News: Cowboys defense practicing takeaways, eyeing soft QB schedule

Also, a possible playoff bubble, replacing Gerald McCoy, the recent linebacker shuffle, and how the Dallas sidelines will look different.

While still getting over the awful double-shot of Gerald McCoy news from Monday and Tuesday, there was plenty for Cowboys fans to feel good about on Wednesday, including a key reinforcement being officially added to the defensive line that McCoy just vacated.

Elsewhere, a franchise legend is still basking in his limelight moment, and the Dallas defense could be primed for quite a moment of its own. The team received word that the sidelines will be a little less colorful this season, and there’s talk of playoff teams moving to a bubble after the season. All that plus news about play calling, quarterback mentoring, linebacker shifting, turnover practicing, and opposing-passer ranking. Here’s the midweek News and Notes.

The strength of schedule for each NFL team based on opposing quarterbacks tiers :: The Athletic

Here’s a list where fans want to see their team near the bottom. The Cowboys are slated to face just one “Tier 1” quarterback, Russell Wilson, in 2020. Lamar Jackson, Ben Roethlisberger, Matt Ryan, and Carson Wentz are considered “Tier 2” opponents. The majority of the Dallas schedule- 10 games- will be played against quarterbacks in the weakest two tiers.


Mailbag: Still top-five potential on defense? :: The Mothership

In the latest edition of Mailbag, Cowboys writers David Helman and Rob Phillips do their best to answer fan questions. In this edition, they take their turns predicting who will replace Gerald McCoy at 3-tech and look at whether the Cowboys have a chance to be a top-five defense without him.


Cowboys activate Dontari Poe same day they say goodbye to McCoy :: Cowboys Wire

As the Cowboys received terrible news about Gerald McCoy, fellow defensive tackle Dontari Poe officially made his return from injury. The two play different positions along the defensive line, but Poe’s presence will nevertheless ease some of the burden left by McCoy’s absence.




No Cowboys cheerleaders in 2020 (bad), sideline reporters (ok), or Rowdy (awesome) :: Cowboys Wire

The sidelines at AT&T Stadium will look very different this season, with several longtime staples suddenly MIA due to the COVID-19 crisis.  But there is a silver lining, as the eviction of one of the parties may portend a return to the Super Bowl if history repeats.


Dalton embracing mentor role in Cowboys QB room :: The Mothership

Snagging QB Andy Dalton was an excellent offseason move by Dallas. Easily now one of the best backups in the league, the veteran has experience and knowledge that he’s sharing with the Cowboys’ young quarterbacks.



Ezekiel Elliott on Cowboys in 2020: ‘We’re going to run the ball’ :: ESPN

There is a misconception surrounding Mike McCarthy that the former Green Bay head coach doesn’t like to run the ball. But McCarthy understands the back he has in Ezekiel Elliott, and the former two-time rushing champ expects the Cowboys to continue pounding the rock.


Why Drew Pearson belongs in the Pro Football Hall of Fame :: NFL.com

Drew Pearson isn’t in the Hall of Fame yet, and that’s a problem. The 1970s’ All-Decade wideout is overqualified for the achievement, with three first-team All-Pro selections and a Super Bowl win. Gil Brandt helps explain why Pearson should finally get the call in 2021.


McCarthy: Kellen Moore calling plays is ‘best decision’ for 2020 Cowboys :: Cowboys Wire

Mike McCarthy has turned over the big laminated menu to Kellen Moore. But he’s given up play-calling duties before… and then taken them back when things didn’t go so well.



Leighton Vander Esch believes the Cowboys defense practices getting turnovers more now :: Blogging the Boys

A longstanding deficiency of the Cowboys seems to be getting extra attention under Mike McCarthy and Mike Nolan. The third-year linebacker reports that there is now a portion of each practice session dedicated to “punching, raking, hammers, all the stuff. Tackling and punching at the same time.”


Bucky Brooks: What the LB position switch means :: The Mothership

The analyst breaks down the recent shuffling of Leighton Vander Esch and Jaylon Smith, and explains why each player’s individual game should improve… and predicts the new roles could allow the Cowboys defense as a whole to become a blitzing nightmare for opposing quarterbacks.


