Cowboys News: Next up for the Hall, Elliott bounce back, Dak and cap

Cowboys news and notes, including a too-early 2021 power rankings, the latest on Drew Pearson in the HOF, and a new plan for Dallas at QB?

The 2020 NFL season has officially ended with Tom Brady leading the Tampa Bay Buccaneers to a Super Bowl win. While the NFL’s new league year isn’t officially scheduled to start till March 17th, ESPN has already released it’s first set of power rankings for 2021.

A star studded 2021 Pro Football Hall of Fame Class was announced over the weekend. Find out just how the Cowboy’s newest Hall of Famer learned he would be part of football immortality. Plus, who will be the next former Cowboy inducted?

Dak Prescott’s contract situation will be a constant topic of conversation this offseason. Will he be franchised? Will he sign a new deal? Will Dallas draft a QB at 10? Only time will tell but until then we will discuss the possibilities. The salary cap is expected to drop for the 2021, find out by how much and how that affects the Cowboys.

 

 

 

Cowboys legend Drew Pearson is finally joining the Hall of Fame after being snubbed for so long

About time.

Cowboys legend Drew Pearson, now 70 years old, was a star for the Cowboys from 1973 to 1983. He was a three-time First Team All-Pro, a three-time Pro Bowler and a Super Bowl Champion. He was also named to the 1970’s All-Decade team.

Yet, somehow, he hadn’t been inducted into the Hall of Fame despite it having been literal decades since he’d last played. He’d been snubbed for years. Last year, he was devasted after missing it again and rightfully so.

This year, that wrong has been corrected. The legendary Cowboys wide receiver will be inducted into the Hall of Fame’s class of 2020.

He was stunned when he found out.

“I’m just stunned. I didn’t know what to expect coming here, not this, though. I’ve been waiting, you know, and finding out the vote had been in and all that. And I’m going crazy waiting and waiting….I promise I will live up to what the Hall of Fame is all about…I will live up to it the rest of my life. Now you’re giving me a chance at immortality.” 

Clearly, this really means a lot to him. As it should. Congrats to Peason. This is well deserved.

About time, NFL.

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Drew Pearson with emotional response to learning he is Hall of Famer

Dallas Cowboys star is in a Pro Football Hall of Famer a year after Canton heartbreak

A year after the disappointment that turned into anger, former Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Drew Pearson is a Pro Football Hall of Famer.

Pearson was emotional and humble as he received the news from PFHOF honcho David Baker with his former quarterback Roger Staubach and Dallas Cowboys team owner Jerry Jones present.

The decision was announced officially during NFL Honors on Saturday.

Tears flowed last year but for a different reason. Pearson said repeatedly, “They broke my heart … they broke my heart” after learning he would not be part of the Class of 2020.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oxDbFn8DCz4

A year later, the original No. 88 will take his place in Canton, presuming the pandemic subsides and the ceremony can take place in August.

NFL Honors 2021: Pro Football Hall of Fame predictions

Today is Selection Saturday for the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Peyton Manning and others are waiting to hear the call. Who gets in?

The Pro Football Hall of Fame will announce their next class of honorees prior to Super Bowl LV. The 48-member Pro Football hall of Fame Selection Committee will meet on Saturday to decide among the 18 finalists, which include 15 modern-era players and three additional finalists: Drew Pearson (senior finalist), Bill Nunn (contributor finalist) and Tom Flores (Coach finalist).

The by-laws of the Selection Committee provide that “between four an eight new members will be selected.” Here are Touchdown Wire’s 2021 Pro Football Hall of  Fame predictions.

Cardinals’ miracle finish stirs up memories of 1975 Cowboys’ original ‘Hail Mary’

The heroics of Kyler Murray and DeAndre Hopkins call to mind the original miracle finish by Roger Staubach and Drew Pearson in 1975.

Kyler Murray’s desperation heave to wideout DeAndre Hopkins in the Arizona Cardinals’ instant-classic comeback over Buffalo on Sunday is understandably the talk of the league. Within hours, the miraculous 43-yard throw-and-game-winning catch already had a nickname; it had been dubbed “The Hail Murray.”

