Cowboys News: 2 coach-QB duos for the ages, Cooper’s WR ranking

Dallas Cowboys news and notes for July 10, 2020.

The Dallas Cowboys have had on the most dramatic offseason in the league with regards to personnel changes. A mostly-new coaching staff has brought in a number of new faces, especially along the defensive front. What level of performance should be expected in Mike Nolan’s new scheme? Kellen Moore, one of the few retentions, has a lot of positives to build on from his first season calling plays, including his encouraging use of analytics in the game-plan.

The Cowboys rich history is full of many accolades and accomplishments. In a ranking of the greatest Coach-Quarterback duo’s ever, Dallas managed to be the only team with two different pairings in the top-10. You may be able to guess the duo’s, but continue reading to find out where he landed in the ranking. Drew Pearson remains on the biggest Hall of Fame snubs in the league, and Amari Cooper is graded as one of the best wide receivers in the league today.

Position Breakdown: Defensive Tackles :: The Mothership

Defensive tackle, along with cornerback, is littered with fresh faces on the roster. Neville Gallimore is a promising prospect, Trysten Hill should improve in year two, and Gerald McCoy and Dontari Poe are a force that the Dallas defense has lacked in recent years. All aspects of the position discussed on this Cowboys positional breakdown.


Ranking NFL Offenses By Analytics Usage :: Rotoworld

Analytics in sports are an ever-increasing presence and can be used to benefit teams in a multitude of ways. Hayden Winks from Rotoworld dove deep into the analytics each offense used last year, and you might be surprised where the Cowboys rank in a number of the categories.


NFL’s 20 greatest coach-quarterback duos: Andy Reid, Patrick Mahomes looking to join list :: CBS Sports

Throughout the years the NFL has had many great Coach-Quarterback tandem’s, but two of the top-10 combinations in history helped to grow the Cowboys fanbase into what it is today. Continue reading on CBS Sports to find out where the duo’s of Troy Aikman and Jimmy Johnson, and Roger Staubach and Tom Landry, stand in the all-time ranks.



Brian Westbrook: There’s no reason why the Cowboys can’t be successful running and throwing the football :: FOX Sports

Former Eagles’ running back Brian Westbrook had some high praise for the Dallas offense. Hear him explain first hand how the Cowboys can continue to put up points in the upcoming season.


Dallas Cowboys: Who do you got in ‘The Battle of the Connors?’ :: FanSided

There is an assumed battle for left guard as the Cowboys enter July’s training camp. It could be Connor Williams, or Connor McGovern.


Best routes for rookie NFL wide receivers: Why CeeDee Lamb’s out, Brandon Aiyuk’s screen are unstoppable :: ESPN

With Amari Cooper and Michael Gallup running their deeper routes on the outside of the 2020 Cowboys offense, this should leave plenty of room for rookie wide receiver Cee Dee Lamb to run his favorite and most effect route, the out, underneath.



What are the Best- and Worst-Case Scenarios for the 2020 Cowboys? :: Inside The Star

The Cowboys can finish 6-10 in 2020, or, they can finish 11-5. This is the definition of two opposite extremes. Find out how they finish with these complete opposite records for this upcoming season.


Every NFL team’s best player who is not enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, yet :: CBS Sports

The Cowboys have a long-list of deserving players for the Hall of Fame, but Drew Pearson, wide receiver on the 1970’s NFL All Decade team, remains the biggest Dallas snub to-date.


Ranking the NFL’s best wide receivers for 2020: Execs, players, coaches debate the top 10 :: ESPN+

ESPN is compiling rankings from NFL players, coaches, and front office members. Ezekiel Elliott was the third running back, and Dak Prescott was top 10 as well. Amari Cooper completed the trio, ranking tenth in the NFL at one of the most loaded positions in the league.


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CBS Sports names Connor Williams key homegrown talent for Cowboys

Former Longhorn Connor Williams finds himself in a position battle in 2020. CBS Sports calls him a key homegrown talent for the Cowboys.

National NFL writer for CBS Sports, Patrik Walker recently laid out a key homegrown talent for every NFC East team. For the Dallas Cowboys it was former Texas Longhorn Connor Williams. Until the ACL tear, Williams was the starting left guard in between Tyron Smith and Travis Frederick. With Frederick now retired and Williams coming off the injury, there are two spots up for grabs under first-year head coach Mike McCarthy.