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Player fines? Larger practice squads? Split teams? Covid posing more questions

The ongoing pandemic is forcing the NFL to ask some hard questions and consider new processes as it moves toward play in 2020.

At the time of this writing, NFL teams are 25 days away from reporting to training camp. The chances of a 2020 season actually happening, though, have never felt so shaky.

Given the longest head-start of any major sports league on how to proceed in the midst of a pandemic, the NFL has wasted most of that time cruising full speed ahead as if everything will be just fine. But with the nation’s coronavirus numbers constantly changing- and not for the better- the league suddenly finds itself nearing an event horizon, with more questions now than ever.

Adam Schefter reports teams are likely looking at starting camp this preseason with fewer than the usual 90 players. According to the NFL insider:

“One source said he believed it’s likely that teams will go to camp with 80-man rosters, and another source said it’s ‘definitely not 90.’ A third league source said he has ‘heard lots of discussion about 75 players potentially instead of 90,’ especially with the reduction in preseason games and teams not needing as many players for camp as normal.”

Another possible change? Larger practice squads. Those units are already set to grow from 10 to 12 this year thanks to the new collective bargaining agreement, but Schefter notes that the league is considering further expansion “to 16-20 players” to provide teams a larger pool of players to draw from should a Covid outbreak occur.

Team player representatives and the NFLPA’s medial director took part in a conference call Thursday regarding the virus.

ESPN’s Dan Graziano reports:

“One source told ESPN that players on the call were told that they could be fined for conduct detrimental if they are found to have engaged in “reckless” behavior away from the team facility, such as eating out in restaurants and using ride-sharing services.

New protective equipment- including gameday alterations to players’ on-the-field gear- was also discussed as a possibility.

Graziano goes on:

“Sources told ESPN there was plenty of pushback on Thursday’s call from players asking why they are trying to rush back to play if the virus is such a dangerous threat. Players also have been asking what happens to their contracts if they opt not to play for virus-related reasons (as some NBA players already have), what happens if they grow too uncomfortable to play as the season goes on and what happens to next year’s salary cap as a result of lost revenue this year.”

Even the buildings that NFL teams will be entering pose a legitimate risk. The league has already instructed teams to devise protocols for how team employees will move about their facilities. But SoFi Stadium, the new Los Angeles home of the Chargers and Rams that’s now nearly complete, revealed just Thursday that seven more workers at the stadium- from three different trades- have tested positive for Covid-19. Twenty-five stadium workers have now tested positive since the pandemic began.

The Cowboys were scheduled to open SoFi as the visiting team for its first game, Week 1 of the preseason against the Rams. The NFL had already nixed Weeks 1 and 4 of the preseason before the latest positive cases at the facility.

As stadiums reopen for business, recommendations from an internal group headed by a league executive “will likely include having stadiums stop accepting cash, concessions only offering prepackaged food, and for all fans to wear masks.” Daniel Kaplan of The Athletic reports that the NFL may even ask fans to sign liability waivers before attending games.

Amidst talk of shrinking training camp numbers and beefing up practice squads for the Cowboys and the 31 other teams, there’s also now talk of splitting rosters. The idea is for each club to keep two fully-functioning skeleton crews practicing in isolation. Like the president and vice-president not traveling on the same plane, if something happens to the A-team, the B-team can still take the field.

ProFootballTalk’s Mike Florio argues:

“Whether the squads practice in different shifts (following a thorough cleaning of the primary practice facility for camp) or whether part of the team works at the practice facility and the rest practices at the stadium, there’s real value in keeping the team separated.

“Obviously, fewer players in any given space will make it easier to comply with guidelines aimed at limiting the spread of the virus. More importantly, if an outbreak commences, the other half of the team will (in theory) be insulated.”

The sporting world is already getting a look at what happens when players and team personnel start testing positive. Major League Soccer, using Orlando as a “bubble city” to resume its season in just a matter of days, is dealing with an eleventh-hour outbreak on its Dallas team.

The team members reportedly tested negative for the virus before leaving Dallas but tested positive once inside the bubble. Texas is currently experiencing one of the highest Covid spikes in the country; Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott has already tested positive for the virus, as have other players among the Cowboys and Texans organizations.

