REPORT: Kalen DeBoer adding Buffalo head coach Maurice Linguist to defensive staff

Kalen DeBoer adding another FBS head coach to his defensive staff in Tuscaloosa

New Alabama football head coach Kalen DeBoer is reportedly adding another FBS head coach to his defensive coaching staff in Tuscaloosa bringing in Buffalo head coach Maurice Linguist. Adam Rittenberg of ESPN was the first to report the breaking news.

Linguist has been the head coach at Buffalo since 2021 where he has posted a 14-23 record. Linguist has had a long and successful career as a defensive coach including stops in the SEC at both Mississippi State and Texas A&M.

Linguist is best known for his recruiting effort in the state of Texas which produces some of the top high school talent every season.

Stay connected to Roll Tide Wire for more coverage of Coach DeBoer and the new staff in Tuscaloosa.

Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on X (Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes, and opinion. You can also follow Stacey Blackwood on X (Twitter) @Blackwood89.

Official: Michigan loses assistant to Buffalo

In Ann Arbor since January, one of the premier hires this offseason for Michigan football is off to be the new Buffalo Bulls head coach.

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As one former coach with ties to Michigan football was replaced in his post, it caused a ripple effect which meant that the Wolverines would be replacing another assistant in May.

With former Michigan lineman Les Miles ousted in Kansas, the Jayhawks stole away Buffalo head coach Lance Leipold. As the Bulls sought to bring in a new head coach, it went back to the well, hiring a new Wolverines assistant who had previously assisted at Buffalo.

Maurice Linguist was in Ann Arbor for just a few months, brought aboard in January as the cornerbacks coach and co-defensive coordinator, getting a step up from the previous post held by Mike Zordich. Linguist came aboard from the Dallas Cowboys and was integral in recruiting Michigan five-star commit Will Johnson.

However, on Friday, Linguist was hired away, announced as the Buffalo Bulls’ newest head coach.

Linguist had been in Ann Arbor for such a short time, he never even met with the media.

Candidates to replace him include Kentucky defensive backs coach Steve Clinkscale, who has put several DBs into the NFL in recent years.

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Mo Linguist leaves Cowboys staff for role at Michigan

Former Cowboys secondary coach Maurice Linguist is headed to the University of Michigan to coach the cornerbacks amongst other roles.

The coaching staff shuffle continues for the Dallas Cowboys on the defensive side of the ball. While the hiring of Dan Quinn to run the defense was the biggest notable splash, bringing Joe Whitt, Jr. to coach the secondary was just as important of an acquisition. The hiring of Whitt effectively meant the replacement of Maurice “Mo” Linguist.

Linguist is now set to join Jim Harbaugh’s coaching staff at the University of Michigan. Linguist will join the Wolverines as a co-defensive coordinator and cornerbacks coach.

 

Linguist, 36, only spent one year in Dallas as their secondary coach alongside Al Harris where it gradually improved over the course of a 16-game season. The Cowboys had 10 interceptions in 2020. It was his first year working in the professional ranks after coming over from Texas A&M where he worked with the cornerbacks group. He also coached at Minnesota, Mississippi State and Iowa State among other stops.

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Michigan completes defensive coaching staff

The defensive coaching staff for Michigan football is complete heading into the 2021 season.

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Michigan finally completed its defensive coaching staff, and while there were some rumored hires on the way, only two came to pass, ultimately.

The Wolverines announced that, in addition to new defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald, they’re hiring two new defensive coaches while retaining two. Shaun Nua will continue to coach the defensive line while Brian Jean-Mary will continue to work with the linebackers.

As far as the new additions are concerned, they’re two that were reported previously. New safeties coach George Helow comes aboard from Maryland after coming up through the SEC in various stops, while avid recruiter and recent Dallas Cowboys defensive backs coach Maurice Linguist will coach the defensive backs in addition to being the co-defensive coordinator. Macdonald will still be considered the defensive coordinator-proper.

Full release:

University of Michigan J. Ira and Nicki Harris Family Head Football Coach Jim Harbaugh announced Wednesday (Jan. 20) the hiring of Maurice Linguist and George Helow to the defensive coaching staff. Linguist will serve as defensive backs/co-defensive coordinator and Helow will coach the safeties for the Wolverines.