The former second-round pick finds himself entering Year 3 with arguably more questions surrounding him than ever before. His rookie season was one that showed promise but also inconsistency that led to the former Longhorn packing on muscle and building strength for Year 2, where he began to show what he’s capable of before battling two separate knee ailments — one requiring arthroscopic surgery (the second of as many seasons) before returning and tearing his ACL that landed him on injured reserve.

He’ll enter 2020 looking to not only bounce back from the latter, but it’ll also be the second season of his young NFL career wherein he won’t have the tutelage of perennial All-Pro center Travis Frederick to the right of him, by virtue of Frederick retiring this offseason. So as he battles second-year talent Connor McGovern — who returns from a redshirt rookie season and will also be test driven at center — at an all-important position, the name of the game for the born-and-bred Texan will be to take the next step in his promising career and to remain healthy while doing it. – Walker on Williams being a key for the Cowboys

Williams will find himself in a position battle when training camp opens up in Frisco, Texas. It will be key for him to take a hold of the left guard spot where he has spent his entire NFL career, so the team can focus on just who will man the all-important center position for the Cowboys in 2020 and beyond.

What would an NFL offense look like comprised of only Texas Longhorns?

The Texas Longhorns have produced a plethora of offensive talent over the years. So what would an offense of only Longhorns look like?

The Texas Longhorns have provided plenty of NFL talent over the years, but a large portion of that talent came during the Mack Brown era. It wasn’t just Brown that produced NFL talent, as the first Longhorn ever drafted dates all the way back to 1938 when Hugh Wolfe was selected by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the third round.  Other big names include Bobby Layne, Tom Landry, Tommy Nobis, Earl Campbell, Ricky Williams, Vince Young and many more.

Manny Rubio-USA TODAY Sports

Given the amount of Longhorns that have made the jump to the NFL and AFL, we were curious what an offense of former Texas players would look like in the NFL today. We used players from the XFL as well to fill out the starters. So let’s get started with the quarterback.

Cowboys have configuration decisions galore on OL in 2020

What will the starting offensive line look like for the Cowboys in 2020?

For the past several seasons, the offensive line has been major strength for the Dallas Cowboys, perennially ranking among the league’s best. Dallas spent three first-round picks in four seasons on offensive linemen from 2011 through 2014, steadily collecting the pieces which provide the foundation for their offense.

Entering the 2020 season however, the OL unit is in a state of flux. The Cowboys currently have at least one starter’s role up for grabs after the retirement of Travis Frederick, and the group’s long-term outlook is unclear as well. Dallas has plenty of options to plug in, but who they roll out with the starters in Week 1 is anyone’s guess, having both on-field and ripple effects down the roster.

The core of the Cowboys’ offensive line returns strong, with entrenched starters LT Tyron Smith, RG Zack Martin and RT La’El Collins all returning. The center and left guard positions will be filled by either relatively young and unproven players, or career depth lineman stepping into starter’s roles. But the unit as a whole should be prepared to see the field, given how often Dallas has relied on their reserve linemen in recent years.

Training camp (whenever that may be) will decide a lot, as Mike McCarthy will attempt to field his five best linemen together. He inherits a crowded room, with not a lot of investment in anyone, except 2020 fourth round center Tyler Biadasz, and recent free agent signing Cam Erving. Given the prevalence of position flexibility among the options, and how willing these Cowboys are to move guys around, it wouldn’t be shocking to see Dallas get creative in filling the C and LG spots, along with the rest of the depth chart.

 

Option 1: LG Connor Williams, C Joe Looney

If McCarthy is looking to maintain the status quo, Connor Williams and Joe Looney will get the nods at the two OL openings. The soon-to-be 23-year-old Williams and 29-year-old Looney are the most tenured of the OL options, and Looney filled in for Frederick in 2018.

Williams, who played tackle at the University of Texas, is an intriguing prospect who’s missed time with injuries over his first two NFL seasons. Williams was utilized at LG under Jason Garrett, but is capable of playing essentially any position along the line, including center. Coming off a late-season ACL tear, his standing isn’t nearly as solidified as the established veterans, opening the door for someone else to step up and earn the LG position. But until McCarthy tips his hand regarding who he favors there, it’s at least Williams’ job to lose.

