Cowboys Roster Cuts: New kicker waived; Dallas’ COVID situation alters plans

The Cowboys released the ex-CFL star after less than a week; the team has no active kickers at the moment for Sunday’s preseason finale. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Lirim Hajrullahu was not believed to be a long-term answer for the Cowboys when he was signed last week, with the club maintaining that regular kicker Greg Zuerlein would be ready to resume his duties soon.

As it turns out, Hajrullahu’s stint wearing the star lasted less than a week. The Kosovo-born CFL All-Star was waived by the club on Tuesday, the only player sent packing in this latest wave of cuts.

The Cowboys, like all other NFL clubs, were required to trim their rosters from 85 to 80 players by Tuesday afternoon. But since the four players placed on the COVID/Reserve list over the past few days did not count toward the 85, Dallas was forced to release only one player.

As the team website points out, the Cowboys also receive an exemption for offensive lineman Isaac Alarcon as part of the NFL’s International Pathway Program.

With the release of Hajrullahu, the Cowboys have no game-eligible kickers at the moment. That suggests that Zuerlein may be taken off the Physically Unable to Perform List before Sunday’s preseason finale. However, more cuts will have to be made in order to bring him and any of the COVID list players- CeeDee Lamb, Malik Hooker, Israel Mukuamu, and Carlos Watkins- to the active roster.

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Cowboys release punter Hunter Niswander to make room for new kicker

The Cowboys waived the second-year punter; Bryan Anger takes over while newly signed Lirim Hajrullahu assumes preseason kicking duties. | From @ToddBrock24f7

The writing was on the wall in Dallas for punter Hunter Niswander. Now it’s been turned into an official press release.

Former CFL All-Star kicker Lirim Hajrullahu, brought in for a workout on Wednesday and then formally signed by the team on Thursday, will be handling all preseason kicking and field goal duties starting this Saturday night versus Houston.

Punter Hunter Niswander, kicking (for the first time) throughout camp, was placed on the waived/injured list in order to make room on the roster. Niswander has been dealing with a back ailment, according to the Cowboys. If he clears waivers, he reverts to the team’s injured reserve list.

Bryan Anger, the veteran punter signed during the offseason, is expected to take over full-time punting responsibilities.

As for Hajrullahu, his Cowboys tenure figures to be a short one if all goes according to the club’s master plan. The organization maintains that Greg Zuerlein will be ready to go for the season opener September 9th after recovering from his own back injury. He connected on eight of eight warmup field goal attempts before the team’s preseason game in Arizona. Zuerlein remains on the Physically Unable to Perform List for now, with apparently no plans by the coaching staff to put him in a live-fire situation in either of the Cowboys’ final two preseason contests.

Niswander came on last season in relief of Chris Jones. Over eight games, he punted 26 times and ended the 2020 campaign with a 47.2-yard average.

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Report: Cowboys working out CFL kicker before clash with Texans

The Cowboys maintain Greg Zuerlein will be fine Week 1, but he remains on the PUP list. Now the team is looking at a former CFL All-Star. | From @ToddBrock24f7

The Cowboys are, to hear them tell it, all set at the kicker position, despite the fact that their presumed specialist remains on the Physically Unable to Perform list. And that last year’s punter- who the team has all but admitted won’t be sticking around long because there’s a different punter waiting in the wings- has been learning how to kick field goals and extra points for the first time this preseason.

Now, just a couple days before the club’s third preseason game, Dallas is reportedly bringing in another kicker.

Yep, all set there.

NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero explained Tuesday that the Cowboys have scheduled a workout with free agent Lirim Hajrullahu. The 31-year-old is a Canadian Football League veteran, having played for three squads from 2014 to 2020. He was named a CFL All-Star twice.

The Carolina Panthers signed him to a reserve/future contract earlier this year, but waived him soon after. Prior to that, Hajrullahu spent the 2020 offseason with the Rams, where he just missed overlapping with special teams guru John Fassel, now the coordinator in Dallas.

Fassel has expressed confidence that kicker Greg Zuerlein will be fully ready for the start of the regular season following offseason back surgery. Hunter Niswander, the young punter who took over for an injured Chris Jones last year- and then kept the job- has been handling all kicking duties during training camp. The club, though, has made it clear that they expect Bryan Anger, signed in April, to be their punter in 2021, and that Niswander was being allowed to learn kicking in camp to help him to build resume tape.

While Niswander is seen as the odd man out, the Hajrullahu workout does raise questions about the team’s kicking specialists heading into the season. They appear to have no kickers they have full confidence in for Saturday’s game.

Clarence Hill Jr. of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram tweeted Tuesday that “there has been no setback” with Zuerlein, citing a source.