“Maurice and George are outstanding additions to our defensive coaching staff,” said Harbaugh. “They are highly regarded and well-respected coaches who have worked with some of the top defensive minds in college football. Their experience at some of the top programs in the country will benefit our team and student-athletes. Michigan Football welcomes Maurice, George and their families and look forward to them joining our football family and university community.”

In addition, Harbaugh announced that the program reached an agreement on a contract extension with Shaun Nua to continue as the team’s defensive line coach. Brian Jean-Mary will work with the linebackers. Those personnel moves complete the defensive coaching staff for the Wolverines under first-year defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald.

Following is biographical information and comments from Linguist and Helow about joining the Michigan staff:

Maurice Linguist Comment on Michigan

“I have always had an appreciation and an admiration for Coach Harbaugh and his accomplishments at the University of Michigan. The University of Michigan is full of college football’s best traditions, and I cannot wait to get started. I look forward to leading and serving the young men in the program, developing life-long relationships, and competing at the highest of levels on the field. My family and I look forward to getting to Ann Arbor, and we are beyond excited to join the Michigan family. Go Blue!”

Maurice Linguist Biographical Information

Linguist joins the Michigan football staff as defensive backs/co-defensive coordinator after spending the 2020 football season as the defensive backs coach for the Dallas Cowboys. Prior to joining the Cowboys staff, Linguist was the cornerbacks coach at Texas A&M for two seasons (2018-19).

In Dallas, Linguist directed a secondary that forced 10 interceptions while allowing the fifth-fewest passing first downs in the league (180). The Cowboys were also ranked in the top half of the league in pass yards allowed (11th), completion percentage against (10th) and takeaways (ninth). Linguist coached rookie cornerback Trevon Diggs (three interceptions) to a strong first season in the league. Three of Dallas’ four leading tacklers in 2020 were starters in the secondary, including former Wolverine Jourdan Lewis who set a career-high with 59 stops. Safety Donovan Wilson, whom Linguist coached at Texas A&M, led the Cowboys in takeaways (two interceptions, three forced fumbles, and two fumble recoveries) and was third on the team with 71 tackles.

Linguist has worked with college secondaries at eight programs. Most recently, he coached cornerbacks at Texas A&M (2018-19), defensive backs at Minnesota (2017) and safeties at Mississippi State (2016).

At A&M, Linguist’s secondaries limited opportunities for opponents and played tight coverage in key situations. Teams converted just 31.2 percent of third down tries (102-of-326) over his two seasons and A&M ranked ninth nationally in that category in 2018. The Aggies intercepted their opponents 19 times in his two seasons and made a habit of getting off the field. During the 2018 season, the defense was top-15 nationally in first downs allowed (221) and faced the fewest snaps against among all SEC teams. The defense made a dramatic improvement in pass efficiency defense from 2018 to 2019, jumping from 106th nationally to 26th in the country.

Linguist helped the Aggies produce back-to-back top six recruiting classes nationally in 2019 and 2020. He was the lead recruiter for five-star safety Jaylon Jones, the first-ever five-star defensive back to sign with Texas A&M.

In his season at Minnesota, Linguist’s secondary helped anchor a defense that finished No. 11 nationally with 174.5 yards allowed per game after listing 73rd in the NCAA a year earlier. The unit surrendered 16 touchdowns, a top-25 figure nationally, and also ranked among the nation’s best in first downs allowed (11th), and total defense (30th). Linguist was the lead recruiter for Rashod Bateman, the Big Ten’s Wide Receiver of the Year. Linguist was promoted to assistant head coach following the 2017 season before accepting a position at Texas A&M.

At Mississippi State, Linguist led the safeties group which was responsible for seven of the team’s 14 interceptions. Three safeties eclipsed the 50-tackle mark for the Bulldogs: Brandon Bryant (62, three PBUs), Kivon Coman (58, four PBUs), and Mark McLaurin (51, seven PBUs) were among the team’s leading tacklers. The defense scored four touchdowns (No. 8, NCAA) and totaled 14 interceptions (No. 35, NCAA) during the 2016 season.