The center position figures to be the main training camp battle, as Looney is up against multiple viable candidates for the starter’s role.

Option 2: Tyler Biadasz starts at center

How soon will 2020 fourth rounder Tyler Biadasz be ready? The draft symmetry was almost too good to be true, with the Cowboys seemingly selecting another Wisconsin Badger to follow in Frederick’s footsteps. Viewed as one of the top college centers in the country, is it realistic to expect him to immediately step into the position at the NFL level?

It’s possible, but Biadasz faces competition in not just the veteran Looney, but another Big Ten offensive lineman aiming to make his professional debut.

Option 3: The Two Connors

After being drafted in the third round of the 2019 NFL draft (90th overall), Connor McGovern missed the entirety of last season due to a pectoral injury. Now healthy, he’ll at least be a factor in how the OL unit is evaluated, and also possesses some intriguing traits as a player. McGovern started 13 games at center during his final year at Penn State. His 2019 NFL draft profile read:

“Reliable run blocker with NFL-ready size and strength but exploitable holes in his pass sets that need to be addressed as quickly as possible. His starting experience at both center and guard could bring additional interest in McGovern, who would be a bigger, stronger option at center for teams facing odd-front power in their division. He is a good fit in gap and inside-zone run schemes, but his tendency to over-set in pass protection could be challenging to correct. He’s an early starter as a Day 2 pick, but Year 1 could have ups and downs.”

Regardless of who gets first crack at the starting center role, the other players represent key depth who still could likely eventually see the field in another capacity. The flexibility of players like Williams, McGovern, Brandon Knight, Erving and even Joe Looney (started Week 17 last year at LG) make things extremely fluid within the unit.

Training camp could shake out in a way that leaves Williams playing the swing tackle role, in a move that could keep him healthier, and allow him other opportunities at positions as well.

Option 4: LG McGovern/Knight, C Biadasz/Looney

Depending on who emerges from training camp, moving from Williams from starting LG to key Swiss-Army style OL depth could actually make the team stronger and better positioned to absorb injuries down the road. If a particular LG-center pairing excels in the preseason, Dallas could at least enter the regular season with it, and go from there. With as much transition as there’s been within the Cowboys this season, the team obviously isn’t closing itself off to anything.

Regardless, the extremely healthy OL competition for starter’s snaps is a good problem to have. Dallas has done well to fortify the position and leave itself many possible options to sort through for the coming season. The opportunity is certainly there for someone to take it.


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Who have been the last 10 players drafted 50th overall?

Looking at the previous players that have been taken 50th overall, there are some encouraging picks but more that didn’t exactly pan out.

The Chicago Bears are without a first-round pick for the second straight season, but they do own a pair of second round picks at No. 43 and No. 50.

When considering the previous players that have been taken at 50th overall, there are some encouraging picks but more that didn’t exactly pan out.

Let’s take a look at the last 10 picks at No. 50.

2019: TE Irv Smith Jr., Vikings

Jake Roth-USA TODAY Sports

Following a solid preseason, rookie Irv Smith Jr. was gradually worked into Minnesota’s offense. In 2019, Smith had 36 receptions for 311 yards and two touchdowns, which was more than any Bears tight end last season. The Vikings already have a really good tight end in Kyle Rudolph, so there hasn’t really been a rush with Smith. But with the loss of Stefan Diggs, Smith is expected to get more opportunities in Minnesota’s offense in 2020.

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Cowboys News: WR becomes feature draft discussion, 2020 win-total odds

Dallas Cowboys news for April 16, 2020. One week away from the NFL draft. Mock drafts are getting heavier and the Cowboys have options.

The 2020 NFL Draft is now less than a week away and NFL fans along with the media have reached their breaking point and have exhausted their last bit of patience. It’s almost here!

The mock drafts are kicking into overdrive as the internet is trying not to psyche themselves out of their own respective original thoughts. There are dozens of possibilities that the Dallas Cowboys can go with at pick 17 but the question remains if it would be the best fit. In today’s news the mothership hints at a possible wide receiver that has great upside and while NFL.com agrees with the position pick, the player selection is not the same. Stepping away from the draft for a second, Bleacher Report is saying the 2020 Cowboys are playoff bound with their over/under win total. Conor Williams is making strides towards a bigger and better version of himself as he recovers from his season ending knee injury.

