowboys rookie to start a game last season.

–TB


If Jason Witten moves on, Emmitt Smith, Tony Dorsett know the feeling :: ESPN

Todd Archer caught up to past legendary Cowboys to see how they felt about leaving the silver and blue after years of historic status. Former Cowboys Hall of Fame running backs Tony Dorsett and Emmitt Smith chimed in on why they left and how they felt after the fact.

“I thought I had more in the tank,” Smith said from Super Bowl LIV during a promotion for Marriott. “I felt like I still was a 1,000- to 1,200-yard back, and I felt like I could continue [to] do that.” Smith and Jerry Jones mutually parted ways after Bill Parcells was brought in and clearly wanted to go in a different direction.

Witten is about to go face to face with a very similar situation in just a few weeks.

–DS


Deep Dive into the Dallas Cowboys 2020 Salary Cap :: Inside the Star

There have been a lot of narratives as to what the Cowboys could, should and will do with their near $80 million dollars in cap space in the 2020 off-season.

It’s no secret that Dallas has three players at the top of their “to-do” list in quarterback Dak Prescott, wide receiver Amari Cooper, and corner back Byron Jones. John Williams of Inside the Star breaks down a plethora of moves the Cowboys can make to free up space.

–DS


TE Overview: Are Cowboys Ready To See Jarwin? :: The Mothership

On March 18 the Cowboys will be faced with nearly 25 unrestricted free agents to make decisions about. One player that they won’t have to worry about, contract wise, is tight end Blake Jarwin. However, with the looming decision to be made about Cowboys legendary tight end Jason Witten, it could be time to give Jarwin more of a role.

–DS


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Dez Bryant lobbies for return to Cowboys in ‘role they gave Witten’

The former Dallas wideout wants to return to the team under new coach Mike McCarthy, and he’s taking to social media to make his case.

There are suddenly lots of new faces around The Star in Frisco and just as the recent coaching churn quiets down, it will be time for free agency. More new faces. Then the draft. More new faces. Suffice it to say that when the 2020 season finally rolls around, this Cowboys team will look drastically different. But there’s one familiar face out there hoping he can be one of the “new guys” for Year One of the McCarthy era.

Dez Bryant wants to throw up the X in Dallas again.

The three-time Pro Bowl wide receiver is currently a free agent, having been let go by the Cowboys in 2018 after eight seasons. Nine weeks into the 2019 campaign, he signed with the New Orleans Saints, only to rupture his Achilles tendon during his second practice session with the team. He’s spent the time since rehabbing with an eye toward making an NFL return, and now with Jason Garrett out as Cowboys coach, Bryant is lobbying hard to make a return to Dallas.

Bryant’s tweet on Sunday certainly raised a few eyebrows and started the wheels turning for more than a few fans, including Ezekiel Elliott’s mom.

Also chiming in was Jets safety Jamal Adams. Many believed the Cowboys should have traded for Adams prior to 2019’s deal deadline. They tried, but were unsuccessful. Some feel that the team should make another run at him during this offseason, as the position remains a weakness. The league’s top safety- a Texas native himself who has made no bones about the attractiveness of playing in Dallas- tantalized fans with the notion of being teammates with Bryant, presumably (though not explicitly) while wearing a Cowboys uniform.

It’s a fun idea to noodle over, even if it’s far-fetched.

If you’re going to really “think about it,” as Bryant suggests, the first thing to consider is what Bryant actually meant by “the role they gave Witten.”

Sign Bryant to play tight end? Bryant has always been athletic and has kept himself in fighting shape, according to the workout videos he posts often on social media.

But to think that Mike McCarthy, in the midst of the countless changes he’s already bringing to the Cowboys, is going to sign a 31-year-old wide receiver with a repaired Achilles, 750-plus days since his last NFL reception- and redesign the entire offense just to line him up at tight end- borders on absurd.

Could Bryant play tight end? Maybe technically. But Bryant last measured in at 6-foot-2, 220 pounds. Jason Witten is 6-foot-6 and weighs 263. Blake Jarwin is 6-foot-5, 260. The numbers don’t add up; Bryant isn’t the next Cowboys tight end.

But was Dez referring to something else when he mentioned Witten’s role?

