Cowboys’ offensive line already accounts for almost 25% of ’24 salary cap

Following the money spent on the offensive line finds Dallas’ depth impressive but two big holes have to be filled. | From @ArmyChiefW3

Budgeting for the offensive line is not an easy task as this group, whose numbers normally hover around 10 every season, can consume a large portion of a team’s salary cap. Even when only one player is paid top dollar, the amount of money spent on linemen can be a burden based on sheer numbers. With so many teams across the league scrambling for viable options, Dallas has assembled a cast of young hopefuls that could provide depth for the next few years.

The Cowboys will need to address the starting left tackle position this offseason, and although the upcoming draft is full of options, bringing back Tyron Smith could be the smart play. So could an agreement with center Tyler Biadasz, who is slated to hit the open market for the first time in his career. Here’s a rundown of what is currenly on the ledger for the group going into 2024.

Report: Cowboys OL Josh Ball to miss 2 months

From @ToddBrock24f7: The former 4th-round draft pick shouldn’t need surgery, but the Cowboys will have to use a roster spot on him if he is to return in 2023.

The Cowboys have one more offensive line injury to factor into the difficult roster decisions facing them this week.

Third-year tackle Josh Ball suffered a soft tissue injury in his hip and groin area that will sideline him for about two months, per a report from Michael Gehlken of the Dallas Morning News. That prognosis comes after an MRI on Sunday, a day after the team’s 31-16 win over Las Vegas in their preseason finale.

Ball sustained what was first described as a hip injury on the Cowboys’ opening possession of Saturday’s contest and left the game later in the first quarter.

Ball is expected to avoid surgery, but that is both good and bad news. On the upside, the Marshall product could be eligible to return to action this season and provide backup for a Dallas line that has traditionally needed to rely heavily on its midseason depth.

But to do that, Ball would need to take up a spot on the team’s initial 53-man roster on Tuesday and then subsequently be moved to injured reserve. Placing Ball on IR now would force him to miss the entire 2023 campaign, but it would open up a roster spot for an immediate contributor.

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The 6-foot-8-inch former fourth-round draft pick missed his rookie year with an ankle injury and saw very limited action in 2022.

The Cowboys have already seen linemen Chuma Edoga and Matt Waletzko get dinged this preseason, though Waletzko was able to play Saturday versus the Raiders.

Dallas has 15 linemen currently on the squad. Their initial 53-man roster is due Tuesday.

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Cowboys OL Josh Ball exits game with hip injury

Offensive lineman Josh Ball exited his final audition for a 2023 roster spot. | From @ArmyChiefW3

Dallas Cowboys offensive lineman Josh Ball left in the first quarter of Saturday night’s game against the Las Vegas Raiders with what is being reported as a hip injury. With questions surrounding the depth of the offensive line, this injury could force the club to look elsewhere for help.

The third-year player, whose roster spot is uncertain to begin with, entered Saturday’s game in hopes of having a good showing yet his night may be over after just a few plays.

The 2021 fourth-round selection has only recorded 42 regular season snaps all of which came last season. His rookie season was wiped out by an ankle injury which made this a pivotal third season. While lineman depth is an issue throughout the league, time may be running out.

 

Pressure on Ball, Waletzko to step up on Cowboys offensive line

The Cowboys drafted Matt Waletzko and Josh Ball to be viable options down the road – based on what’s going across the O-line, the time’s now. | From @ReidDHanson

Call it unrealistic expectations or just good old-fashioned impatience, but the time for former draft picks Josh Ball and Matt Waletzko to step up their game is now. After a boatload of offseason hype, both players have largely underwhelmed in camp, causing concern on the Cowboys offensive line.

On Saturday, the two lined up side-be-side in the starting lineup for the club’s 28-23 loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars in the exhibition opener. Each played exactly 50% of the team’s offensive snaps, 36 to be exact.

Both Ball, a fourth-round pick from 2021, and Waletzko, a fifth-round pick from 2022, came to Dallas with some buzz about them.

They experienced rocky seasons in 2022 but were expected to rebound significantly in 2023. They were frequently mentioned throughout the offseason by Cowboys coaches and executives as players to watch and cited as reasons why more wasn’t done to address the offensive line.

As former mid-round draft picks, they come with certain expectations. They each had high-ceiling skillsets and impressive physical traits to work with. They just have to put it together. Given the current state of the Cowboys offensive line, that time needs to be now.

Dallas’ offensive line situation has been a growing concern in camp. All-Pro guard Zack Martin has been sitting out all summer in a contract dispute while Terence Steele is working his way back from a significant knee injury.

Tyler Biadasz has missed time at center and the Cowboys primary free agent acquisition, Chuma Edoga, recently went down in a scary moment which required him to be carted off the field.

The depth of the line is truly being tested and the Cowboys desperately need their two pedigreed linemen to rise to the occasion.

The Cowboys don’t intend to use their remaining starters much (if at all) in preseason games so opportunities for down-roster players will be plenty. Dallas requires viable options down the ranks should the injury bug attack their offensive line again in 2023.