Zuerlein took warmup kicks prior to last week’s preseason tilt in Arizona; Anger did the holding for those and was active for the game, punting once. Niswander handled kicks, as he did in the Hall of Fame Game. He is 4-of-6 on field goal attempts with one PAT conversion this preseason.

With Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy putting more importance on the team’s third exhibition game, perhaps the Niswander Kicking Experiment has reached its end. Or possibly Zuerlein isn’t as close to a return as the team would like. Or maybe Fassel wants to help another promising leg (who has ties to his friends on the Los Angeles staff) build some tape himself. Or perhaps he’s just staying abreast of current options, as he- and special teams coordinators in general- are prone to do.

Or maybe the kicker who fled his native war-torn Kosovo as a boy and has now found his way to America’s Team is just too good a Hard Knocks story to pass up. Even if it is just for a couple weeks.

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Cowboys set out to improve special teams in 2020 and continue the work in 2021

After a disastrous 2019 on special teams, it took just two off-season’s to rebuild the Dallas Cowboys units under John Fassel.

There was work to do to improve all areas for the Dallas Cowboys when Mike McCarthy arrived in January of last year. The offense was good but needed some fresh insight and the defense was regressing. The area that needed the most work, however, may have been the special teams units. It had been in decline for years and finishing 2019 as one of the worst units in the league, change was absolutely necessary.

In came one of the best teams coaches in the NFL, John Fassel who brought with him a commitment to improving all facets of the unit. Change was needed, both in approach and innovation, which Fassel provided. Under the guru, the Cowboys showed they were on the right path.

Dallas wasn’t resting on their laurels and continued to overhaul their special teams. It took just two offseasons to remake the units and the Cowboys now have a drastically different look than they did before McCarthy and Fassel took over.

Vincent Carchietta-USA TODAY Sports

The process began with bringing in kicker Greg Zuerlein to stabilize that phase after the team released Dan Bailey. Zuerlein came in as a Fassel favorite and he had a lot of success in his first season with the Cowboys. The veteran made 34 of 41 kicks, but six of his seven misses were on kicks from beyond 50-yards out and he nailed every kick shorter than 40 yards. On the flip side, he missed three extra points. Zuerlein needs to be more consistent there, but he was the only major change in the kicking units at the beginning of last year.

Much to team observers’ dismay, Dallas held onto incumbent punter Chris Jones to start the 2020 season. A core muscle injury to Jones changed that proposition and forced the Cowboys to look outside the organization, where they eventually found Hunter Niswander. Dallas got much better results from Niswander and he’ll now compete with recently signed Bryan Anger for punting duties in 2021.

The other major roster shakeup was the franchise choosing to not re-sign their longest-tenured player, long snapper L.P. Ladouceur. It was a shock to see the organization walk away from a player who had never missed a game in his 16 seasons with the Cowboys, nor did he ever have an errant snap.

To replace Ladouceur, Dallas signed LS Jake McQuaide, who played for Fassel with the Los Angeles Rams. McQuaide has also never missed a game and has two Pro Bowls on his resume.

The exit of Ladouceur this offseason meant the Cowboys have replaced all three of their main special teams parts, the team replaced its kicker, punter and long snapper in the span of 16 months.

Dallas also made key signings to keep the special teams moving in the right direction. Coverage unit ace C.J. Goodwin was brought back as one of the best players on the unit and the Cowboys added safety Jayron Kearse to give the coverage teams a bump as well. The 2021 draft also brought forth many players who should further boost the overall speed and athleticism of both the coverage and return units. Towering speedster Simi Fehoko (6-foot-4, 227 pounds, 4.44 40-yard time) immediately come to mind.

(AP Photo/Roger Steinman)

Last season, Fassel’s influence helped transform running back Tony Pollard from an unsure, hesitant return man to one of the league’s most electric options as he finally capitalized on the skills that make him a talented change of pace option.

Pollard’s timidity was still present early in the year, but by midseason he was breaking off big gains. From Week 7 on he had three different returns of at least 60 yards and improved his kickoff return average from 17.5 in 2020 to 23.9 in 2021.

Tavon Austin led the club in punt returns in 2019 with 17, averaging just 4.9 per return. Rookie CeeDee Lamb had 24 returns and averaged 7.2 per jaunt.

These are now the baselines for the competitions heading into 2021 training camp and Fassel’s technique coaching along with blocking schemes are to thank for the steps up.

Aside from the turnover in players to improve the units, Fassel has also brought in a new philosophy.

The Cowboys tried several trick plays on special teams, which came with a moderate amount of success. They didn’t all work, the Thanksgiving fake punt debacle is hard to forget, but there were several attempts that did work.

