Cowboys secondary takes further hit; Brown and Wilson to miss Week 13

Dallas’s already-depleted DB unit will now face the Ravens’ high-octane offense minus cornerback Anthony Brown and safety Donovan Wilson.

Secondary depth has been a major concern for the Cowboys all season long. It continues to be a problem even as the 2020 campaign limps to a close.

Cornerback Anthony Brown and safety Donovan Wilson will now miss the team’s Tuesday night meeting with the Baltimore Ravens. Both players had been listed as questionable on Saturday’s injury report.

For Brown, it will be his second straight absence due to a rib injury. Wilson suffered a groin injury on Thanksgiving Day against Washington and has not practiced all week.

Also on Monday, the club brought cornerbacks Deante Burton and Rashard Robinson from the practice squad to the active roster as depth; Darian Thompson should start at safety versus the Ravens.

Cowboys fans have eagerly awaited the debut of rookie defensive back Reggie Robinson; no word yet on whether this latest rash of injuries in the secondary will open the door for the versatile Tulsa product to finally see the field.

Brown signed a new contract with the Cowboys back in March. The Purdue alum suffered a rib injury in the season opener against the Rams and missed the next three games during a stint on IR.

Wilson has enjoyed an increased role this season and made the most of the opportunity. He forced and recovered a fumble versus Philadelphia in Week 8, and then forced a pair of fumbles, recovering one, in the Week 11 win over Minnesota.

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Ravens’ Lamar Jackson expected to play vs Cowboys

The Dallas Cowboys have been preparing as if they’ll face Lamar Jackson when they take on the Baltimore Ravens on Tuesday night. That appears to be the reality as the reigning MVP seems good to go for Week 13 following being placed on the COVID-19 …

The Dallas Cowboys have been preparing as if they’ll face Lamar Jackson when they take on the Baltimore Ravens on Tuesday night. That appears to be the reality as the reigning MVP seems good to go for Week 13 following being placed on the COVID-19 list and missing his team’s Week 12 loss to the undefeated Pittsburgh Steelers.

NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport confirmed the reports on NFL GameDay Sunday morning.

The Cowboys (3-8) and Ravens (6-5) were supposed to play this past Thursday night, but the game was postponed in the wake of the Ravens and Steelers matchup being delayed almost an entire week due to a rampant outbreak of COVID-19 positive tests with the Ravens. That game was supposed to follow Dallas and Washington on Thanksgiving, but was pushed all the way to Wednesday night as the Ravens kept having new positive tests.

Now the teams will square off on Tuesday night after initially being delayed to Monday afternoon. The NFL gave that 4:00 p.m. Central slot to Washington and Pittsburgh.

The news means that former Cowboys’ star Dez Bryant will have a legitimate chance to score against his former team with Jackson at the helm.

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Cowboys expecting Lamar Jackson to play, Ravens won’t confirm or deny

The Cowboys are preparing to face the league’s MVP on Tuesday night, but the Ravens are giving no hints about their QB’s COVID status.

“I’m excited that we’re getting the game in, we’re getting a primetime game in, and it’s going to be a different date than normal, but I’m anxious to see how that works for that time of week.”

Those were the words of Cowboys owner Jerry Jones on Friday morning, speaking with 105.3 The Fan about the team’s upcoming appearance on a rare edition of Tuesday Night Football against the visiting Baltimore Ravens.

But as any football fan who’s been paying the slightest bit of attention can attest, four days out is way too early to count on much of anything… and the health of the Ravens’ players is the biggest X-factor in the league these days.

Baltimore played Pittsburgh on Wednesday afternoon- a game that had originally been scheduled for six days earlier- with a whopping 17 of their players on the Reserve/COVID-19 list, including the league’s reigning MVP, quarterback Lamar Jackson.

“Knock on wood, we’re in good shape relative to the COVID,” Jones said of the Cowboys’ own state of readiness. “Where we are as we speak this morning, we’re in great shape. We all know that the Ravens have been having to make a lot of adjustments; they did play the other day. I don’t have notation here of anything that is, let’s say, accelerated regarding them, but I don’t know about their detail.”

If the Ravens themselves even know who they’ll have available to put on the field at AT&T Stadium, they’re not letting on.

According to Jonas Shaffer of the Baltimore Sun:

“Among those also sidelined are running backs Mark Ingram II and J.K. Dobbins, fullback Patrick Ricard, and outside linebacker Pernell McPhee. Tight end Mark Andrews, wide receiver Willie Snead IV, and outside linebacker Matthew Judon all reportedly tested positive over the weekend, which means they’ll likely miss Tuesday’s game.”

Shaffer adds: “Guard Bradley Bozeman said after Wednesday’s loss, the Ravens’ third straight, that ‘a lot of guys had some symptoms.’ But he said he didn’t think anyone was ‘super sick or anything like that.'”

Ravens head coach John Harbaugh reiterated this week that all of the affected players are at the mercy of their COVID test results.

“They all have their different days when they’re possibly allowed to come back, but those are medical decisions, in the end, not coaching decisions,” Harbaugh said Thursday. “So when the doctors clear them to practice, that’s when we’ll have them.”

As for Jackson, who reportedly tested positive on Thanksgiving Day, his status for Tuesday’s contest- 12 days after the fact- remains a mystery. When asked about his starting quarterback and leading rusher specifically, Harbaugh was curt.

“I think I already answered that.”