The Cowboys need to find viable options on their roster and Waletzko and Ball are the best equipped to be those options. It’s time to start fulfilling the potential because concerns are growing, and the offensive line could potentially sink this extremely explosive offense.

Expectations are still Martin and the Cowboys will settle their differences and he’ll be back by Week 1, but that’s not as automatic as it once seemed.

Regardless of Martin, the Cowboys need at least three viable options down the ranks and the progression of Waletzko and Ball is probably their best chance at achieving that.

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Cowboys ‘feel great’ about Josh Ball, Matt Waletzko; will likely still draft OL early

From @ToddBrock24f7: McCarthy says Waletzko is rehabbing nicely from injury and Ball will play both tackle and guard, but offensive linemen are always in demand.

When it comes to offensive linemen, more is always better as far as the Cowboys are concerned.

“I don’t think you can ever have enough of them,” Cowboys chief operating officer Stephen Jones said Monday during the team’s pre-draft press conference, “and Mike [McCarthy, head coach] would agree with that. We should be drafting one, you’d like to hope, in the top three or four rounds every year.”

Dallas made it their No. 1 priority last year, taking Tulsa’s Tyler Smith with the 24th pick. All the rookie did in return was step in for an eight-time Pro Bowler and lead the entire team in snaps for the season.

So forgive the Cowboys brain trust if they lean toward getting right back in that line with the 26th overall pick this weekend.

Even with perennial All-Pro Zack Martin, the impressive Tyler Smith, a returning Tyron Smith, up-and-comer Terence Steele, and a very solid Tyler Biadasz, the Cowboys admit they still have a need up front.

“You look at Cincinnati last year, where they were trying to struggle through the injuries,” Jones added. “You look at Kansas City over the years, trying to get through the injuries. We had our share of injuries last year, of course, with Steele and Tyron missing quite a bit of time. You can’t have enough of those guys. That’s why we do put a premium on drafting them.”

Dallas indeed had to scramble to put together a front five for much of the season. Tyron Smith missed the start of the season with a hamstring tear; he hasn’t played a full campaign since 2015. Matt Farniok and Matt Waletzko were both lost to season-ending injured reserve in October. Steele suffered a major knee injury in December. Josh Ball, who had sat out his 2021 rookie season on IR, came in for Steele and foundered badly.

Connor McGovern, though injured himself, was asked to do a lot at multiple positions- some not even on the offensive line- but he’s in Buffalo now.

The Cowboys signed Chuma Edoga in free agency, but he played just 55 snaps for Atlanta last season; the team may not know yet exactly what they have there.

So yes, plan on Dallas calling a big, beefy lineman at some point this weekend.

But that’s not to say they’re putting all their chips on finding another plug-and-play starter like Tyler Smith.

Despite his disastrous debut versus Houston, third-year man Ball will be expanding his role for the team. McCarthy confirmed that he’d play “guard and both tackles” in 2023.

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He’s not the only young lineman the coach is expecting to see step up this year; McCarthy told reporters he feels “great” about both Ball and Waletzko.

“Matt’s having a great offseason. He obviously had the surgery, so he’s knocking it out of the park there. And Josh, I think, clearly, will work more inside than out. He does a tremendous job in the offseason program, things like that. I’m excited to see those guys play in the preseason. They’re ready. We’ve just got to get them battle-tested. They’re making all the progress you look for in his your second- or third-[year] players. They’re right on schedule.”

So the numbers are coming back around for the Cowboys and new offensive line coach Mike Solari. But the reality is, the line likely won’t be at full strength for long.

“It’s just inherent that you’re going to have injuries in that area,” Jones explained. “So consequently, you like to have, in a perfect world, eight or nine guys that you feel comfortable going in the game. But they’re all protecting big-time assets. We all see what people are paying quarterbacks these days. Those guys up front have the biggest responsibility of keeping them upright.”

Looked at through that lens, it seems like a lock that Dallas will add another lineman or two to help protect their $40 million man, Dak Prescott.

The question is, when will they turn in that card?

Tennessee tackle Darnell Wright may be there late in the first round. The gargantuan Dawand Jones out of Ohio State and Alabama’s Tyler Steen are other possible options in the first two rounds.

As for guards, O’Cyrus Torrence out of Florida and TCU’s Steve Avila look to be early picks, as well as North Dakota State’s Cody Mauch.

“You trust in your process,” McCarthy concluded.

So far, the process for the Cowboys seems to be constantly restocking the shelves at offensive line… maybe sooner rather than later, given the recent roster shuffles there in Dallas.

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Is there a future for controversial draft pick Josh Ball in Cowboys’ lineups?

Steele and Ball are comparable players in mass and length, similar strengths and weaknesses and potential developmental arcs. @ReidDHanson wonders if the Cowboys will see it through.

It wasn’t long ago the Cowboys were facing quite the quandary at the tackle position. On one hand they had a young player with potential they believed in. On the other hand, the growing pains of that development were hard to escape and there weren’t any shortcuts in the developmental process to be found.

It was 2020, and Dallas was entering the season without starting right tackle La’el Collins, who eventually was ruled out for the year after a season-ending hip injury. The Cowboys had signed journeyman Cameron Erving in the offseason and many expected him to get the nod, but it filled few with a ton of hope. With no other proven depth on the roster, in the mix was a pair of undrafted reserves, Brandon Knight and Terence Steele.