Everything is changing daily for all Americans. Best-laid plans are falling by the wayside with every news report. A second wave of closings is spreading. Every question about how an NFL season might look or could work in the current climate just leads to more questions. And the answers to those questions aren’t set in stone. They’re not written in ink. Heck, by the time they’re scrawled on a dry-erase board, things have probably changed. And things will undoubtedly change again- multiple times- before July 28.

To that end in this rapidly-evolving environment, Florio warns that the CBA agreed upon in the pre-Covid era just a few months ago is in desperate need of an express-lane update to get the league and its players through a season like no other.

“They need to reach, essentially, a new labor agreement that covers one season of football,” Florio writes. “What the league thinks advances the safety interests of the players may be different from what the players believe. That’s where problems can arise, and problems that can’t be worked out could delay the start of training camp and, potentially, the start of the season.”

Florio even brings up the possibility of a “non-traditional work stoppage” that could result from the league and team owners plowing forward with football, putting players in jeopardy during an unprecedented global health crisis.

A work stoppage in the current landscape would be disastrous. But right now, a work startage looks like it could be, too.

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Dallas could be NFL’s bubble city in a COVID-19 season; but bubbles pop

While Dallas could handle the relocation of all 32 teams for an isolated season in a bubble, science says it’s trickier than just geography.

With the NFL Draft just days away and Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones suddenly on the president’s task force aiming to bring sports back, the NFL is currently moving forward as if the 2020 season is going to happen. Reports even surfaced this week that the league has been working on contingency plans that include cancelling early-season games or possibly playing in empty stadiums.

There are, of course, literal fortunes that would be lost if the NFL — or any major sports league, for that matter — simply pulled the plug on an entire season outright, so the owners and league executives will undoubtedly look for any alternative they can find to put on some semblance of normality. Anything to fulfill the contractual obligations of playing the games, more or less, as scheduled.

In that almost-no-price-is-too-high vein, a new term has made its way into the conversation. What if the NFL could find itself a bubble city?

The idea is to relocate all 32 teams- players and essential club personnel- to a single city. Sequester them in hotels shown to be virus-free. Ferry them to and from the field for games, where they play in front of network broadcast crews… but no fans. Then keep them isolated in that bubble the rest of the time. Rinse and repeat, for the duration of a whole season.

An extreme way to salvage the season? Certainly. But is it even feasible?

Mike Leslie of WFAA notes thinks it seems at least technically possible. And Dallas – Fort Worth is one of the perhaps few metropolitan areas that could pull it off.

Start with AT&T Stadium, the cornerstone of this plan. JerryWorld could do the heavy lifting by hosting as many as six games in a weekend: Thursday night, two Saturday games (since college football may not play this fall), two Sunday games, and Monday night. With no need to change out the field, no concessions or vendors, and greatly reduced cleaning necessary after each game, it’s logistically do-able, in theory.

But it would by no means be easy.

Leslie’s modest proposal hinges on AT&T Stadium doing double-duty with a doubleheader every Saturday and Sunday. Assume that those kickoffs were spaced out as far as possible- say, the early midday slot and the late primetime slot both days- and it’s still a tight turnaround. Teams’ equipment crews need access to the locker rooms well in advance of the game. And it takes them a long time- even once the players leave- to pack it all up afterward. Then, for this bubble season to work, a separate crew would have to come in and sanitize everything: field, sidelines, locker rooms, press areas, and any other place that’s been touched- all before the next game’s teams can even get off the bus.

Even if the league dramatically shortened the windows of accessibility to the stadium with abbreviated pregame load-ins and hurried postgame load-outs to help facilitate such a doubleheader plan, crews would be cutting it close every time.

If everyone were motivated enough, though, they could make it happen. The home of the Cowboys could indeed serve as the primary field for the NFL’s 2020 campaign.

But there are still as many as ten games left to be played each weekend. Luckily, the Metroplex has no shortage of monster-sized football stadiums that could easily handle network-quality broadcasts. This is Texas, after all.

Leslie calls on TCU’s Carter Stadium, SMU’s Gerald Ford Stadium, the original Cotton Bowl Stadium, McKinney’s ISD Stadium- all outstanding facilities that rival most NFL arenas- to take on two games each per weekend. A Saturday game and a Sunday game at each of those four locations; that’s now fourteen total.