In his first season back after a one-year retirement, Witten was expected to take fewer snaps on the field. Or that’s how it was sold, with the theory that he would serve largely as a mentor to the promising backup Jarwin, subbing in to provide multiple looks and giving defenses another weapon to worry about in key situations.

Witten ended up being on the field for 75 percent of Dallas’s offensive snaps, compared to just 38 percent for Jarwin. So that role sort never played out in real life, due in part to Witten’s competitive nature that no doubt made it hard for him to stay on the sideline, but also in part because of Garrett’s long relationship and loyalty to the future Hall of Famer.

For his part, the 11-time Pro Bowler hasn’t ruled out coming back for a 17th NFL season, and he hasn’t said it would have to be as a Cowboy. With Garrett gone, Witten’s spot on the Dallas roster isn’t cemented. And were he to return, his normal amount of playing time isn’t guaranteed. As Bryant said, “no shot at Witten,” but the 37-year-old is no longer producing as an elite tight end. Most weeks, truth be told, he didn’t even look like the best tight end on the Cowboys.

All of that is to suggest that Bryant offering his discounted services as what 2019 Witten was supposed to be: a motivator in the locker room, an example on the practice field, and a veteran leader on the sideline… who also takes a handful of snaps and provides a legitimate threat in a few creative personnel packages alongside the other players he listed in his tweet… well, that idea has some merit.

But whether the team would welcome him back is another matter.

Bryant was typically vocal as he left Dallas. While he has deep affection for owner Jerry Jones, he was less than complementary of players like Sean Lee, who still commands respect with most guys on the roster. And after the kid-gloves treatment that the front office gave to Garrett throughout their amicable divorce, inviting his loudest critic back for a second tour of duty in the building may prove to be more headache than help.

Ultimately, it will be McCarthy who almost assuredly has the only say. While Bryant and McCarthy were on opposing ends of one of the most infamous plays in Cowboys history, there’s no indication that the new coach would be eager for a reunion.

“I said after the game, ‘That was one hell of an athletic play.’ I was impressed,” McCarthy said of Bryant’s goal-line grab in 2015’s NFC Divisional Round against the Packers. “It was a great catch, I can say now. But it wasn’t then, technically.”

Dez caught it in 2015. But that doesn’t mean he’ll catch the break he’s looking for as he pleads for a 2020 return to the Cowboys.

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2020 Texas Longhorns Profile: Cade Brewer

With new offensive coordinator Mike Yurcich coming in could Cade Brewer see a rise in production?

The tight end position has become one that has become a lost art in the college game. Without the player being a freak athlete used as a big slot receiver, the days of using one in the offense are all but dead. Just look at the entire college football landscape, but will the Texas Longhorns be any different with Cade Brewer?

Brewer is your prototypical size at the position standing 6’4″ and 250 pounds. Given his size, Brewer is a perfect candidate to play a big slot receiver or line out wide for Texas. Especially given what the team is losing at wide receiver due to the seniors who are graduating. Texas has talent but Brewer has experience.

In the run game, Brewer is a good physical blocker so getting him involved in the run game is relatively seamless. He can block on the edge or as inline tight end even though that isn’t the best spot for him on the field. He is more of the spread offense type.

Tim Heitman-USA TODAY Sports

The key for Brewer is getting the ball in his hands and allowing him to use his athleticism in space. In high school, he showed off his leaping ability to showcase that he can be a handful in space. On top of the athleticism, Brewer’s size makes him an attractive redzone target for the offense. He can win the jump balls in the endzone to give Texas another option when trying to score and that makes the Longhorns that much more dangerous on offense.

The question remains on if new offensive coordinator Mike Yurcich will use Brewer in 2020. At Ohio State, the Buckeyes used two tight ends but it was more about the running back and wide receivers for Ryan Day’s offense.

While at Oklahoma State, Yurcich used current Dallas Cowboys tight end Blake Jarwin in a way that could be similar for how they deploy Brewer in 2020. During his time in Stillwater, Jarwin secured 41 passes for 616 yards and five touchdowns. His yards per receptions were 15, which is a number very feasibly obtained with an athletic tight end in Cade Brewer.

