Tony Pollard punches it in for a TD on long first Cowboys drive

The Cowboys needed a big first drive and they got it. RB Tony Pollard finished it with a jet sweep touchdown to give Dallas an early lead. | From @CDBurnett7

With a long list of defensive starters out for the Cowboys, the offense needed to start strong with Justin Herbert and the Chargers offense licking their chops. Dallas received the ball after Los Angeles deferred and offensive coordinator Kellen Moore picked up right where he left off in Tampa Bay.

After running the ball on a rare occasion in Week 1, running backs Ezekiel Elliott and Tony Pollard combined for nine carries on the first drive and helped move down the field and chew almost seven minutes off the clock. After a pair of big catches by tight end Blake Jarwin and wide receiver Amari Cooper, Pollard punched it in to the endzone on a jet sweep for the first score of the game.

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Quarterback Dak Prescott was 5-for-6 on the first drive and right tackle Terence Steele did a good job of limiting pass-rusher Joey Bosa. After a strong first drive for the offense, the Dallas defense gets to work with a 7-0 lead.

Donovan Wilson out, Damontae Kazee to play as Cowboys-Chargers Week 2 inactives announced

The Cowboys are without a multitude of starters on the inactive list while Los Angeles will be without a pair of veteran starters. | From @CDBurnett7

The Dallas Cowboys have seen their fair sure of injuries, suspensions and then some after their Week 1 loss to the Buccaneers. Defensive end Demarcus Lawrence is out for six to eight weeks with a broken foot and while he’s part of an important group of players on the IR, Dallas will be without a multitude of starters on the field against Los Angeles. Just four of those missing for the Cowboys are inactives, though.

Offensive tackles La’el Collins (suspension) and Ty Nsekhe (illness) are both out for the matchup and backup Terence Steele will have his hands full in the role, taking on standout pass-rusher Joey Bosa. New reserve quarterback Will Grier is inactive for Sunday, setting up quarterback Cooper Rush as the backup.

Safety Donovan Wilson (groin) will be missed in the secondary while safety Damontae Kazee is active after being on the injury report during the week. Without both starting defensive ends, backup Chauncey Golston was expected to make his Cowboys’ debut but is inactive for the game. Thankfully for Dallas, Los Angeles offensive tackle Bryan Bulaga was moved to the injured reserve, so the pass rushers should have an easier time. For the defensive backfield, safeties Malik Hooker and Israel Mukuamu bring much-needed reinforcement in the absence of Wilson.

The Chargers are also without cornerback Chris Harris Jr. after the Cowboys targeted the backup cornerbacks in Week 1. Offensive coordinator Kellen Moore should find the holes and let the offense attack them. Starting defensive end Justin Jones is also out for Los Angeles, so the focus will likely be on Bosa in pass protection.

For a pair of playoff hopefuls, this game will be missing a strong list of starters, especially for Dallas.

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Zack Martin, Cowboys coaches ‘confident in whatever combination’s out there’ at O-line

Jerry Jones picked his guy on the radio and Mike McCarthy is noncommittal, but Zack Martin says he’s not playing right tackle on Sunday. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Two games into the 2021 schedule, and the Cowboys will already be on their second different roll call along the offensive line, continuing a theme from the injury-plagued 2020 campaign.

Right guard Zack Martin’s absence for the season opener threw a one-game wrench into the club’s plans. The looming five-game suspension of La’el Collins threatens to derail things for much longer. While some assumed that Martin’s return from the COVID list would signal his move to right tackle- a swap the team made last year- the perennial All-Pro clearly would prefer to stay put this time around.

“I think that was different circumstances last year,” Martin told reporters this week. “I play right guard and that’s what I’m going to do.”

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones was leaning that way as well when he went on Dallas radio station 105.3 The Fan on Tuesday and announced that Terence Steele would step in at right tackle, allowing Martin to play his usual guard slot.

“You talk about position flex in the offensive line,” Jones said, “but when you make a move [like moving Martin to tackle], you’re dealing with two people at different positions rather than just one new one in there.”

Head coach Mike McCarthy was not nearly as committed- at least publicly- to naming his offensive line starters, stating on Wednesday that there was still work to be done on that front.