Knight, a one-year veteran, appeared to be the safer option to play the left, while Steele was a rookie whose skillset better fit the right. Steele got the start at right tackle in the season opener and never gave up the post, playing in 16 games his rookie season. Knight would go on to have an adventurous season as well, replacing Tyron Smith in week No. 2 and starting nine games for the Cowboys at left tackle.

To say both young tackles struggled that season may be a bit of an understatement. While they flashed potential, they also showed their undrafted roots. Both players had pass protection issues and ranked near the bottom of the NFL in Pro Football Focus grades.

Of the 79 offensive tackles graded in 2020, Steele ranked No. 76. But the Cowboys saw something in the 6-foot-6, 310-pound tackle and it was enough for them to roll the dice with him again in 2021.

Steele showed progression in his second season, improving in both phases of the game. His pass protection was still a liability but his run blocking was making up for it. He finished the 2021 season ranked No. 55 by PFF.

This progression continued in 2022, with Steele rocketing up to No. 23 on PFF’s list. His run-blocking prowess turned to dominance and Steele graded out as the sixth-best run blocking tackle in the NFL. Before a knee injury ended his 2022 season prematurely, he was arguably the top run blocker on the Dallas line and possibly even a success story for the ages.

Will the Cowboys be able to recreate a similarly successful arc for Josh Ball?

Eagles-Saints injury report: Miles Sanders among 4 to not practice, A.J. Brown listed as limited

The Philadelphia Eagles held a Wednesday walkthrough with Miles Sanders and Jalen Hurts among four players to not practice, while A.J. Brown and Jordan Davis were limited

The Eagles released their initial injury report for Sunday’s matchup against the Saints, and Miles Sanders was among four players to sit out practice.

Philadelphia participated in a walkthrough, so the injury report was an estimation, while A.J. Brown and Jordan Davis were limited participants.

Quarterback Jalen Hurts is pushing to play, but was a non-participant in Wednesday’s session, while the team awaits word on C.J. Gardner-Johnson. The star safety didn’t have his 21-day practice window activated, meaning he’ll miss another week.

Lane Johnson is delaying surgery on his injured abdominal in will rehab before returning for the playoffs.

Studs and duds from Eagles 40-34 loss to the Cowboys in Week 16

We’re looking at the Studs and duds from the Philadelphia Eagles’ 40-34 loss to the Dallas Cowboys in Week 16

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The Eagles moved to 13-2 on the season after a Christmas Eve loss to the Dallas Cowboys at AT&T Stadium.

The Birds can still clinch the No. 1 seed – Philadelphia needs to win just one of the final two games to clinch the NFC East, the No. 1 seed, the first-round bye, and home-field advantage throughout the NFC playoffs.

The Eagles are battered and a bit flustered after an ugly performance that was buoyed by four turnovers on offense, and an inability to get off the field on third downs as a defense.

DeVonta Smith and A.J. Brown both went over 100 yards on the day but were overshadowed by CeeDee Lamb’s 10 catch, 120 yards, and 2 touchdown performance to carry the Dallas passing game.

Eagles’ PFF grades: Best and worst performers from 40-34 loss to the Cowboys

Here are the Best and worst PFF grades from the Philadelphia Eagles’40-34 loss to the Dallas Cowboys in Week 16

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The Eagles moved to 13-2 on the season after a Christmas Eve loss to the Dallas Cowboys at AT&T Stadium.

The Birds can still clinch the No. 1 seed – Philadelphia needs to win just one of the final two games to clinch the NFC East, the No. 1 seed, the first-round bye, and home-field advantage throughout the NFC playoffs.

The Eagles are battered and a bit flustered after an ugly performance that was buoyed by four turnovers on offense, and an inability to get off the field on third downs as a defense.

Gardner Minshew was 24-40 for 355 yards, 2 touchdowns, and 2 interceptions in place of an injured Jalen Hurts.

Minshew also had one rushing touchdown on the afternoon but was credited with one lost fumble as well.

With the team pivoting towards Week 17, here are the best and worst performers according to PFF.

Eagles snap count vs. Cowboys: Breakdown, observations from Week 16

Here’s a look at the snap count and playing time usage from the Philadelphia Eagles’ 40-34 loss to the Dallas Cowboys on Saturday at AT&T Stadium

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Gardner Minshew threw two scoring passes and did his best Jalen Hurts impersonation by running for another touchdown, but it wasn’t enough on the road in Dallas.

Dak Prescott finished with 347 yards passing and three touchdowns after his interception was returned for a touchdown by Josh Sweat, and the Cowboys beat the Eagles 40-34 on Saturday to stay within striking distance in the NFC.

The top team in the NFL, Philadelphia (13-2) committed two of their four turnovers in the final five minutes and missed a chance to clinch the NFC’s top seed with a win over a division rival.

The Eagles now need a win or loss by Dallas (11-4) in the final two games in order to wrap up home-field advantage throughout the NFC playoffs.

Here’s the snap count and usage rate for Philadelphia after their five-game win streak was snapped.