‘If this is the end…’ Jason Witten and teammates reflect on his HOF career

The 11-time Pro Bowl tight end came out of retirement to try for a Super Bowl but says he’s not sure he’ll return to the Cowboys in 2020.

Jason Witten got choked up as he meandered back and forth between dissecting Week 17’s 47-16 win over Washington, reflecting on his comeback season after a year of retirement, and summarizing his 16 years playing in Dallas. The 11-time Pro Bowler says he hasn’t made up his mind about whether he will return for another season as a Cowboy. But after the 2019 finale, his teammates, his coaches, and even Witten himself spoke lovingly about lessons learned and legacies left over the 37-year-old’s Hall of Fame career. They spoke in reverent tones. It was almost as if it were a eulogy. They even used past tense.

Witten says he doesn’t know. But he sure sounds like a Cowboy who’s saddling up for a ride off into the sunset. Again.

“We’ll have to see,” Witten told the press after Sunday’s win. “There’s a lot of moving parts, I think, that we all know. Anytime that a season ends and you’re at this point in your career, you’ve got to take time. The organization has to make a decision; you have to make a decision on what you want to do. I know I left everything I had out there. And when you empty the bucket like that, like I tried to do every single day, that takes a lot out of you, takes a lot out of your family. But their support was unwavering every step of the way: ‘Have a chance and go compete.’ Being out there on the field in critical moments, maybe it was a little bit of a different role, but damn, I sure enjoyed it.”

Witten finished the day with an unremarkable 4 receptions and 24 yards to add to his mind-boggling lifetime totals: 1,215 catches for 12,977 yards and 72 touchdowns. He played in 255 of 265 games over 16 seasons, missing just one contest in his 2003 campaign because he had had three plates surgically inserted into his jaw after breaking it in a game against Arizona as a rookie. Witten owns the franchise records for receptions and receiving yards, and he sits 19th on the league’s all-time leaderboard for receiving yardage.

With those astounding stats, Witten’s place in football history was already secured when he retired in April 2018 to take a broadcasting gig with ESPN’s Monday Night Football crew. Rejoining the Cowboys in 2019 didn’t add monster numbers to his resume, but it sure enhanced his legendary status in the annals of America’s Team.

“It was a heck of a year for me to be able to come back, play this game,” Witten said. “I was proud of the way I played all year. It’s never perfect; there’s always plays that I want to have back. But to be a part of this team, be one of the 53, in this franchise, and have an opportunity to compete for a division, have a chance to go to the playoffs, that was something that motivated me every day when I woke up to go to work: to make myself better, make this football team better, to make my teammates better. Those young guys, it was great to work with them every day and be a mentor to them. We came up short, but it’s that group of guys. It’s a show-me game. It’s a hard game. We had our opportunities, but unfortunately, we didn’t get them. But I’ll take a few days, figure out what’s next. But as I said to you guys a year ago when I retired: to have the opportunity for 16 seasons to put on that helmet and run on that field with the star on your helmet, that’s an opportunity of a lifetime.”

It was originally thought that Witten’s return might be in a reduced role. Young tight ends Blake Jarwin and Dalton Schultz had played well in the year of Witten’s absence; maybe the team would look to use Witten as a sort of player-coach to help them in their development. That proved to not be the case; the Tennessee alum’s 2019 stats were nearly identical to his 2017 stat line.

“There wasn’t any moment this season- through training camp, through the offseason, in games, in practice- that I felt I couldn’t win and do my job at the level I’ve always done it,” Witten offered. “This is a different offense than in ’07 [the most prolific season- 1,145 yards- by a tight end in club history]. A different offense in 2012, when I caught 110 passes. It’s not always apples-to-apples when you start comparing, because this is a different system. It really is, even though there are a lot of similarities still around with the scheme. So I don’t measure it on those things, even though I think on the surface, it’s easy to look at production from a stat line and probably say it wasn’t.”

It wouldn’t really be a drop in production that convinces Witten to walk away a second time, but rather the missed opportunity of what he might have seen as his last best chance to reach the ever-elusive Super Bowl. That’s why he came back, not to pad his stats. Starting over with another offseason, another training camp, another coach? That might finally be too much for the big tight end.