Possible Pick: Higgins Offers Strong Possibilities :: The Mothership

Randall Cobb leaving Dallas left the Cowboys WR room barren after Cooper and Gallup. The Cowboys are linked to a number of potential WR targets in the draft. Clemson’s Tee Higgins would offer a skill set the Cowboys don’t currently have.


2020 Draft: 50+ prospects linked to Cowboys by virtual, in-person visits :: Cowboys Wire

An excellent source for Cowboys draft prospects, these players have interviewed with Dallas in one way or another. Who’s your favorite on the list?


Cowboys 2020 Draft: Daniel Jeremiah says Justin Jefferson would bring “firepower” to Dallas offense :: Blogging the Boys

NFL Network’s draft expert Daniel Jeremiah suggests another potential wide receiver target for the Cowboys. Jefferson is extremely versatile, and could line up in the slot or outside should the Cowboys upgrade their number three wide out.


Connor Williams recovery, progress now Cowboys most important OL factor in 2020 :: Cowboys Wire

Losing Travis Frederick to retirement means the rest of the Cowboys O-Line has to step up in 2020, starting with Connor Williams. Learn the latest about his recovery and who else could help out along the offensive line.


2020 NFL Odds: Brady’s Bucs at 9, Patriots at 8.5 and More Win Totals Revealed :: Bleacher Report

Preseason win totals are a fun way to project how competitive a team will be in the upcoming season. The Cowboys sit at 9.5 wins in this latest projection, with only a handful teams above them.




Who is better suited to play in the slot in Mike McCarthy’s system, Jon’vea Johnson or Cedrick Wilson? :: Blogging The Boys

Cowboys fans are debating if they should select a wide receiver with pick 17 in the 2020 NFL Draft. If they don’t, do they have someone on the current roster who can fill that void at slot receiver?



Dallas sits down with Alabama DE Terrell Lewis ahead of draft :: The CowboysWire

The Cowboys have to address losing defensive end Robert Quinn. With questions in the air about Randy Gregory and Aldon Smith, the Cowboys sit down with another possible replacement.

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Connor Williams recovery, progress now Cowboys most important OL factor in 2020

How well are the Cowboys prepared at the interior offensive linemen spots?

Connor Williams showed up at 2019 training camp bigger and bulkier than he looked as a rookie in 2018. The problem was, he wasn’t all that much better. The second-round pick out of Texas was clearly not strong enough when he entered the league. Anyone looking at him during his draft press conference could tell that he wasn’t yet filled out to where he will eventually end up and that facing the interior linemen of the NFL was going to be a bit of a problem for the Dallas Cowboys latest addition to the second iteration of the Great Wall of Dallas.

After showing up for 2019 noticeably bigger, an ACL tear ended Williams second campaign early, playing just 11 games. Now, with the sudden-to-the-public retirement of Travis Frederick, Williams’ recovery is paramount to the Cowboys continued offensive line success. His improvement is a necessity, too, because he’s the domino that sets in motion Dallas’ ability to still sport one of the leagues’ premiere OL units.

Best Laid Plans

If Williams is healthy, and better, than that allows second-year and redshirt interior OL Connor McGovern to compete at the center position. Drafted in the 2019 third round, McGovern was a center at Penn State for his sophomore season before moving back to guard in 2018. He is likely the heir apparent to Frederick’s throne that is currently on the roster, but if he has to play left guard because Williams isn’t recovered or isn’t very good, than the dominoes start falling.

Joe Looney substituted for Frederick the entire 2018 season. He physically fared ok, but the Cowboys clearly lost a lot of Frederick’s offensive line leadership. The ability of a center to relay what he’s reading from the defensive front and linebackers is paramount and is a great aid to quarterback Dak Prescott. Without it, the fifth-year QB bears more of the responsibility to do so, and although he’s started 64 of 64 games since coming into the league, that’s part of what makes long-time veterans so great.

QBs have a lot to process when at the line of scrimmage and if they know the line will see the same things they do out of a defensive pass rush, that means they can spend more time dissecting what the coverage is going to try to do to stop them. It wasn’t as heralded as the impact of Kellen Moore on the stale offense they’d been running, but having Frederick back to take that responsibility likely had a huge impact on Prescott’s progression in 2019.