Prior to his time in Starkville, Linguist coached defensive backs at Iowa State (2014-15) and Buffalo (2012-13), earning the title of defensive passing game coordinator in his second year at both schools. He coached players to three All-Big 12 honors in his two seasons at Iowa State, including safety Kamari Cotton-Moya, a first-team freshman All-American by the Football Writers’ Association of America (FWAA). Cotton-Moya led the team in tackles and was named the conference’s Freshman of the Year on defense. Linguist would help direct cornerback Brian Peavy to be a finalist for the award the following year.

At Buffalo, Linguist helped the Bulls finish second in the MAC East and reached the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl in 2013. The unit ranked second in the league in interceptions (15), points per game allowed (24.4), and yards per game allowed (382.2). Linguist coached Najja Johnson to first-team all-conference honors and a career total of 38 pass breakups, No. 2 in program history. Johnson led the MAC in interceptions the year earlier as part of a Bulls unit that was tops in the conference in pass completion percentage allowed while ranking second in pass defense.

Linguist spent three years at James Madison, helping the program pull in the top FCS recruiting class during the 2012 cycle while the team reached the second round of the NCAA Football Championship Series Playoffs. He helped JMU rank among the top 20 teams in FCS in scoring defense three consecutive seasons (2009-11).

Linguist’s first full-time position was at Valdosta State, working with defensive backs and special teams. The Blazers went 9-3 and earned a No. 12 national ranking in Division II.

Linguist began as a graduate assistant at Baylor, his alma mater, working as a graduate assistant with the strong safeties and rover backs. During his career at Baylor, he was a defensive MVP and honorable mention All-Big 12 selection. He made 24 starts in 42 appearances as a strong safety from 2003-06. A native of Dallas, Texas, Linguist graduated from Baylor with degrees in communications (2006) and a master’s in health, human performance and recreation (2007). He was an Academic All-Big 12 honoree.

Linguist and his wife, Stacie, have a daughter, Maura (4), and son, Lance (18 months). Stacie is a practicing attorney that is barred in five states [Texas, Maryland, Iowa, Minnesota and Washington (DC)].

George Helow Comment on Michigan

“I am incredibly excited and grateful to be joining the Michigan Football program, a school with a rich tradition and history of winning. I am looking forward to developing great players who are also upstanding citizens. This is an outstanding opportunity to work with Coach Jim Harbaugh, one of the best in the business, and the great coaching staff that he has assembled at Michigan. I can’t wait to get to work. Go Blue!”

George Helow Biographical Information

Helow (pronounced He-LOW) joins the Michigan football staff as safeties coach after spending the 2020 season as the special teams coordinator and inside linebackers coach at the University of Maryland. Helow has been a member of two national championship teams and worked with some of the college football’s top defensive minds.

He spent four seasons at Colorado State University (2016-19) prior to joining the Terrapins staff. Helow coached the safeties during his final two seasons on staff, after working with the outside linebackers as a defensive quality control coach and graduate assistant during the 2016-17 seasons.

Helow oversaw a secondary that allowed just 181.6 yards per game in 2019, the seventh-best pass defense in the country and the top-ranked in the Mountain West Conference. Safeties Jamal Hicks and Logan Stewart combined for 193 tackles, eight tackles for loss, 2.5 sacks and two interceptions for the Rams. Hicks earned first-team All-MWC and helped lead a pass defense that held seven opponents under 200 passing yards.

In his first season mentoring the safeties, three of Helow’s defensive backs ranked in the top five in tackles on the team in 2018. The Rams ranked fourth in pass defense in the MWC.

Helow has coached at some of the nation’s top programs during his career, with stints at Alabama, Florida State and Georgia. Helow helped the Seminoles win a national title in 2013 as a defensive graduate assistant coach. He also spent two seasons as a defensive graduate assistant at Georgia (2014-15) where he worked with the safeties.

In 2012, Helow broke into the college coaching ranks as a member of the Alabama staff under Nick Saban. He was an intern in the weight room during the spring and summer before working as a defensive intern for coordinator Kirby Smart during the fall. The Crimson Tide allowed just 10.9 points per game during the year and went on to win the national title against Notre Dame in the BCS National Championship Game.

Helow played collegiately at the University of Mississippi from 2006-10. After redshirting in 2006, Helow saw his first career action against Louisiana Tech in 2007 and went on to play in all 38 games for Ole Miss during the 2008-10 seasons, including back-to-back Cotton Bowl victories in 2009 and 2010. He led the Rebels in special teams tackles during the 2010 season and was nominated for the Burlsworth Trophy, an award given annually to the nation’s most outstanding college football player who began their career as a walk-on.