“I’ll just say this about the right tackle,” McCarthy said in response to Jones’s on-air declaration, “we’ll work all the combinations we’ve been working to this point. I mean, the obvious is L.C. [Collins] will not be there. We’ll sort it out at the end of the week.”

Ty Nsekhe would appear to be the other backup lineman possibly in the mix at the tackle position. Having healthy tackles on the bench to even pick from is a luxury the Cowboys didn’t have when Martin slid over to start Weeks 11 and 12.

“Well, last year, we had about six tackles down,” according to Martin. “That was the biggest difference.”

Now there are two capable tackles healthy and waiting in the wings.

And while second-year man Steele struggled in his rookie season after being pressed into service, McCarthy says he’s seen quantum leaps in his game.

“I would say he improved in every area,” the coach explained during his Wednesday press conference. “Coming off his experience last year, he just really needed to and committed to the weight room. So he’s a lot stronger. He does everything the same way every day. I just came from the training room before I came in here, and Zack Martin comes in there and gets taped at the same time every day. Terence Steele comes right after him, same time every day. I was just talking to the trainers about it because they’re always in tune with the veterans helping the rookies. I made the point to them, ‘If I was a young offensive lineman, I’d follow Zack Martin around all day, too.’ So that’s the kind of guy Terence Steele is.”

Steele does seem to have the upper hand over Nsekhe for the start in Los Angeles. Thursday morning, McCarthy was still raving about his offseason improvement. And the coach admits that Steele getting playing time next to Martin last year would help the coaching staff feel better about the undrafted free agent out of Texas Tech taking the field this week.

“It gives you a lot of comfort,” McCarthy told media members. “Experience, you can’t buy that. His experience last year, for a rookie, was tremendous. I think not only the experience that he had last year, but the energy that he took into the offseason and what he did in the offseason. Terence is clearly probably one of our most improved. He’s definitely one of the players that – from his rookie year to his second year- we’ll be using as an example, because he’s done a tremendous job preparing for his second year.”

But still no definitive word on who would take the field against the Chargers. Part of that may be deliberate subterfuge as the line prepares to face one of the league’s premiere pass rushers. Why not keep Joey Bosa guessing as long as possible?

“High motor,” Martin said of the third overall pick of 2016’s draft. “Has every move in the book. You’ve got to be on your A-game. Obviously, he’s a point of emphasis.”

With the Cowboys and Chargers playing each other so infrequently, Martin hasn’t been able to give his younger teammates much in the way of a scouting report, saying they’ve all relied on tape to study how to defend the three-time Pro Bowler.

“He’s very skilled,” Martin elaborated. “I think his get-off is kind of what gets guys in trouble. He’s off the ball so fast that you’re playing catch-up from the initial snap, so the big thing is using the cadence to our advantage; we know when we’re starting the play. And then obviously getting to your spot and going to work from there.”

But it’s not just Bosa. Martin knows the Chargers defense as a whole will provide challenges for whoever the Cowboys’ front five turns out to be.

“Obviously, we all know about 97. He’s kind of their bell cow up front, but they’ve just got a really sound defense that plays extremely hard. It’s going to be a big challenge for us. They have a lot of different fronts and variations, stuff that we haven’t seen. We don’t play them very much, so it will be a big challenge for us to communicate and get on the same page and be able to execute.”

Of course, getting on the same page seems like it would be easier once the Cowboys figure out who the names on the page will be. But Martin says he’s not concerned about who lines up on either side of him on Sunday.

“I’ve played next to, obviously, [center] Tyler [Biadasz] and Terence and gotten a ton of reps with Ty during camp,” Martin explained, “so I’m confident in whatever combination’s out there, that we can get the job done and really thrive.”

Even if that combination involves a last-minute change of heart for the Dallas coaches and a last-minute change of position for Martin?

“Listen, I’m open to do whatever they need me to do but, um… yeah.”