Put another Saturday-Sunday slate in the Cowboys’ five-star indoor facility, Ford Center at The Star in Frisco, and the math works. There are other world-class facilities just in case, like Eagle Stadium at Allen High School and Toyota Stadium in Frisco, even Globe Life Park in Arlington, the former home of MLB’s Rangers, located across the street from AT&T Stadium.

Yes, Dallas could, at least in terms of properly-outfitted gameday facilities, be the NFL’s bubble city.

But don’t ever forget one important thing about bubbles.

They burst. Often without warning. Sometimes at just the slightest nudge.

And that’s the danger Sports Illustrated‘s Stephanie Apstein calls out in a piece from last week.

Staging an NFL season is about far, far more than just finding enough gridirons to host the actual games. Even in empty stadiums, with players locked in their protective bubble with daily COVID testing, there are countless other logistical concerns that would have to be addressed. The key issue with a bubble city isn’t geography; it’s science.

For starters, Apstein writes, “every person who would have access to the facilities will need to be isolated separately for two weeks to ensure that no infection could enter. That’s players and coaches, athletic trainers and interpreters, reporters and broadcasters, plus housekeeping and security personnel. No one can come in or out. Food will have to be delivered. Hotel and stadium employees will have to be paid enough to compensate for their time away from their families. Everyone onsite will have to be tested multiple times during this initial period.”

Ignore for a moment that adequately testing any group of individuals for coronavirus has proven to be easier said than done. The supply simply hasn’t been able to keep up with demand as of yet. Testing every player on every NFL roster multiple times during the initial quarantine- while doctors and nurses and frontline workers and the general public go completely without- just to save the pro football season is a whole different debate.

Because even with all that testing, consider how easily it could fall apart.

“If one person gets [the virus],” Apstein suggests, “he or she will begin spreading it immediately, so everyone will have to continue practicing social distancing. That probably means using a new ball for each play. It probably means seating players in stands rather than on benches or in dugouts. It certainly means banning high-fives.”

But there’s more.

“If a player needs treatment by outside medical personnel, even just for a sprained ankle, he or she has left the secure area and will need to isolate for 14 days before returning to it. And, of course, medical resources need to be abundant enough that society can afford to have ambulances and EMTs on call for games, plus doctors and nurses—clad in currently-scarce protective equipment—who can tend to sports injuries.”

And that’s just for the three hours it takes to play a game. Once the players are driven back to their hotels- in buses whose drivers would also have to agree to be similarly isolated through all of this- there are 165 other hours each week where each and every NFL player would have to live under the kind of microscope that not even Dallas Cowboys are subject to.

“And then once they are back in their rooms,” the SI article continues, “every person involved will have to follow rules. You can’t take your kids to the park. You can’t run to the grocery store. You can’t invite your Bumble match up to your room. These are humans, so the leagues would surely require insurance: That means security personnel (another group that would need to isolate) or invasive cell phone tracking (good luck getting that by the players’ union). If your wife gives birth or your father dies of cancer and you want to be there, that’s another 14-day reentry period.”

Remember, at any point during the entire five months of this laborious, exhausting, and surreal exercise, the whole delicate bubble pops at the slightest disruption.

“What if the person delivering groceries to the biodome walks by someone who coughs on the lettuce and a week later, a player tests positive? Is there an option other than shutting down the whole operation for 14 days?”

Carl Bergstrom, an infectious diseases expert at the University of Washington, offers a blunt answer to Apstein’s hypothetical.

“No,” he says.

“And that’s really the end of the conversation,” Apstein maintains. “Even if we can start this, we almost certainly can’t finish it.”

It’s a fascinating brain game, perhaps, to think about the logistics of housing an entire football season for 32 teams in one city’s stadiums. Thousands upon thousands of tiny details and average-sized what-ifs and gargantuan sacrifices would have to line up just right, though, to even conceive of actually doing it. And it would take the most random thing ever- literally, one person coughing wrong- to butterfly-effect the whole enterprise into a million disastrous pieces. Just so the owners don’t have to give back advertising dollars. Just so football fans still banned from large gatherings in real-life can sit alone in their man caves and pretend to feel normal for three hours on a Sunday in October while Joe Buck and Troy Aikman dissect Xs and Os. Just so the games can be played.

Yes, the NFL probably could build a bubble city.

But it might not survive watching it burst.

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