Helow graduated from Ole Miss with a business degree in marketing and added a master’s degree in adult education during his time at Georgia.

A native of Jacksonville, Florida, Helow played at Bishop Kenny High School and later attended Hargrave Military Academy Prep School in Chatham, Virginia, before enrolling at Mississippi. Helow returned to his alma mater, Bishop Kenny, to coach with his younger brother Peter after graduating from Ole Miss.

Michigan football assistant coach hiring tracker

Michigan football is building out its new coaching staff and with so many changes, here are those who have been connected to Ann Arbor.

Michigan football is experiencing an incredible amount of turnover on its staff, with some wholesale changes making for a new-look coaching unit set to overtake the team in 2021.

While there’s been just one addition to the offensive staff at this juncture, and it appears that most of the offensive staff will return in bulk, the defense is another story.

We already know about Michigan’s hire of defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald, which was announced on Sunday, as well as the previous hire of running backs coach Mike Hart, but there are multiple names that have been reported to join the staff in short order — though none of those have been made official.

Here are all the names of those connected to coaching jobs at Michigan, what their status is, their job history and more below in our coaching tracker.

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Report: Michigan dipping again into the NFL for co-DC hire

Michigan football is looking to the NFL again, hiring a co-defensive coordinator from the Dallas Cowboys.

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Why have one, when you can have two for twice the price?

It turns out, Michigan football might not be relying solely on new defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald for his defensive expertise, after all.

According to Yahoo Sports’ Pete Thamel, it appears as if the Wolverines will do like many programs have done in recent memory and have another ‘co-defensive coordinator’ oversee the defense alongside a protege. Though Macdonald himself is young, Michigan seems to be intent on continuing the youth movement, by adding another young defensive mind from the NFL — this time in Dallas Cowboys defensive backs coach Maurice Linguist.

Thamel says he’s set to join Macdonald as Michigan’s co-defensive coordinator.

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A Texas native, Linguist is 36 years old and spent one year in the Dallas Cowboys organization. Before that, he coached cornerbacks at Texas A&M. A former safety at Baylor, Linguist has also coached at Valdosta State, James Madison, Buffalo, Iowa State, Minnesota and Mississippi State.

As far as his philosophy working with defensive backs, here’s how Linguist approaches it:

While speaking with the media, Linguist said he will spend the majority of his time with the safeties and slot corners. Former cornerback, Al Harris will work with the cornerbacks.

“Ballhawks,” Linguist replied when asked the type of safeties he wants. “If you are looking at an elite defensive player, you want somebody who can be aggressive to the ball and go make plays on the ball.”

While at Minnesota, Linguist also held the role of assistant head coach.

Michigan has also been reported to be in the mix to hire Maryland assistant George Helow and Florida coach Christian Robinson.

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Does Clinton-Dix cut put Earl Thomas in play? Stephen Jones ‘wouldn’t rule anything out’

The release of a veteran safety leaves Dallas thin at the position while a 7-time Pro Bowler who wants to be a Cowboy sits unemployed.

The news came as a surprise to many in Cowboys Nation. HaHa Clinton-Dix, the former Packers/McCarthy-era safety who was expected to bring veteran leadership to the back end of the Dallas defense, was unceremoniously cut just ten days before the season opener.

But arguably, the bigger surprise for some came when that roster move wasn’t immediately followed up by an announcement that the club was in talks with Earl Thomas to take over that newly-vacated locker. While Cowboys ownership says they will “look at all avenues” at the safety position, the release of Clinton-Dix does create a sense that the team may be woefully thin in the secondary.

Speaking on Dallas radio with 105.3 The Fan, Cowboys chief operating officer Stephen Jones gave no indication that signing Thomas is on the front office’s weekend to-do list. But he didn’t slam the door on the idea, either.

“We’re certainly going to look at all avenues as we move forward here and I wouldn’t rule anything out,” Jones said, according to the team website. “We’re just down there working with [vice president of player personnel] Will [McClay] and our pro scouting department as well as our coaches in trying to figure out what our next steps might be here.”