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How to watch, wager, live stream, listen to the Cowboys-Chargers Week 2

How to watch the Cowboys at Chargers game including on tv, satellite radio, or streaming. Also the odds and over/under on the game. | From @CDPiglet

The Dallas Cowboys headed into Week 1 of the NFL season as the biggest underdogs in the league. Despite losing the game, the consensus from fans and analysts alike was the team came out looking better than what people thought they would. The Cowboys outplayed the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in almost every way possible. They had more total yards, won the turnover and time of possession battle, and were better on third-down conversions. The only area Tampa Bay out performed Dallas was a big one though, in the red zone. The Cowboys could’ve, and probably should’ve beat the defending Super Bowl champions in their house.

In the days since the game, news hasn’t been on the side of the Cowboys. While their all-pro right guard Zack Martin is returning from the COVID-19 list, Randy Gregory ends up going on it, and is now in question for Sunday’s game. Demarcus Lawerence broke his foot making it likely both top edge rushers will miss the game. Michael Gallup was diagnosed with a groin injury, and will be on IR for three to five weeks. La’el Collins being suspended five games, pending appeal, guarantees that once again Dak Prescott will not line up behind his full starting five offensive lineman for the next five games minimum.

The Cowboys offense seems equipped enough to handle the loss of Gallup. Not only do they have receiver depth like Cedric Wilson, and Noah Brown to lean on, but they can run more two tight end sets with Blake Jarwin and Dalton Schultz, or two running back sets with Ezekiel Elliott and Tony Pollard. The loss of Collins is much more troubling though.

Owner Jerry Jones said in an interview with @105.3thefan the plan is for Terence Steele to start at right tackle in place of Collins. Mike McCarthy left the door open for other options, but if it ends up being Steele, he started 14 games last year at right tackle and preformed poorly.

Pro Football Focus gave him a grade of only 50.3 in 970 offensive snaps which ranked him 70th amongst qualifying offensive tackles. That’s not ideal when the franchise quarterback is coming off of a major injury and the Chargers will line up Joey Bosa opposite Steele all game. Ty Nsekhe is another options to replace Collins; right guard Zack Martin is not.

On defense the possible loss of Gregory to COVID-19 protocols and the injury to Lawerence will make an already tough task, even tougher. The rebuilt Chargers OL already held the formidable Washington Football Team’s pass rush to only two sacks. They completely shut out  second-year star Chase Young to not only zero sacks, but not even a single pressure. The Cowboys will have to find away to get to Justin Herbert with their back up edge rushers and keep the Chargers from going for a 74% conversion rate on third down. Getting off the field on third down will be a big key to the Cowboys success on Sunday.

Here’s how fans can watch, listen to, and bet on Sunday’s game.

Initial Injury Report: Cowboys-Chargers missing several key pieces as Week 2 tilt nears

DE Lawrence’s broken foot headlines, but are the Chargers in danger of missing both safeties against the shorthanded Cowboys? The first Week 2 practice report. | From @CDBurnett7

In the first game of the 2021 season, the Dallas Cowboys saw wide receiver Michael Gallup leave with a calf strain and safety Damontae Kazee was poked in the eye. It took just one game for the Cowboys to lose a large impact starter and right tackle Lael Collins is now suspended for five games, adding to the absences.

Heading towards a second-straight road game, this time against the Los Angeles Chargers on Sunday, Dallas needs to be as healthy as possible. Wednesday was not a good day in that regard. DeMarcus Lawrence, the team’s best defensive payer, is the big name on Wednesday’s injury report after breaking his foot and is now out indefinitely.

Safety Donovan Wilson is dealing with a nagging groin injury and going against Justin Herbert and the Chargers offense, Dallas needs to have their best veteran talent on the field come Sunday. Defensive end Chauncey Golston is back as a full participant, which is a good sight after dealing with injuries since he was drafted by the Cowboys.

Rookie cornerback Nahshon Wright also missed practice for personal reasons but should be a full-go for Sunday.

Lawrence had a strong season debut with a team-high 91.4 PFF grade with five quarterback pressures alongside the highest run-defense grade of Week 1 at 96.3.

Lawrence’s injury has even more importance with opposite defensive end Randy Gregory being on the COVID/reserve list after testing positive on Monday. If both of Dallas’ best edge defenders are out, Herbert could have a field day similar to that of Tom Brady in Week 1.

For the Chargers, there is also a list of starters who could be hampered or even out for the tilt with the Cowboys.