“One of the best decisions I made was listening to to my gut to come back and play. I’m sure that decision can be picked apart a million different ways, but I’m really proud of the way I played. I love this game. This game’s given so much to me.”

And Witten’s given a great deal back. He’s been a leader both on and off the field, having won the Walter Payton Man of the Year Award in 2012.

He is unquestionably one of the true leaders of the team, looked up to by all the other players on the roster. And they all seemed to know that Sunday’s win over Washington may well have marked the end of an era.

“Jason Witten is the ultimate pro,” running back Ezekiel Elliott said of No. 82. “I watched the guy since I started playing football; he’s played in the league as long as I’ve been playing football, period. He’s one hell of a player. One hell of a man. Hell of a father, hell of a husband, hell of a teammate, and obviously, one of the greatest tight ends ever. Every day he comes into work, he leaves it all. Special dude.”

“He’s a legend. He’s smart,” wideout Michael Gallup told media members on Sunday. “He does everything the right way. That’s just what I want to get to, hopefully if I stay in the league as long as he did. He’s great leader. He’s a great dude. He was really the hype man in the huddle; a lot of people didn’t even know that. But he’s someone that you want on your football team. We should all strive to be like Jason Witten.”

Quarterback Dak Prescott was asked how much Witten’s return has meant to his own progress.

“So much,” the fourth-year passer said from the podium in his postgame address. “The disappointing part is you’ll never get to play with some of these people again. And who knows if that’s what it is for Witt, but he’s meant everything to me. Everything as a leader, someone I can look up to on the field, off the field. Somebody, ever since I was a little boy, who’s worn the star the right way, and I hope I can do that throughout my career.”

Prescott choked up as he said that last part. And he wasn’t the only Cowboys connection who let his emotions show when talking about the player they call Big Witt.

“You know, we had a good hug in the locker room afterward,” head coach Jason Garrett relayed in his postgame remarks, stopping himself from elaborating, but clearly touched as he spoke. “Witt’s a special, special guy.”

Even the guy whose playing time has taken the biggest hit spoke glowingly of his mentor.

“He’s going to be a first-ballot Hall of Famer,” backup tight end Blake Jarwin told reporters, “and he deserves every bit of that recognition. I can’t be any more appreciative. The guy means the world to me and what he did for me.”

But not even the other guys in the tight end rotation know what’s going to happen moving forward.

“I’m not sure what Witt’s decision is, but I respect it either way,” Jarwin said. “If he’s back, great. It gives me another year to learn under the guy. But like I said, I think I’m ready. It goes back to work. I’m going to put a lot of things up on a big whiteboard in my room and start chipping away come time to start training again.”

That sounds like something Witten would do.

And that’s the part that may make up Witten’s mind for him. The grind. He’s long repeated his mantra that “the secret’s in the dirt,” a testament to his uncompromising work ethic. But Father Time catches up to everyone. And his tackle becomes gradually harder to break. Witten knows just how difficult it was to get himself back on the field for what was ostensibly one last ride in 2019.

“I’m not naive enough to think at 37 I’m the same player I was at 25. But I worked really hard. The coaching staff, the trainers, the strength staff, all the sacrifices and work they’ve put in, I felt like there wasn’t a game where I showed up that I couldn’t make plays to help this team. I had mistakes, too. It wasn’t perfect. But they weren’t perfect in 2007, either. That’s what makes it hard.”

Witten himself fought back tears as he reflected on a career that was filled with big plays, big games, and big stats. But what hit him the hardest was thinking about the big goal that has gone unrealized.

“If this is the end, I’m really proud of how I played today and hold my head up high. But it’s never about that. It’s never about a catch or 1,200 catches. It’s about winning. And to not have that opportunity to hold up a trophy, to bring that to the Jones family, to bring that back to Dallas, you know? It’s hard.”

Witten was even asked to comment on his own legacy, how he hoped he would be remembered. After all, not many people get the chance to write their own eulogy.

The moment was a lot like this last chapter of Witten’s amazing career. It looked like he was going to bow out… but then came back to give it his best shot.

