Cowboys WR Cedrick Wilson nursing ankle injury, misses second straight practice

Cedrick Wilson suffered an ankle injury against the Las Vegas Raiders on Thanksgiving threatening his availability. | From @StarConscience

Wide receiver Cedrick Wilson had the second 100-yard game of his career against the Las Vegas Raiders on Thanksgiving, but it came at a price. Wilson suffered an ankle injury during the game and he was the only member of the Dallas Cowboys 53-man roster to miss practice on Monday. He followed that up with another absence on Tuesday making his availability for Thursday’s game against the New Orleans Saints in doubt.

Wilson stepped into the WR3 role once Michael Gallup suffered a calf injury in Week 1 against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. He’s fifth on the team in targets (44), fifth in receptions (30), fourth in yards (420), fourth in receiving touchdowns (3), and second in yards per catch (14.0) for the Cowboys this season. With Gallup returning to the lineup two weeks ago coupled and CeeDee Lamb (concussion) set to return from missing a week, Wilson and Amari Cooper are the standing question marks for now. If Cooper is activated from the COVID list, Wilson will resume his WR4 duties in which he’s as good as any receiver in the NFL at that spot when he himself is available.

The Cowboys signed Wilson to a one-year contract in April so he is playing for a possible new deal in 2022. His performance so far in 2021 is giving him a strong case to return to Dallas. With six games left, the Cowboys need him to continue to be productive as they look to wrap up the NFC East and a playoff birth in the coming weeks.

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Mike McCarthy confirms Dan Quinn will coach Cowboys from sideline vs Saints

Dan Quinn will be on the sideline, handling in-game decisions for the team as well as performing his DC duties in New Orleans. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Upon news breaking of Mike McCarthy’s positive COVID test Monday, speculation began immediately regarding who would step in and assume the Cowboys’ interim head coaching duties when Dallas travels to New Orleans to face the Saints on Thursday night.

Defensive coordinator Dan Quinn seemed to be the logical choice, given his recent five-plus-year stint as the head man in Atlanta and Super Bowl appearance on his resume. But longtime Packers player and staffer Rob Davis, hired by McCarthy in January 2020, has the “assistant head coach” title next to his name, seemingly designating him as the No. 2, despite no tangible coaching experience.

Both were named by various sources in Monday morning news reports as the likely candidate to fill in for McCarthy. Now McCarthy himself has spoken, confirming to USA Today Sports that Quinn will call the shots in Week 13, as per Jori Epstein.

Quinn, who normally coaches the defense from the booth, will be on the sideline Thursday night and retain his defensive coordinator role during the game.

“I think, understandably, with Dan’s experience, the challenge flag, the timeouts, the referees’ meeting, there’s just a lot of little things that go into it,” McCarthy told reporters via conference call Monday afternoon. “Number one, he’s done it before, so that’s obviously part of the thinking, part of the reason going through the change. He’s called a defense two years as the head coach. With that, I was trying to keep it as tight as I possibly can. Anytime you have one change, you don’t want to make 6 adjustments.”

Davis will handle administrative duties in McCarthy’s absence.

Before the news of his COVID test, McCarthy shared with Dallas radio station 105.3 The Fan that he had already relocated temporarily as an extra precaution following the holidays; the entire league has ramped up virus protocols at all team facilities.

“Our players have done an excellent job taking the extra step,” McCarthy told Shan and RJ early Monday morning. “Personally, I’ve moved into a hotel the last couple days. Our climate here is we’re doing the things necessary to give us the best chance each and every week.”

The entire coaching staff will undergo something of a shuffle for the time being. Offensive line coach Joe Philbin and assistant offensive line coach Jeff Blasko are out with COVID; tights end coach Lunda Wells has stepped in there. Offensive quality control coach Chase Haslett takes over the tight end group. Team consultant Ben McAdoo, a former coach, will take on extra responsibilities, too.

Offensive coordinator Kellen Moore and special teams coordinator John Fassel will continue leading their respective units.

McCarthy, who confirmed to USA Today that he is vaccinated, says he plans to be involved in the Cowboys’ game plan by leading virtual meetings this week, up until and including Thursday.

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Report: Rob Davis to handle Cowboys’ HC role; McCarthy to be virtually involved all week

Dan Quinn, John Fassel, and Ben McAdoo have all been head coaches at the NFL level; but Rob Davis will oversee things in Week 13.| From @ToddBrock24f7

Head coach Mike McCarthy has entered the league’s COVID-19 protocol. And while his positive test will keep him off the sidelines when the Cowboys take the field in New Orleans on Thursday night, the coach still plans to be involved with preparations leading up to the Week 13 game, including day-of meetings to be conducted virtually.

While the team has not officially announced a plan on who will do what with McCarthy out, there’s previous head coaching experience already in the building.

Although that should give the team some options as they move through the week, USA Today’s Jori Epstein reports that assistant coach Rob Davis “will assume head-coaching responsibilities in person, two people with knowledge of the Cowboys’ plan confirmed.”

Davis spent 11 seasons with Green Bay as a long snapper and then another ten as the Packers’ director of player development during McCarthy’s tenure. He was plucked from the private sector by McCarthy in January 2020 to assume the title of Cowboys’ assistant head coach.

Defensive coordinator Dan Quinn was a head coach as recently as last season and led the Falcons to a Super Bowl berth; WFAA’s Mike Leslie reported earlier that it was Quinn who was expected to assume head coaching responsibilities in McCarthy’s absence.