The most logical next step has seemed to be Thomas, the seven-time Pro Bowl safety who has been widely linked to his hometown Cowboys for close to two years. The longtime Seahawk was released by the Baltimore Ravens after just one season and has been unemployed for nearly two weeks.

Now with the sudden thinning of the herd at safety in Dallas just as a promising season is about to begin, the calls to slap a star on Thomas’s helmet have never been louder.

Other league insiders, though, started downplaying any potential move to sign Thomas within minutes of the news that Clinton-Dix had been dismissed.

The Cowboys profess to be pleased with their defensive backs under new coordinator Mike Nolan and position coaches Al Harris and Maurice Linguist. Darian Thompson reportedly had an exceptional training camp and looks to have earned the starting nod opposite Xavier Woods in the wake of Clinton-Dix’s release.

But Woods has been dinged up, causing even more uncertainty barely a week before the team’s opener against the Rams. The coaching staff has been preaching positional flexibility to its players; that model may be tested early as cornerbacks Chidobe Awuzie and newcomer Reggie Robinson may find themselves fulfilling safety duties out of necessity and leaving the corner slots to Anthony Brown, Jourdan Lewis, and highly-touted rookie Trevon Diggs.

“CeeDee Lamb might be Randy Moss, and Zeke might run for 2,000 yards, but they’re going to give up 50 points [a game] unless these guys can play,” said Good Morning Football host Kyle Brandt on Friday while looking at a listing of the current Cowboys secondary.

The team lists just three true safeties with the Clinton-Dix release. The oldest of them is 26. Of the ten listed cornerbacks, the average age is 24.7. The DB group as a whole is young and green.

“I would just call this out now,” Brandt continued. “On Monday, most of the country is not going to work. Good for them. Today and tomorrow, you know who’s not working? Earl Thomas. This is a different conversation now. If you didn’t want to get in the Jamal Adams business, that’s fine. It would have been very expensive and a whole different deal. Earl Thomas can maybe help you immediately. It goes from being a luxury of a good player to a necessity that, ‘I don’t know if we have enough talent on our back end to go toe-for-toe with some of these teams, starting with the Rams.’ If you know Earl is super-super-thirsty to play in Dallas, make him an offer. Low-ball him. See how much he wants to play in Dallas. I was okay on the thing before; now they need it. That is a striking fullscreen about America’s Team. ‘That’s the best we got?’ That makes me really worried.”

Despite whatever personality issues sent Thomas packing from both Seattle and Baltimore within the last 17 months, he’s a veteran player who could conceivably provide leadership on the field, and certainly still has the physical tools to contribute.

But Jones played it close to the vest when specifically asked about the former Legion of Boom star.

“As I always say, we’re always in the market 365 days a year to improve this football team, and that’s what we’ll we’ll continue to do,” Jones said.

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ESPN reveals Cowboys’ weakness, but coaching staff has a plan

Dallas didn’t land an elite safety and lost its Pro Bowl cornerback, but the new DB coach says all his guys will be able to multitask.

Sizing up the Cowboys roster is still largely a speculative effort. A lack of preseason games and a shortened training camp with tight controls on revealing what’s happening behind those practice field doors has left fans and experts alike with very little information to work with, making for lots of guesswork when it comes to grading players.

Thanks to Sunday night’s not-ready-for-primetime televised practice that barely televised any actual football, judging the 2020 Cowboys- or any NFL team- still comes down to how they look on paper. ESPN’s Bill Barnwell has done just that, attempting to identify the biggest Achilles heel for each squad as the season draws nearer.

In Dallas, he sees the secondary as the club’s primary deficiency. But it’s not at the position viewed as most troublesome when the 2019 season ended.

Barnwell’s list looks at the 20 teams deemed most likely to make the 2020 postseason, and spotlights the weakest link, whether it’s an injury that’s left one unit severely depleted, a COVID-19 opt-out that’s exposed a shallow depth chart, a less-than-ideal contractual entanglement, or plain and simple bad roster makeup.

In Dallas, he says, the Achilles heel is… cornerback, not safety. High-profile flirtings with Earl Thomas and Jamal Adams have made it pretty clear to the rest of the league that the Cowboys felt their back end was exposed, so to speak. And while many expected the club to shore up the safety spot with Xavier McKinney or Grant Delpit (or even Antoine Winfield Jr. or Jeremy Chinn) in the 2020 draft, the team elected to sit tight with Xavier Woods, Darian Thompson, Donovan Wilson, and the newly-acquired HaHa Clinton-Dix.