Zuerlein’s watermelon on-sides kick helped the Cowboys beat the Atlanta Falcons and the throwback punt return against the Pittsburgh Steelers was successful and well executed to the tune of a 73-yard explosion.

McCarthy and Fassel’s willingness to be aggressive and to force opponents to prepare for every situation was a different approach from the previous regime.

It only took one year, and two off-seasons, to change the direction of the Cowboys’ special teams. It’s a vastly different group now and the hope is that Dallas continues to improve from year one to year two.

The rebuild on special teams were needed and the Cowboys are in much better shape now than they were before the duo of McCarthy and Fassel arrived.

You can chat with or follow Ben on twitter @BenGrimaldi.

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Cowboys 53-man roster prediction is heavy on defense following draft

The Dallas Cowboys will go heavy on defense in this way too early 53-man roster prediction for the 2021 season.

The 2021 NFL draft dust is just settling, rookie free agents are in the process of getting signed and the teams are narrowing down their rosters to 90 players. The Dallas Cowboys did a little house cleaning to their roster when they released veteran players recently, most notably DT Antwaun Woods, to reach the threshold.

Now set within the roster rules with their 90-man arsenal, the Cowboys have less than four months to trim the player down to its initial 53-man team. Here’s a way too early guess at what the 2021 edition of the Cowboys might look like when they break training camp and head into the season.

Cowboys improved place kicking in 2020 with additions of Zuerlein, Fassel

The Cowboys special teams improved in nearly every area,, including the field goal team, which benefited from the signing of Greg Zuerlein.

The Dallas Cowboys entered 2020 with a goal to improve their special teams unit, and they succeeded. The Cowboys special teams unit was arguably the worst in the entire league in 2019-20, and Mike McCarthy knew that that would have to improve for his new team to compete in his inaugural season.

The organization brought in special teams coordinator John Fassel, formerly of the Los Angeles Rams, as well as a few key contributors on the field, put a greater coaching emphasis on the third phase of the game, and the results were noticeable as Dallas’ special teams improved more than any other team in the NFL.

With that in mind, let’s take a look at one area of the special teams where Dallas made measurable upgrades, place kicking.

Good, Bad, Ugly; Cowboys’ performance too reminiscent in season-ending defeat

The Dallas Cowboys failed to play well enough with their season on the line in the loss to the New York Giants

The season came down to one game for the Dallas Cowboys and unfortunately they played it like too many of the games from earlier in the year. They started slow, got down early and were forced to scratch their way back into contention.

And just like how so many games ended during the aftermath of the Dak Prescott injury, the Cowboys couldn’t make the plays to come away with a win. In the end, it didn’t cost the team a division title, as Washington won later Sunday night, but it was emblematic of a season gone wrong.

Here is the good, the bad and the ugly from the final game of the season for the Cowboys.

News: Aikman thinks directionless Cowboys now capable of playoff run

Also, looking at Dallas’s playoff chances and possible opponents, what sparked the defense’s turnaround, and key injury updates.

Plenty of news in Cowboys Nation as the team prepares to close out the 2020 regular season with an early-2021 date in New York. Dallas can still make the postseason with a win and help, although their chances of going on to compete for the Lombardi Trophy are statistically infinitesimal. But even one of the franchise’s all-time legends agrees there is hope, and that’s something that seemed lost just a few weeks ago.

The Giants know the Cowboys are different bunch now, and their head coach breaks down the ways. A seemingly healthy Ezekiel Elliott could be looking at another 1,000-yard season, and some are already looking ahead to the Cowboys’ possible opponent in a wild-card round. Whatever happens, there will be decisions to be made: about fifth-year options on rookie contracts, about Andy Dalton’s future, about Mike Nolan and the Dallas defense that has only just recently come alive… and about the franchise tag of one Rayne Dakota Prescott. All that, and a Cowboys legend blows out the candles on another birthday cake. Here’s the News and Notes.

Good, Bad & Ugly: Tony Pollard, defense shine for Cowboys in 41-33 win

Tony Pollard and the defense forcing four turnovers highlights most of the good things the team did to beat the San Francisco 49ers

The Dallas Cowboys are living life on the edge, hanging on by a thread in the race for the NFC East. They kept their hopes alive with a thrilling Week 15 win, 41-33, over the San Francisco 49ers.

It was one of the more spirited efforts from the Dallas defense, despite giving up 33 points and over 450 yards of total offense. Just a week after forcing three turnovers, the Cowboys took the ball away four more times in the win to escape the division basement.

Here is the good, the bad and the ugly for the Cowboys as they fight their way to a fifth win on the year.

McCarthy on Cowboys’ total team ineffectiveness: ‘We’re kicking field goal attempts, and they score touchdowns’

The Dallas coach and players were unhappy about the team’s missed field goals and overall lack of scoring against Baltimore on Tuesday.