The Cowboys are moving forward with their game prep under the assumption that Jackson will be ready to roll. So said Dallas coach Mike McCarthy in his Friday press conference.

Rescheduled games on odd days and at weird times. Stadiums with no fans. Players and coaches wearing surgical masks on the sidelines. Heck, the Broncos had to play an entire game with no quarterbacks at all.

So gearing up for a Tuesday night game that may or may not happen against a quarterback who may or may not play is just par for the course in 2020. But Jones says that this kind of uncertainty is, strangely, exactly what the sport is all about.

“We have an oblong football; it’s not round. You can’t really manage a lot which way the ball is going to go when it hits the ground. So you’ve got to be ready for it to go either way. Football is rarely canceled because of the elements. Football is rarely canceled because of injury. Football is a game of attrition, it’s a game of being played under unique conditions, and it’s a game of adjusting. It always has been.”

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News: Cowboys scout Ravens live, Post Malone flaunts ‘#1 Fan’ bling

Also, Dez Bryant’s imminent return to Dallas, which free agents are worth re-signing, and breaking down Randy Gregory’s techniques.

A surreal week in Dallas has hit the halfway mark. The Cowboys took advantage of the unusual opportunity to watch their next opponent play live, with more practices to go in which to adjust to what they saw. That comes as the team prepares to say its final farewell to a beloved member of the coaching staff, and as a fan favorite prepares to come back to town wearing enemy colors. Strange times, indeed.

But some are already looking ahead to next season, either forecasting the status of one of the team’s supposed strengths, making a case for which free agents are worth re-signing, or trying to speak into existence who the club should select with their first-round draft pick. There’s tape to break down on how Randy Gregory has come so far so fast in his football comeback, and words of wisdom from Dak Prescott to NFL rookies as he deals with a season cut short. There’s a mini-history lesson on Wednesday football, a TV ratings win for America’s Team, and a bit of celebrity news as a rap star puts his Cowboys fandom on full display with a pricey pendant. Here’s the News and Notes.

Tuesday Night Football: Cowboys-Ravens Week 13 tilt shifts again due to COVID

The Dallas Cowboys came out of their Week 9 bye week with aggression and confidence. With two weeks to prepare, they bubbled up, defeated the Minnesota Vikings and hoped to have turned their season around. Four days later, those hopes came crashing …

The Dallas Cowboys came out of their Week 9 bye week with aggression and confidence. With two weeks to prepare, they bubbled up, defeated the Minnesota Vikings and hoped to have turned their season around. Four days later, those hopes came crashing down to earth on Thanksgiving when they were blitzkrieged by the Washington Football Team to drop to 3-8 on the season.

They were scheduled to be able to lick their wounds and try and bounce back a week later, as is their recent November tradition with back-to-back Thursday games. Their next opponent though, the Baltimore Ravens, have been undergoing a COVID-19 crisis and the schedule has been set on it’s head. The Ravens and Pittsburgh Steelers were supposed to follow Dallas-Washington, but have now been postponed three times. Of course, that’s had an impact on the Cowboys-Ravens matchup. First moved to the afternoon of Monday, December 7, it has once again shifted to a Tuesday night affair.

First Baltimore-Pittsburgh was pushed to Sunday. Then they were postponed to Tuesday. As the positive test results continue to come in, the game has once again been pushed back, this time to Wednesday.

So the Cowboys now have basically a second full bye week as they’ll be going 12 days in between contests. Dallas, like other teams during this season, have had their schedule turned upside down due to another team’s inadequate approach to the safety regulations. Baltimore traced their outbreak to a strength and conditioning coach who didn’t report his symptoms and was maskless in the facility.

The list of their players who have tested positive is extensive and star-studded. QB Lamar Jackson and top running backs Mark Ingram and rookie J.K. Dobbins are among multiple dozens of sidelined players and coaches. Their status for the Week 13 game against the Cowboys is up in the air.

Dallas has had their own run-ins with COVID-19, but nowhere to the impact of other teams. This weekend, the Denver Broncos were forced to start a practice squad rookie wide receiver at QB after that entire room was quarantined due to not following safety protocols.

As of now, there’s been no adjustment of Dallas’ Week 14 game, when they travel to Cincinnati, now on just four days rest (after a night game) for a noon CT kickoff.

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Cowboys-Ravens game pushed to December 7 due to COVID outbreak

The Baltimore Ravens have had a spike in COVID cases lately. This forced the NFL to push back their Week 13

The Cowboys are coming off of an embarrassing 41-16 loss to the Washington Football Team on Thanksgiving. They were set to have another Thursday game with the Baltimore Ravens next week, but those plans have now been altered.

The Ravens have had a spike in COVID cases following their Week 11 game. At least a dozen players and staff members have all tested positive for the virus which has forced the NFL to push back their Week 12 matchup with the Pittsburgh Steelers again from this Sunday to Tuesday after they were set to square off Thursday. Now, it has also rescheduled their showdown with the Cowboys to December 7.

The Cowboys have been affected by COVID as well lately, just not to the level of the Ravens. Quarterback Andy Dalton and defensive lineman Tyrone Crawford were both placed on the reserve/COVID-19 list earlier this month before being added back to the active roster on November 18. Even running back Ezekiel Elliott had his battle with the virus during the summer.

This gives America’s Team four extra days to prepare for the Ravens and try to salvage what’s left of the 2020 season, which from the looks of things won’t be a whole lot.

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