The team was able to land Alabama corner Trevon Diggs in the second round, though, and also brought in Reggie Robinson, a potential diamond in the rough at the position. So what gives Barnwell pause about the CB state in Dallas?

“[I]t took a step back at cornerback after losing Byron Jones to the Dolphins in free agency,” he writes. “The Cowboys re-signed Anthony Brown, who should start in the slot, and Chidobe Awuzie will likely return as a starter on one side, but they’re hoping to replace Jones by having someone emerge from a committee.

“[Jourdan] Lewis is the favorite on paper to emerge as the starter, but minor injuries to Lewis and Awuzie have created an opportunity” for someone else, he points out.

That someone else could be Diggs, who has, by all accounts, had a very impressive camp. In fact, Barnwell notes, “he has the most upside of the bunch and figures to be a regular by the end of the season.”

Robinson and veteran Daryl Worley also figure to factor in as well, along with cornerbacks Chris Westry, Saivion Smith, C.J. Goodwin, and Deante Burton.

But new Cowboys defensive backs coach Maurice Linguist has hinted recently that outsiders should stop drawing such a sharp distinction between safeties and cornerbacks. Because he’s not. In fact. he’s expecting everyone in both groups to do both jobs.

“I’ll tell you what I told all the DBs: ‘Hey guys, you guys play DB,'” Linguist said Saturday, according to the team website. “Don’t lock yourself into a position or lock yourself into thinking you’re any one thing. Learn them all. There’s multiple spots back there.”

Besides the aforementioned minor injuries to Lewis and Awuzie, Woods has also joined the list of the walking wounded. The Louisiana Tech product left Sunday’s practice session with a groin injury and did not return, although head coach Mike McCarthy said he wasn’t concerned about Woods’ status.

Still, a high attrition rate among the defensive backs may mean more chances for all of them to do some cross-training.

“By no means are you just one position for us,” Linguist said. “You play defensive back, and we all know how this thing kind of goes throughout the season. We’ll see multiple people at multiple different positions.

“If I know exactly where the safety is and I’m a corner, well, that’s going to help me better understand what my technique is at corner,” he continued. “If I know exactly what a corner is doing at the safety position, it can help me move six inches to the left or six inches to the right and be successful.”

“I think one of the worst things you can do is say ‘This is what I am,'” Linguist said. “Because what it’s going to allow us to do is plug and play the next best person, the next best player – not necessarily just the ‘backup’ of the position. How can we find the best spots – six, seven, eight DBs – and get them on the field together in a rotation.”

It sounds great on paper. Right now, though, that’s all fans have to go on. The multitasking strategy will have its chance to play out in the real world soon enough.

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Cowboys 4th round pick Reggie Robinson moved to safety

CB Reggie Robinson has spent a lot of time in training camp at cornerback. Is a full-time position switch coming?

Noticeable during the second week of Cowboys training camp was the amount of time 2020 fourth rounder Reggie Robinson reportedly spent at safety. Is a full-time position switch forthcoming for the rookie, or does this reflect the overall philosophy of the new defensive coaching staff?

The 6-foot-1, 190-pound Robinson played cornerback at Tulsa, but the Cowboys think his skillset also translates. Robinson did spend time there in high school, and the zone-heavy scheme Tulsa ran gave Robinson a lot of time to look into the opponent’s backfield. Dallas is relatively deep at CB, with 2019 starter Chidobe Awuzie alongside rookie second rounder Trevon Diggs, and veterans Anthony Brown, Jourdan Lewis, Daryl Worley and special teamer C.J. Goodwin. Their listed safeties are Xavier Woods, HaHa Clinton-Dix, Darian Thompson and Donovan Wilson.

Whispers about a position change for someone among Cowboys secondary group have surrounded the team for most of the offseason. As camp progresses, those rumors appear to be coming to fruition, with both Worley and Robinson taking reps at safety.

Of the two players, Robinson’s change is being reported as more permanent.