Clever, to be sure. But it wouldn’t exist if there weren’t already a universally-recognized play that served as the first Hail Mary. The most iconic moment in Dallas Cowboys history is also one of the most famous moments in NFL history, spawning terminology that has even transcended football to become an accepted part of the English language in every walk of life.

That the latest version of the play is stirring up memories of the original as the 2020 Cowboys prepare for a road game against the Vikings is just too delicious for words. Expect the heroics of Murray and Hopkins to resurrect even more stories this week of how Roger Staubach and Drew Pearson did it first, forty-five years ago.

The year was 1975.  Dallas had finished the season with a 10-4 mark, good enough for to earn the NFC’s lone wild card berth in the postseason. They traveled to frigid Minnesota for a divisional-round date with the top-seeded Vikings just three days after Christmas.

Down 14-10 with under two minutes to play, Staubach and the Cowboys offense began their last-chance drive deep in their own territory. In a heartbeat, it seemed, Dallas was facing 4th-and-16 from their own 25.

Staubach found Pearson for a sideline catch that gained 25 yards. It earned the Cowboys a new set of downs… and earned Pearson a kick in the side from a Minnesota security guard who was standing near where Pearson landed.

With the next first-down play, Staubach’s pass to Pearson fell incomplete. Second down. Thirty-two seconds left. No timeouts. Captain Comeback would be looking once again to get the ball to his trusted No. 88. And he would do so by going off-book, making up a schoolyard play from scratch in the huddle.

“So basically, I told everybody, ‘Go block, this will be pretty simple,'” Staubach would later recall. “‘And Drew, go deep, run an in-route, and I’ll look the free safety off.'”

Using the shotgun formation- newly-introduced to the league that same year by Cowboys coach Tom Landry- Staubach had a precious extra second or two to set up for a long throw. As promised, he looked off future Hall of Fame safety Paul Krause and pumped to his left to sell it.

Coming back right, Staubach unloaded from about his own 41. The wobbly ball was within Pearson’s reach about five yards away from the goal line as he jockeyed for position against Vikings cornerback Nate Wright.

“But the ball was underthrown,” Pearson said. “So I see that and then I use the swim move, right? To get the inside position. Use my outside arm and bring it in, and while doing that, there was contact on Nate. And with that contact, he fell down. No, there’s no flag. And the ball hit my hands and slithered through my hands and stuck between my elbow and hip.”

There was, as Pearson points out, no flag. Whether there should have been has been the source of passionate debate for decades. The Vikings were sure of it, pointing and gesturing toward officials. Their fans screamed for it. Pearson himself looked for a flag as he trotted into the end zone.

“It’s hard to say,” Pearson told the Star-Tribune back in the aftermath of the game. “I thought I might have gotten pass interference. It could have gone either way.”

“I had a clear view,” said Vikings quarterback Fran Tarkenton. “The man pushed his arm down and pushed Nate down. It definitely should have been offensive pass interference.” (In a bizarre twist, Tarkenton’s 63-year-old father suffered a heart attack and died while watching the game’s third quarter at his home; he never saw the stunning conclusion.)

Watching the play in slow-motion, there is a blur of color at Pearson’s feet. Turns out, incredibly, it was an orange. The Super Bowl that season was set to be played at Miami’s Orange Bowl, and Minnesota fans were so sure that their team would be headed there that they brought store-brought oranges with them to celebrate. A fan had fired his fruit from the stands onto the field as the play unfolded.

Bedlam ensued as the touchdown was signaled. Staubach hadn’t even seen the improbable completion; he was lying on the turf after being hit and knew Pearson had caught it only by the stunned hush from the crowd. Pearson heaved the ball toward the scoreboard in celebration. Minnesota fans began pelting the field with everything they could throw; the official who had not called a push-off on Pearson was hit with a whiskey bottle and knocked cold. Players and coaches from both teams ducked into the tunnel hurriedly after the game’s final 24 seconds ticked off.

In the locker room afterward, Staubach was asked about the dramatic play.

“I was a Catholic kid from Cincinnati,” Staubach explained, “and they asked me, ‘What were you thinking about when you threw the ball?’ And I said, ‘When I closed my eyes, I said a Hail Mary.'”