Five of the Chargers’ defensive starters are on the injury report, with all but one not participating in practice on Wednesday. In the secondary, both safeties missed practice and Derwin James Jr. is one of the biggest playmakers on Los Angeles’ defense, making seven tackles in Week 1 after missing all of the 2020 season due to injury.

The Cowboys’ offense has plenty of weapons even with Gallup on returnable-IR and will likely target the backups after offensive coordinator Kellen Moore made it a focus against Tampa Bay.

Chargers’ starting right tackle Bryan Bulaga also missed practice but the potential impact of his absence is numbed by Lawrence’s injury. The pass rush against Herbert will be integral in Dallas’ success on Sunday and both teams could be without a multitude of starters for the matchup.

Cowboys coaches say practicing against Dak preps defense for Chargers QB Justin Herbert

Defensive coordinator Dan Quinn likens Herbert’s skill set to that of the Cowboys QB, meaning the Dallas D could be in for a tiring day. | From @ToddBrock24f7

The Cowboys squared off last week against the oldest quarterback in the league. In Week 2, they’ll do battle with a passer at the other end of the spectrum.

The Chargers’ Justin Herbert was the youngest signal-caller in the NFL last season; he didn’t turn 23 until March of this year. And while 2021 newbies like Trevor Lawrence, Justin Fields, Trey Lance, and Zach Wilson now have Herbert beat in the youth department, his 15 NFL starts last season have the defending Rookie of the Year playing like a seasoned pro.

The rocket-armed Oregon product will pose a whole different kind of threat to the Cowboys than Tom Brady did on opening night, but Dallas defensive coordinator Dan Quinn thinks his unit may be better prepared to contain Herbert than most, based on who his players see in practice every day.

“Outside the pocket,” Quinn told reporters this week, “this is a player that can really create on the move, much like Dak does where he gets outside, and now he can rip the ball down the field.”

And when Herbert goes off-script, just as when Prescott does it, things can get especially tricky for a defense.

“When you have a player who can do that, it’s almost like defending two plays,” Quinn explained. “Here’s the first play: the quarterback’s in the pocket on a passing play. The second play? Outside the pocket. And that’s when plays get extended four, five, six, seven seconds. He’s got the arm strength to deliver it all the way here, to all the way back over to the other side.”

When Herbert gets flushed, he’s still looking to throw. He was credited with 55 rushing attempts last year and racked up 234 yards (a 4.3-yard-per carry average), but still ended 2020 as the NFL’s fourth-best quarterback in passing yards per game, with 289.1 (trailing only Mahomes, Watson, and Brady).

Last week on the road against a highly-touted Washington defense, Herbert went 31-for-47 and 337 yards through the air, tossing one touchdown and one interception. Of the Chargers’ total offensive plays; just 37% were runs. Herbert guided an attack that threw the ball on 20 of their 27 first down plays. Those numbers will feel familiar to a Cowboys defense that saw a similar approach from Brady and the Bucs.

It’s also not far off from the way Prescott operates, either on Sundays or in practice. So practicing against Prescott may well give the defense a good taste of what to expect from Herbert.

“I’d say the number one that jumps out to me is the aggressiveness in the way they play. They’re very decisive,” Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy said in comparing the two passers Wednesday. “They can play both in the pocket and out of the pocket, extend plays, make throws, and, frankly, they both play with a lot of confidence.”

If heat and humidity were a factor in Tampa, with several Cowboys defenders looking gassed by the fourth quarter, they’ll get no chance to ease up when they face Herbert in Los Angeles. And they’ll undoubtedly have to respect his legs while still guarding against his howitzer arm.

“Does the passer look to run, or does he remain a passer?” Quinn asked rhetorically. “This is one that remains a passer. He certainly has the speed that he can run it, but the big plays that happen with guys like a Dak or a Russell Wilson, they get outside the pocket and can rip. And he has that kind of arm strength and the kind of athleticism to do that. So we’ve got to defend plays longer when you’re defending a quarterback like that.”

Like defending two plays, Quinn said. The Chargers’ offense took 78 snaps in Week 1. That means the Cowboys defense needs to gear up for the equivalent of 156 plays.

From a quarterback who reminds the coaches of their own next-level superstar.

This California trip will be no day at the beach.

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