Whether it be the veteran Looney or the redshirt rookie McGovern, Prescott will have to be able to manage that aspect better than he did as a third-year starter in 2018 when the Cowboys QB was sacked 58 times.

Sacks taken, fundamentally, is a quarterback stat and a scheme stat. When the play breaks down, quality quarterbacks who can see the rush develop know which direction to step to, up or side to side, whether the play can be salvaged or its best to take off and run. Indecision in this area leads to sacks. Ask David Carr.

But certainly there is an aspect of offensive line play and whether they can keep defenders off for at least 2.5 seconds, the benchmark of the pass block win rate metric. Dropping from 58 to 23 with the same quarterback but a different line general is noteworthy.

McGovern has more raw talent than Looney, but it’s unknown whether any of that will translate into a solid NFL career. Dallas normally hits on their offensive line draft evaluations, so it will be an interesting litmus test whether Will McClay’s picks of Williams and McGovern measure up. It’s a lot to ask for McGovern to mimic what Frederick brought to the table as far as defensive line scheme-and-stunt recognition though, which means even though he didn’t do so on Frederick’s level, Looney might be the best answer, simply from seeing it all before.

Current Depth Guys

Aside from Looney and McGovern, the Cowboys seem to have some faith in center/guard Adam Redmond. The team also has Cody Wichmann and Marcus Henry on the offseason roster.

Redmond (6-foot-6, 300 pounds) was a Colts UDFA in 2016 appearing in four games before spending time in the Bills and and Cowboys practice squads the next two seasons. Last year, he was inactive for 9 games and then placed on IR in November. He was an Exclusive Rights free agent who the team tendered in March.

Wichmann (6-foot-5, 319 pounds) has a year and a half of starting experience at guard, beginning in 2015 with the Rams, but has been on the Titans and Cowboys’ practice squads the next two years before hitting IR coming out of Cowboys camp in 2019. Henry stands 6-foot-2 and weighs 300 pounds. He was a UDFA out of Boise State in 2018 who latched on with Seattle.

Coach’s Decision

Of course, the elephant in the room is whether or not Mike McCarthy and new offensive line coach Joe Philbin want to change anything about how the offensive line is constructed. While Philbin has demonstrated flexibility, he still runs primarily the zone-blocking scheme that has become the staple in Dallas over the last decade. But what about the prototype interior lineman?

Here’s a look at all of the players at guard or center who was drafted during McCarthy’s tenure in Green Bay. The two centers both hovered near 6-foot-3 and 300 pounds, while the guard ranged between 300 and 330 pounds.

Both Williams and McGovern stand 6-foot-5, which is the high-end of players McCarthy have drafted. Looney is a bit heavier than the centers McCarthy has, coming into the league at 315 eight years ago and proudly promoting his girth in his famously funny Ezekiel Elliott impressions.

It will be interesting to see whether or not McCarthy wants to roll with what remains in the cupboard following Frederick’s retirement, or if interior lineman has shot up the needs board of the Cowboys. There are a handful of interesting centers in the draft, though the guard position is generally regarded as one of the weaker in recent years.

It’s highly unlikely that there’s a candidate chosen early enough to be an instant starter, considering the remaining needs elsewhere for the Cowboys.

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WATCH: Connor Williams delivers message during quarantine

Former Texas Longhorn and current Dallas Cowboys Connor Williams took to social media to share video on being positive during these times.

During this time of being quarantined it can be difficult to be very positive given how things have transpired in just a matter of weeks. Former Texas Longhorn’s offensive lineman and current Dallas Cowboy Connor Williams took to social media to give thanks and provide some positivity.

 

News: Cowboys finalize Poe’s terms, Connor Williams ahead of schedule

Plus, Dallas signs a new kicker, DeMarcus Lawrence may improve in 2020, Connor Williams is ahead of schedule, and Sean Lee on Dak Prescott.

The Cowboys have locked up the deal with their new defensive tackle and announced the signing of a new kicker. Talks with the starting quarterback are ongoing, but the veteran linebacker isn’t concerned. The special teams coordinator has a new approach, the young offensive lineman has a health update, and the superstar edge rusher may be in line for a bounceback season.