Some sources cite Notre Dame’s Four Horsemen of the 1930s as first using the phrase in football. There’s also evidence that Staubach himself used it to describe a desperation pass he completed against Michigan while playing at Navy… in 1963. Before then, a long, last-gasp pass was often generically referred to as a ‘bomb’ or an ‘alley-oop.’ But from that December day in Minnesota on, it would always be called a Hail Mary.

After the 17-14 playoff win over the Vikings, the Cowboys went on to top the Rams 37-7 the following week. They came up short in Super Bowl X versus the Steelers, but the Hail Mary took on a life of its own and has since become a common tactic for every team needing a last-second miracle and is a play that teams regularly practice.

The original play itself- now 45 years old- still surfaces in dealings between the Cowboys’ and Vikings’ bases.

Staubach has said he was booed at a Minneapolis luncheon as recently as 2018, during the run-up to that city’s Super Bowl hosting stint. Pearson has told the story of how he couldn’t get a taxicab in the Twin Cities years later and was left on the side of the road once his identity was confirmed. And remember the sideline security guard who kicked Pearson two plays prior to the Hail Mary catch? That guy had his own trading cards made and earned a tidy sum for years at autograph sessions in Minnesota. Once he was seated at the same table at Pearson and drew just as many fans.

“This guy has been making a living out of that, the guy who kicked Drew Pearson two plays before the Hail Mary,” Pearson said. “And he gave me his number, and said, ‘Keep in touch.’ I said, ‘Yeah, sure.'”

And the ball that Pearson launched in celebration after his improbable score? There were no stands in that end of Metropolitan Stadium; Pearson’s heave landed in the parking lot and was never recovered. Incredibly, the ball from one of the most famous plays in NFL history could well be lost forever, buried in a box full of old forgotten junk in some dusty Minnesota attic.

At Cowboys team headquarters, though, proof of the Hail Mary still occupies prime real estate. Video of the iconic play was broken down into a series of 36 giant freeze-frame images that now adorn one of the main staircases inside The Star in Frisco. It’s literally a larger-than-life reminder of how in football, despite all the athleticism, all the preparation, all the exacting skill and finely-tuned choreography… sometimes, it still comes down to a bit of divine intervention.

“The Hail Mary became bigger than what actually transpired there on that day,” the team’s chief branding officer Charlotte Jones Anderson has said. “On that day it was important, but, wow, did it become significant in the world of sports, in the world of football, but certainly for us.”

In fact, the name coined that day for a final act of hopeful desperation now transcends football.

“Now it’s really used for everything,” Staubach has said. “If you’ve got a problem or something, you need a Hail Mary.”

The play comes up every time the Cowboys and Vikings play one another. Kyler Murray and DeAndre Hopkins just made sure it will get a little extra airtime this week.

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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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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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Cowboys’ Johnson, rest of Class of 2020 to wait for Hall of Fame induction

Dallas Cowboys greats Jimmy Johnson and Cliff Harris have their Hall of Fame enshrinement dreams pushed back even further.

It’s official: the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s 2020 class will have to wait even longer for enshrinement. The cancellation of the first exhibition game of the year between the Dallas Cowboys and the Pittsburgh Steelers was announced Thursday morning and is set to be made up next year; it was only a matter of time before this news followed.

The class that was to be the biggest in the NFL’s storied history, with 20 players, coaches, and contributors slated to receive the famed bronze bust split into two ceremonies, will have to wait even longer for their moment in the sun.

For the Cowboys, two greats are affected. The first is former head coach Jimmy Johnson, the architect of the ’90s dynasty that resulted in three world championships. Johnson, of course, ended up with just two of those rings before his relationship with owner Jerry Jones soured and became untenable. The other is safety Cliff Harris, who played in five Super Bowls throughout the 1970s, won two of them, and was a member of the All-Decade team.

Harris was one of two positional players of the All-Decade team that had yet to receive the call from Canton. The other, of course, is wide receiver and the original 88, Drew Pearson.

Johnson’s pro coaching career lacked the length that many Hall of Fame coaches enjoyed. He lasted just nine years and won only 80 games.

The wait for a gold jacket has been long overdue for both Dallas legends. Now the wait will be just a little longer.

Cowboys’ CeeDee Lamb jersey outselling every other non-QB rookie

Dallas’s first-round pick trails only Tua Tagovailoa, Tom Brady, Joe Burrow, Rob Gronkowski, and Justin Herbert in jersey sales.