“My legacy? That’s for other people to talk about, but… ‘A guy that brought it every single day, he was prepared, he loved the game, he cherished the opportunity, and he was never going to be outworked.’ And that’s how I tried to approach it.”

5 To Watch: Jerry Jones and 4 on-field Cowboys to keep an eye on vs Rams

The game is on the field, but the focus will turn to Jerry Jones in short order if these other 4 names aren’t contributing to the win.

The Dallas Cowboys have been off of playing football for 10 days, and on the heels of a third-consecutive loss, the outlook for the season couldn’t be further away from where it was to begin things in early September. There is little hope emanating from the fan base, and what is originating from within the organization seems faked and a facade as the club is biding their time before cleaning house on the coaching staff.

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones determined a few weeks back that changing coaching staffs midseason was not going to be the best chance to salvage things. Now, what he says publicly to help boost merchandise sales and reap the benefits of free advertising from every sound bite, and what he believes internally can be two totally separate things.

Jones continues to allow questions about his pending head coaching search to fan the flames around the vacancy, despite refusing to put head coach Jason Garrett out of his misery. With no remorse, Jones implores that there’s no one he wants more to succeed than Garrett while simultaneously pouring gasoline on the conversation about who will replace him whenever the Cowboys season ends. He simultaneously says the words that he knows the failures of the franchise reside on his doorstep while definately refusing to admit that his brand of management – which serves him so well in business – preclude the on-field product from finding continued success.

If the Cowboys cannot emerge from their stupor on Sunday against the Los Angeles Rams, Jones will face another media scrum post-game, another round of radio interviews starting Tuesday and will emerge unscathed yet again, because that’s how this Jerry-go-round works.

While all eyes will be focused on Jones during those Fox cutaways during the action, there will be some lesser-known names on the field worth paying attention to. If Dallas has any hope of pulling off an upset against the team which they squared up against in last year’s playoffs, here’s some unfamiliar names who may end up starring.

Kai Forbath, kicker

The long nightmare is over, and about six months too late the Dallas Cowboys have finally walked away from the kicking disaster known as Brett Maher.  After missing seven kicks in 2018, the Cowboys stuck with him despite missing 10 kicks through 13 games, the most in the last four years across the league.

Finally they brought in another option in Forbath, a journeyman who has played in just one game this season. He does have a 88% accuracy mark on field goals over the last several years, though his extra points have been shaky, including a miss that got him released in New England after just one game earlier this year.

The move is more so symbolic. It exemplified the coaching staff’s refusal to try something different, to believe that their original plan is always the best plan and failing to try something new despite all the evidence what they have done is not working. Whether Forbath is the answer or not isn’t really that important now. The damage of sticking to their guns has already infiltrated the aura of the team.

Luke Gifford, linebacker

It seems like Sean Lee is going to give it a go despite missing all week with pectoral and thigh issues, but fans shouldn’t be surprised if this rookie linebacker gets a handful of defensive snaps in the game.

Dallas needs a spark, as their backer play has been mediocre all year after being touted as a strength of the defense. Leighton Vander Esch is out, Jaylon Smith is not playing up to par and Lee looks his age. Joe Thomas will be the third linebacker, but the UDFA out of Nebraska was very impressive in training camp and preseason and should get a chance to show what he can do.

Tony Pollard, running back

Pollard was missed in the game against Chicago as his injury and ailments to both backs on the practice squad left the rarely utilized Jamize Olawale in the position to be featured and he came up wanting.

Ezekiel Elliott’s handcuff should see a ton of action against the Rams as the Cowboys offense looks to emerge from their doldrums that have infected their possessions over the last couple weeks. Pollard is a weapon in his shiftiness and tackle-breaking ability with excellent balance and needs to be part of both the passing and running game for the Cowboys.

Blake Jarwin, tight end

Free Blake Jarwin.

No, he hasn’t been wrongfully arrested by the law, but the powers-that-be are certainly handcuffing the superior passing-game weapon in Dallas. Jason Witten has had a remarkable career, he’s still the best blocking tight end on the team, but the insistence to allow him to be the primary focus down the seams is maddening.

Jarwin can actually produce yards after the catch and still has on-purpose big-play ability that Witten hasn’t sniffed in half a decade.