The Cowboys got trounced by 17 points. Field goals were not the difference. But having to repeatedly settle for three-point tries instead of putting the ball in the end zone assuredly put Dallas in a hole that they never climbed out of.

Missing three of those tries may have also put kicker Greg Zuerlein in a hole with his teammates and coaching staff.

“The issue,” as head coach Mike McCarthy explained in his postgame press conference, “we’re kicking field goals- or attempting to kick field goals- and they were scoring touchdowns.”

Yikes.

With one pointed zinger, McCarthy managed to trash his anemic offense, insult his porous defense, and put his $2.5-million-dollar kicker on notice.

Zuerlein, a nine-year veteran with a career make percentage of over 82%, found himself in a serious slump in Baltimore on Tuesday night. Despite entering the game having connected on eight straight field goals, the 2017 Pro Bowler missed from 40, 53, and 52 yards against the Ravens on Tuesday.

It marked the first time Zuerlein has missed multiple field goals in a game since 2016, and it was the first time he’s missed three in a game since his rookie season.

The Ravens’ Justin Tucker also had a miss on the night. According to him, it’s become a not-uncommon problem in his home stadium in recent years.

The December air was chilly, with a noticeable wind coming in off the Inner Harbor. But Zuerlein couldn’t blame his performance on the weather or the stadium.

“I wouldn’t say it was anything, at all,” the kicker said, per the Cowboys team website. “I think the conditions were fine, even if there was wind. I’m good enough to make the kicks, I just didn’t do it.”

Kickers are often held at somewhat of a distance from the rest of the team, viewed as a separate entity. Even though they work hand in hand, so to speak, with the offense, every-down players are often hesitant to comment on the specialist’s job.

But Zuerlein’s teammates couldn’t help but notice the misses that left them empty-handed after three of their ten drives during the game.

“They’re definitely crucial,” wide receiver Michael Gallup said afterward of the missed kicks, “but we’re always thinking six and seven. We’re always thinking those touchdown plays. We’re not trying to settle for a field goal. It’s great to get field goals, but we want touchdowns. We want to score big.”

Scoring big has been a rare occurrence for Dallas in 2020. The team ranks in the bottom ten leaguewide in total scoring, averaging just over 22 points per game. They’ve averaged just 15 per game over their past seven outings; the only time they topped 20 in that span resulted in their lone win since mid-October.

Zuerlein may have blown his opportunities Tuesday, but the offense as a whole isn’t doing their job, either.

They had chances in Baltimore. The Cowboys ran 23 more plays than the Ravens, had ten more first downs, nearly matched them in total yardage, won the time of possession battle, and had the ball inside Ravens territory on all but two of their offensive drives.

“We’re getting good field position, we’re getting the ball on their side of the 50,” running back Ezekiel Elliott told the media after the game. “We’ve got to go score touchdowns. That’s kind of been the story this year.”

“We had the ball forever,” Gallup agreed. “We were moving the ball. We were running it, we were throwing it, we just didn’t get paydirt. That’s the biggest thing.”

“We kept getting stalled, kind of, right before the red zone,” noted quarterback Andy Dalton. “We made it tougher on the kicks. We’ve got to find a way to convert first downs on those situations, keep drives alive, and get down there and score touchdowns.”

Zuerlein’s last two misses- from 53 and 52- perhaps shouldn’t have come as a shock. The normally-dependable kicker nicknamed “Greg the Leg” has converted just one of his six attempts from beyond 50 yards this season.

Kickers, on the whole, though, are improving dramatically from long-range. Field goals of 50-plus yards were once a true novelty in the NFL. In 1960, for example, just five were made across the entire league that season. Through the first 13 weeks of this season, 88 of them have been made at a rate of nearly two out of every three attempts.

Once considered a highlight-reel sniper shot, a 50-plus-yard field goal is now a 65.6% proposition.

But it’s Zuerlein’s first miss from Tuesday night that will really stick in the craw of Cowboys fans. After an eleven-play drive put them in the red zone, Dallas lined up for a 35-yard field goal. Zuerlein had a 91.7% career make percentage from 30 to 39 yards. He connected.

But a terrible bit of pre-snap clock management brought a delay of game penalty. The Cowboys were moved back five yards to try again. Zuerlein’s make percentage from 40 to 49 yards was just 79.7%, but he’d been perfect from that range on the year up to that moment.

The ensuing kick sailed wide right. And with it seemed to go much of the Cowboys’ momentum.

“We missed the field goal,” McCarthy said. “Those are the kind of mistakes you can’t make in a game like this. We needed points there. We had some opportunities for points that did not come out. At the end of the day, we’re kicking field goal attempts, and they score touchdowns.”

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