All that, plus scoop from the former cornerback, greetings from the new big man in the middle, and new fan gear honoring the retired center and his facial hair. Oh, and a bizarre threat issued to teams… from the league commissioner. That’s on deck in this edition of News and Notes.

Cowboys agree to terms with DT Dontari Poe :: The Mothership

Specific terms and financial figures took a while to be released, but the team has officially finalized their contract with defensive tackle Dontari Poe. All that’s left is his physical and for him to actually put pen to paper.


Sean Lee confident Cowboys will take care of Dak Prescott :: ProFootballTalk

The General says he and his Cowboys teammates have no reason to worry about whether Prescott will be there when offseason work starts. Lee tells SiriusXM NFL Radio that he believes owner Jerry Jones will “take care” of Prescott with a new contract.


Cowboys sign Pro Bowl kicker Greg Zuerlein :: Cowboys Wire

Kai Forbath will have some competition in camp this year, as the team has signed veteran kicker Greg “The Leg” Zuerlein to a three-year deal that will reunite him with Rams special teams coordinator John Fassel.


Cowboys positional review: How will John Fassel fix Dallas’s special teams unit? :: The Athletic

Take a deep dive into the so-called “third phase” of the game and check out what the coordinator of the best unit in the league plans to bring to Dallas. Like, for example, no playbooks.



Report: Cowboys have no plans to reduce Tyrone Crawford’s contract :: Blogging the Boys

Dollars-and-cents watchers have pointed out that Crawford currently locks up $8 million of salary cap money, but the club is apparently not looking at trimming that number. It may be the clearest indication yet that the team is counting on him to help anchor the right edge of the defensive line in 2020.


A key injury update from Connor Williams :: The Mothership

Offensive guard Connor Williams says he is ahead of schedule on his recovery from a torn ACL suffered on Thanksgiving Day. The second-round draft pick from 2018 credits recently-retired Travis Frederick with helping him transition from tackle to guard after going pro.


DeMarcus Lawrence biggest winner from Cowboys’ DT additions :: Inside the Star

While opposing quarterbacks should definitely be concerned about the Cowboys’ recent acquisitions of Gerald McCoy and Dontari Poe, what they may need to fear most is a direct cause-and-effect resurgence to DeMarcus Lawrence’s game.



Byron Jones: Dallas’s lack of interest had to do with CBs on roster, not money :: ProFootballTalk

The Cowboys let Pro Bowl cornerback Byron Jones leave because “they have a whole bunch of good corners on that team,” he says, refuting the theory held by some that the team simply couldn’t afford him due to other players’ megadeals.



Roger Goodell warns of ‘disciplinary action’ for public discussion of NFL Draft timing :: SI.com

The 2020 NFL Draft will go on as scheduled April 23-25, with the league saying that “there is no assurance that we can select a different date and be confident that conditions will be significantly more favorable than they are today.” The commissioner’s memo to teams also specifies that “public discussion of issues relating to the Draft serves no useful purpose and is grounds for disciplinary action.” Not a good look for the league here in the current climate.


Dallas football fans need this ‘Fredbeard Forever’ t-shirt :: The Landry Hat

A company called BreakingT is offering a limited-run ultra-soft t-shirt paying homage to new retiree Travis Frederick with some cool artwork showcasing Fredbeard’s glorious facial hair.

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Jerry Jones: Connor Williams on track to start week one

Jerry Jones provided an injury update for former UT player Connor Williams. He is expected be healthy for Week One of the 2020 season.

Dallas Cowboys owner/general manager was recently on SiriusXM talking about former Longhorns offensive lineman Connor Williams. The soon to be third-year guard only played 11 games this past season due to a torn ACL suffered against the Buffalo Bills on Thanksgiving.

Jones said Williams was 13 weeks removed from surgery on his knee. He added that the offensive lineman has even begun on-field exercises. Most importantly, Jones said Williams will be able to reach his goal of starting in Week One of the 2020 NFL season.

The offensive line has recently become an interesting unit for the Cowboys, with Travis Fredricks retiring this past week. With the center position now open, Dallas will have questions surrounding who will be playing where next season.

As for Williams, he played in 100% of the offensive snaps before suffering his injury against Buffalo. With the track he is on post-surgery, keeping that consistency at guard for the Cowboys will be crucial for a team about to pay their quarterback nearly $40 million.

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