 

Offensive line coach Joe Philbin was the head man in Miami from 2012 until a month into the 2015 season; he acted as interim head coach in Green Bay when McCarthy was fired there in 2018. But Philbin was placed in COVID protocol just before the Thanksgiving Day game and had already been ruled out of the Saints trip, even before McCarthy’s positive test.

Special teams coordinator John Fassel served as the Rams’ interim head coach for a few games at the end of the 2016 season after the firing of Jeff Fisher.

Ben McAdoo, a consultant with the team who has been doing advance scouting of opponents and had been tapped to help fill in coaching the offensive line this week, was the Giants’ head coach in 2016 and for most of 2017.

Of course, offensive coordinator Kellen Moore interviewed for head coaching jobs in Philadelphia and at the college level at Boise State prior to the 2021 season. He is viewed as a top head coaching prospect and is expected to draw significant interest again this coming offseason.

It’s safe to say that the Cowboys will rely on every staffer listed here to do more than just the job they’re paid for as the team goes into triage mode entering the final six games of the regular season.

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Mike McCarthy tests positive for COVID-19, Cowboys HC out vs Saints

Defensive coordinator Dan Quinn is expected to assume head coaching duties Thursday night with several Cowboys assistants already out. | From @ToddBrock24f7

The Cowboys’ COVID-19 problem continues, and now it’s gone right to the top.

Head coach Mike McCarthy has tested positive for the virus, according to NFL insider Adam Schefter and ESPN reporter Dianna Russini. As per a tweet from Schefter Monday morning, he cites a source as telling him, “there are up to eight positives in Dallas. Details still rolling in.”

A positive test rules McCarthy out of the Week 13 game on Thursday night. WFAA’s Mike Leslie is reporting that defensive coordinator Dan Quinn is expected to assume head coaching responsibilities for the team this week and in New Orleans.

This is a developing story, with more clarification to come as the day continues. But with a host of players and assistant coaches already on the Reserve/COVID list, things are about to potentially get very complicated for the Cowboys as they try to lock down the NFC East title.

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Report: Cowboys may hold Ezekiel Elliott out of Week 13 game over knee concern

Mike McCarthy admitted to being “concerned” about the RB’s struggles; a source tells ESPN Elliott may be sidelined to let his knee heal. | From @ToddBrock24f7

After his second straight game with just a career-low nine rushing attempts, running back Ezekiel Elliott was at a loss to explain why he didn’t get more carries against the Raiders on Thanksgiving.

The 2.8-yard average he compiled across those tries was certainly a factor. But the knee injury that he’s been fighting through is likely part of it, too. Maybe even a bigger part. It may, in fact, be much more of an issue than the Cowboys have wanted to admit over the last month of play.

It may be significant enough that the team decides to take him off the field entirely. As per an ESPN report Friday, the team is considering giving Elliott “some time off” to heal from the injury. That may include “holding him out” of next Thursday night’s game in New Orleans, a source told network insider Ed Werder.

Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy acknowledged Elliott’s lack of production Sunday after the team’s 36-33 overtime loss by saying simply, “I think Zeke was struggling a bit.”

Backup/change-of-pace- back Tony Pollard didn’t exactly see a big bump in his action, logging just 36 yards on ten carries as the team once again abandoned a rushing attack that was going nowhere.

When asked after the game whether his limited use was out of concern for his knee, which did seem to be bothering him on the field, Elliott was unable to provide much insight.

“I don’t know,” Elliott told the media. “I don’t know. I feel all right, but it probably was.”

Elliott hasn’t gotten more than 17 carries in a contest since Week 5. That game against the Giants was also the last time the two-time rushing champ amassed over 70 yards on the ground.

“I am concerned,” McCarthy told reporters on Friday via conference call when asked about Elliott. “He’s a warrior. He was fighting to get back in there every time, all day yesterday. I haven’t seen him personally yet today, and our medical information hasn’t come back yet as far as the things that come out of the game, so I don’t really have an update there. But, yeah, it’s that time of year. Zeke’s running style is ferocious. He gives a pounding, and he takes some hits. We need to evaluate that, and this week we’ll see what the preparation looks like for him.”

Elliott admitted as recently as Tuesday that his knee has been bothering him, especially when he would take a hit during a game. He compared it to stubbing a toe and needing to “walk it off,” promising he’d be able to play through the soreness.

But the Cowboys may be taking that option off the table for him as the team tries to regain a once-formidable lead in the race to a division crown.

He’s a competitor,” Cowboys executive vice president Stephen Jones said Friday on 105.3 The Fan. “Just like a lot of players this time of year- I think he said it- there’s a lot of players that have dings as you get later into the season. He’s a competitor. He wants to be out there playing. We were trying to spell him some yesterday. Obviously, Pollard is a hell of back, a hell of a playmaker for us. Trying to really manage [Elliott] to some degree yesterday.”

Now the Cowboys may manage him right into some forced time off, although Werder’s source claimed that putting Elliott on injured reserve was not believed to be a consideration.

The Cowboys’ final five games of the regular season include four meetings with NFC East foes and a home date against the Arizona Cardinals, currently the conference’s top seed. Holding Elliott out of the Cowboys’ Week 13 game with the Saints would give him two weeks of rest and rehab time before Dallas begins that important stretch.

“It’s obviously something that he’s battled through,” offensive coordinator Kellen Moore said Friday when asked about Elliott’s injury. “Obviously, I think that’s for Zeke and for the trainers and for everyone to continue to work through and make the decisions that are best for him and this team.”

For the first time in very long time, what’s best for the team may be having Elliott in street clothes on gameday.

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