From a logistical standpoint, the move makes sense. But is committing Robinson to safety the best investment, given his ultimate upside at cornerback? Also unknown is just how Dallas is planning on using their additional safeties – or defensive backs, according to coach Maurice Lingusit.

Recently, Linguist clarified how the Cowboys view their secondary, in that they’re all defensive backs. Versatility has been a running offseason theme for the entire defense, with players capable of “being multiple” at each level. The same is true for the secondary, as players are seemingly expected to play both CB and safety. Said Linguist:

“By no means are you just one position for us. You play defensive back . . . If I know exactly where the safety is and I’m a corner, well that’s going to help me better understand what my technique is at corner. If I know exactly what a corner is doing at the safety position, it can help me move six inches to the left or six inches to the right and be successful.”

Whether Robinson’s time at safety is more permanent or situational remains to be seen, but having an interchangeable secondary should benefit the team in 2020. Having players capable of playing multiple positions helps protect against injury, as well as ensures the best group of players is on the field at once. Dallas can utilize additional DBs as slot corners, hybrid linebackers, or additional back-end support, helping Linguist and DC Mike Nolan combat modern NFL offenses and schemes.

However Robinson will be deployed this season, it bodes well that he seems to be in their immediate defensive plans. Given that Darian Thompson somewhat surprisingly seems to have the inside track to a starting safety spot, perhaps more roles are up for grabs than previously thought. For a young player like Robinson, this training camp is crucial toward determining the player he ultimately is at the NFL level.

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News: Randy Gregory may have way back thanks to Raiders, Witten explores options

Also, the Cowboys will keep terminology for Dak Prescott, Jamal Adams may stay with the Jets, and the Raiders’ move may impact NFL policy.

Say, say, say… Super Bowl Week means lots of talk leading up to the big game. And even though they’re not playing on Sunday, the Cowboys have been a hot topic among the media in Miami.

Jason Witten says he still wants to play, even if it’s not in Dallas. Dak Prescott will be saying many of the same things in the huddle in 2020. One of this year’s Super Bowl quarterbacks had great things to say about Tony Romo back when he entered the league. Jamal Adams says he’s planning on staying with the Jets. The Cowboys’ new secondary coach says he wants “ballhawks.” And an unlikely supporter is the latest to say that Drew Pearson’s exclusion from Canton is “a shame.”

Here’s what they all had to say, in this edition of News and Notes.


Jason Witten hopes to continue playing for Cowboys, but says ‘all options are on the table’ :: The Athletic

The 37-year-old tight end looked to many fans as if he had lost more than a few steps last season, but Jason Witten may not be quite ready to hang up his cleats and retire a second time. In fact, he sounds like someone gearing up for yet another season in pursuit of a Super Bowl… but will it be as a Dallas Cowboy?

“We’ll see how it plays out, but yeah, I’m putting myself in position to go play and evaluating what that looks like,” Witten is quoted as saying. “I hope so [it’s with the Cowboys]. But I realize I’m a free agent, too, in March. Any time a new staff comes together, I’ve played a long time, so I realize that may mean somewhere else, too. That’s just part of the business. I’ll continue to communicate and see where it unfolds.”

The future Hall of Famer says he’s had a good visit with new Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy and has been “in constant communication” with Jerry and Stephen Jones in the Dallas front office. But Witten’s longstanding relationship with new Giants offensive coordinator Jason Garrett bears monitoring and has already fueled speculation of a possible move to New York.

–TB


Dak Prescott: Mike McCarthy’s decision to keep Cowboys’ terminology the same is ‘huge’ :: USA Today

With so many changes on tap for 2020, Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott is relieved that one thing that will reportedly stay the same is the vocabulary he uses when calling plays in the huddle.

“It’s huge,” Prescott told Jori Epstein in Miami. “That’s big. I mean, that’s one of the biggest things when you talk about a quarterback, when you talk about leading an offense. Because if the terminology stays the same, that lessens that learning curve, that gap of, ‘I’ve got to learn that before I can teach it.’ Well, now I know that, so I can go straight to teaching.”

Click the link for more of what Prescott said, including his thoughts on what his teammates think of all the talk regrading his contract status with the team.

–TB


Cowboys have found gold (jackets) at No. 17 :: The Mothership

Could Dallas strike gold with the 17th pick in the upcoming draft? It’s happened before. Of the four previous times the club has made the selection in that spot, two of the players chosen have gone on to find themselves enshrined in Canton. Not a bad ratio.