The coaching staff’s inability to devise more plays that feature him tells the tale of their season.

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News: Final Week 11 injury report, Cooper gets top grade from CB Slay

Also, why Jason Garrett is more Marvin Lewis than Tom Landry, the latest on Dallas and Kaepernick, and is Jason Witten part of the problem?

The final injury report for Sunday’s Week 11 game is encouraging for Cowboys fans- both in who Dallas will have suiting up, and also in who they won’t have to face across the line in Detroit. But the Cowboys aren’t the only ones assessing their opponent; a Lions star grades his Dallas assignment tops in the league.

Also, a wily veteran offers his take on the team’s slow starts… but is he part of the problem that’s holding the offense back? A native Michigander comes home this week to play in front of friends and family, Dak Prescott has the numbers to disprove the doubters, the latest on the Cowboys’ interest (or lack thereof) in Colin Kaepernick, and a look at where Jason Garrett really ranks among long-tenured coaches. That’s on tap in this edition of News and Notes.

2 Cowboys questionable versus Lions :: The Mothership

The Cowboys are expected to be close to full strength heading into Sunday’s game in Detroit. Offensive tackle La’el Collins is listed as questionable with a knee and back issue. Safety Jeff Heath has the same designation with a shoulder ailment. Only guard Connor Williams is a confirmed scratch for Week 11; he missed the whole week or practice with a bad knee. All other names who appeared on the injury report over the past few days are cleared and expected to suit up, including Amari Cooper, Zack Martin, Tyron Smith, Sean Lee, and Michael Gallup.

The Lions are not so fortunate when it comes to team health. They will be without quarterback Matthew Stafford for the second week in a row as the veteran continues to nurse a back problem. Also listed as out are defensive end Da’Shawn Hand and tackle Rick Wagner. Safety Tracy Walker, defensive end Romeo Okwara, running back Ty Johnson, defensive tackle Damon Harrison Sr., and punter Sam Martin are all considered questionable for kickoff.


Detroit Lions’ Darius Slay readies for Cowboys’ Amari Cooper :: Detroit Free Press

Of all the wideouts in the NFL, Lions cornerback Darius Slay calls Cowboys wideout Amari Cooper tops at winning at the line of scrimmage.

“‘I might give nods to (Cooper as the best) just cause he’s a lot more explosive than all of them, just cause of the fact that he can run,’ Slay said Wednesday” as per Dave Birkett of the Detroit Free Press. “‘He came out as a 4.3 guy (in the 40).'”

Slay, a two-time Pro Bowler, typically travels with the opponent’s No. 1 receiver, so expect to see him shadowing Cooper for much of the afternoon. As for other pass-catchers with a great get-off, Slay also mentioned Keenan Allen of the Chargers and the Packers’ Davante Adams.

“‘Keenan’s got quick instincts, but he’s a guy that can be quick off the line of scrimmage and quicker downfield, and he’s a little bit bigger than some of them,’ Slay said of Cooper. ‘Overall, they’re all kind of like the same, but he’s very, very, very great off the line of scrimmage, so got to have great patience with him.'”


Pivoting from earlier report, Cowboys not attending Kaepernick workout :: Cowboys Wire

Despite reports earlier in the week that suggested the Cowboys front office would be sending a team representative to Atlanta for quarterback Colin Kaepernick’s league-wide audition, owner Jerry Jones refuted the story on 105.3 The Fan on Friday.

“That’s not correct,” Jones said on-air. “We’re not going to have anybody there. We’ll basically… You know, those are taped, and we’ll look at the tape if we need information there. We really like where we are with our quarterback. We’ve got some very young quarterbacks, and that’s the way we think, to bring anything up behind Dak is to do it with young ones like we’re doing. So we won’t be there.”


Jason Witten thinks he might know reason behind Dallas Cowboys’ slow starts :: USA Today

If the Cowboys’ notoriously slow starts in games this season are maddening for fans to watch, it’s even worse for the players on the field. It’s well-covered territory in coaches’ interviews and press conferences, with everyone on staff trying to find a reason and zero in on a fix.

But tight end Jason Witten has a theory.