All those who thought Jerry Jones didn’t know what he was doing by wanting CeeDee Lamb to wear No. 88 can apparently rest easy now. The jersey is selling quite well, despite the fact that the Oklahoma rookie hasn’t even officially worn it yet.

According to official sales figures, the navy blue version of Lamb’s 88 is the 14th-best selling jersey in the league at the moment, the highest placement of any 2020 rookie who doesn’t play quarterback, and better than any current non-quarterback not named Rob Gronkowski.

Dolphins rookie Tua Tagovailoa tops the list, with his aqua No. 1 at No. 1 on the sales chart; his white jersey sits in second place. Different-colored iterations of Tom Brady’s Buccaneers jersey rank third through sixth. Gronkowski’s new pewter and red Tampa Bay jerseys fall seventh and ninth, respectively, with Joe Burrow’s black No. 9 in between at eighth. Another Brady jersey sits in tenth place, Burrow’s orange Cincinnati jersey is 11th, Justin Herbert’s powder blue No. 10 is 12th, and a women’s version of Brady’s jersey fill out the slots above Lamb.

Denver’s Jerry Jeudy is the only other rookie to appear in the top 20.

Fans have evidently flocked to the newest incarnation of one of the most storied jersey numbers in Cowboys history. Drew Pearson, Michael Irvin, and Dez Bryant all wore No. 88 for the club previously.

Team owner Jerry Jones made it clear shortly after drafting Lamb that he hoped the team’s first-round pick would wear the famed number, partly as an homage to the Dallas legends who wore it previously.  A recently-departed college teammate of Jones named Jerry Lamb had also worn No. 88 while the two attended Arkansas.

Lamb, who wore No. 2 as well as No. 9 while playing for the Sooners, had originally said on Dallas radio that he would wear No. 10 with the Cowboys.

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Lamb makes jersey decision after stunning offer from Cowboys

The new Cowboys WR will wear 10 in Dallas, but only after owner Jerry Jones offered him one of the most famous numbers in team history.

CeeDee Lamb knows the expectations are high for him coming to Dallas. But the wideout who just turned 21 years old a few weeks ago was catapulted into another whole eschelon of rarefied air in his first conversation with his new employers at America’s Team.

The Cowboys may have been surprised when Lamb fell to them with the 17th overall pick. What was likely downright jaw-dropping for longtime fans of the team may have been the offer the team made to their new pass-catching prospect.

Lamb announced on Dallas radio station 105.3 The Fan Thursday night that, after wearing No. 2 in college (and even 9 for a while), he would wear the number 10 as a Cowboy. But Jerry Jones first offered 88, to a player he hadn’t even formally interviewed prior to drafting him.

Dallas doesn’t retire jersey numbers, but 88 is special in Cowboys history. It was Michael Irvin’s number when the team won three Super Bowls. It belonged to Drew Pearson, who hauled in the first-ever Hail Mary touchdown pass from Roger Staubach. Most recently, Dez Bryant wore 88; fans who longed for a reunion with the free agent receiver assumed it would be his if he returned.

Jones offered the vaunted jersey to Lamb, but the owner’s offer may have had less to do with the Cowboys who have worn it than with one of Jones’s college ball connections.

Jones said, according to RJ Ochoa:

“I recently lost a great friend. One of my very best, might have been my best. I played ball with him at Arkansas. He was number 88. His name was Jerry Lamb. He was drafted by the Kansas City Chiefs. We couldn’t have won a national championship without him. And he was a wonderful player.

“And so when we were- this is a little drama from our perspective- when we were all sitting there and had said our piece, and then we said, ‘Okay, what’s it going to be?’ I said, ‘In honor of my great friend that just passed this year, we’re going to have his namesake come on here and wear old Number 88. Just like Michael and Dez and those guys.’ And we’ve got us a wide receiver. And let me tell you one thing: if he’s got the competes and heart of that Jerry Lamb, he’ll be bad to the bone.”

Tavon Austin wore No. 10 most recently for the Cowboys, but it’s not a number with much history in Dallas. Maybe Lamb will be the one to start a tradition of excellence with it.

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