“‘Sometimes when you go through opener (drives), you’re using that to see how they’re going to play certain other things,’ Witten said,” according to USA Today’s Jori Epstein. “‘It may be, in the midst of that, sometimes if you have a three-and-out, yeah, it may have opened our eyes to what we can do in the next series down the road, what we want to get to. But it may have had a negative impact on that possession not scoring early in the game.'”

Dallas will look to come out of the blocks faster in Detroit and score a first-quarter touchdown for the first time since Week 3 versus Miami.


Lewis ‘playing for free’ this week in Detroit :: The Mothership

Dallas cornerback Jourdan Lewis gained a lot of new family and friends this week, it seems. The Motor City native has been bombarded with ticket requests for Sunday’s game when the Cowboys visit Ford Field in Detroit. So far, he’s bought 40.

“Yeah, 40… I’m playing for free this week,” Lewis joked. “And I had to scratch a few off the list. There’s definitely some people hitting me that I haven’t heard from in a while. After 40, you have to get your own.”

The Michigan alum says that despite playing at the Lions’ home stadium with various youth teams and high school squads while growing up, paying a visit to Ford Field as a pro is still “definitely a dream.”


Why does Cowboys’ Jerry Jones treat Garrett like Landry 2.0? :: 105.3 The Fan

Owner Jerry Jones has always been coach Jason Garrett’s biggest fan. The prevailing philosophy he espouses in interviews and sells to the fanbase is that Garrett’s smarts, his pedigree, and his patience and consistency will eventually bring home a Lombardi Trophy.

But as Ari Temkin points out, Garrett is one of just six coaches in league history to coach at least 145 games with the same team and not play for a conference title. The only one with a worse winning percentage than Garrett’s 56% is Marvin Lewis, who won 52% of his games leading the Bengals.

Interestingly, Tom Landry coached 152 games (the same number Garrett will reach with the season finale) before he finally took Dallas to a conference title game. But expecting Garrett to magically go on a Landry-like run at this point is the equivalent of hoping for Garrett to evolve overnight into something he’s never been. As Temkin writes, “Garrett is more Marvin Lewis than Tom Landry.”


Here’s an idea… the Dallas Cowboys should use Blake Jarwin more :: Blogging the Boys

Jason Witten’s return to the field as the Cowboys’ starting tight end was a feel-good story when it was announced, but some wondered if the team would trot out the future Hall of Famer at the expense of the younger tight ends already on the roster trying to gain valuable experience.

RJ Ochoa cites a stat from Inside Edge that says backup tight end Blake Jarwin has averaged 9.8 yards per target this season, the best mark of 42 qualified players at the position. Better than Kelce, better than Ertz, better than Hockenson, better than Kittle. And yes, better than Witten.

“Essentially, on average, when Dak is targeting Blake Jarwin, there’s a move of the chains on the line… Jarwin could be the future at tight end for the Cowboys; maybe that future is now.”


Prescott’s advancement echoed by top spot in several advanced stats :: Cowboys Wire

The Dak Doubters don’t want to talk about it, but the Cowboys quarterback is having a monster season, by almost any measure. He’s leading a passing attack that ranks highest in the league in: EPA per pass attempt, success rate per pass attempt, offensive DVOA, yards per pass attempt, and yards per play.

But the chart that should by all rights turn the non-believers around is Eli Cuellar’s highlighting of Prescott’s week-by-week effectiveness (using Expected Points Added per play) and how he’s compared to the league average quarterback play.

It’s an eye-popping visual and can be found at the link, but the punch line is this: on Prescott’s worst statistical week of the season, he basically matched the league’s average performance.


NFL coaches are finally getting more aggressive on fourth down :: FiveThirtyEight

The two-minute-drive playcalling that got the Cowboys coaching staff raked over the coals all week has also sparked a larger discussion about how NFL teams are approaching fourth downs in general.

While teams generally do not attempt to convert fourth downs as often as the stats say they should, 2019 has seen the highest go-for-it rate in at least 25 years. So far, though, offenses are converting those fourth-down tries at a below-average pace.

“As coaches like Garrett continue to learn which players to trust and when to trust them,” Ty Schalter writes, “they should continue to look at the numbers and realize how far they have to go before they’re actually making the best fourth-down calls they can.”


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