Granted, Emmitt Smith and Mel Renfro leave pretty big shoes for an incoming rookie to fill. But the other two 17th-overall picks in club history were no slouches, either, as team staff writer Nick Eatman points out.

–TB


Patrick Mahomes: Growing up a Cowboys fan, to be compared to Tony Romo is ‘awesome’ :: Dallas Morning News (2017)

No self-respecting Cowboys fan is rooting for the 49ers in Super Bowl LIV. But maybe you’re looking for extra incentive to be an honorary Chiefs fan for the day, like WFAA’s Mark Lane was.

In the 2017 Dallas Morning News piece Lane links to, quarterback Patrick Mahomes detailed his Cowboys fandom as a youngster growing up in Texas. Not yet selected by Kansas City at the time of the article, Mahomes was flattered by pre-draft comparisons likening him to Cowboys gunslinger Tony Romo.

“He wasn’t scared to pull the trigger,” Mahomes then said of the just-retired Romo on the Fox Sports 1 show Undisputed. “He wasn’t scared to make any throw on the football field. So just to get compared to him is awesome.”

–TB


2020 NFL Draft Digest No. 1: Searching for a solution to the Cowboys’ safety woes :: The Athletic

Bob Sturm kicks off his NFL draft work by taking a look at the position the Cowboys have ignored perhaps more than any other as of late: safety. In 2019, Dallas found themselves in the enviable position of being able to choose from Juan Thornhill, Nasir Adderley, and Taylor Rapp. They chose none of those players. Perhaps the new coaching staff has a different philosophy?

Sturm looks into five different safeties that will likely be gone by Day 2 of the draft. The head of the class is Clemson linebacker Isaiah Simmons, who lined up everywhere and, prior to his final college season, played safety.

–TT


New York Jets putting the kibosh on Jamal Adams to Cowboys trade speculation? :: Inside the Star

The sequel to Cowboy Nation’s favorite fantasy tale from last season may be getting the plug pulled while still in preproduction. After a long and public courtship that ultimately went nowhere in 2019, Dallas and Jets safety Jamal Adams may be on the outs once and for all.

Adams has taken to Twitter to reveal that he and the Jets have had “small discussions” about an extension that would keep him with Gang Green. The All-Pro safety went on to say that he “fully expect[s] to be extended this offseason” and that he wants to remain in New York.

Of course, a lot can happen between “small discussions” and actually spilling ink on a Jets contract, so drama-loving Cowboys fans may choose to keep their popcorn at the ready and hoping for a plot twist.

–TB


New Cowboys secondary coach Maurice Linguist wants ‘ballhawks’ at safety :: Blogging the Boys

The Cowboys ranked last in the league in interceptions last season. That’s going to change, if new secondary coach Maurice Linguist has anything to say about it. The Texas A&M hire plans to spend 2020 working mainly with the Dallas safeties, while another new staffer, former Green Bay Packer Al Harris (who had 21 picks over his NFL career), will focus on the team’s cornerbacks.

Linguist, in a video interview posted on the Cowboys’ website, says he wants “ballhawks” at the safety position. In a single answer about what he’s looking for, the 35-year-old Dallas native also used words like “attacking,” “disruptive,” and “aggressive.” All are phrases that may be unfamiliar to Cowboys fans when it comes to discussions of their defensive backs’ recent play.

–TB


Suspensions like Randy Gregory’s may become illegal :: Sport DFW

Defensive end Randy Gregory remains on indefinite suspension after his latest violation of the league’s substance abuse policy in February 2019. In April, the Cowboys extended the former second-round-pick’s contract through the 2020 season- mainly because they believe in his football potential, but also partly because they know the tide is turning when it comes to how society and the law view marijuana usage.

Reid Hanson lays out a theory- also citing ProFootballTalk’s Mike Florio- that the league will perhaps have to change its view on the subject as well. The catalyst may well be the Raiders’ move to Las Vegas. Nevada state law prohibits companies from refusing to hire an employee based on a failed drug test. That law appears to now apply to the Raiders… and could eventually force the league to allow the other 31 teams to follow suit.

With the CBA currently being negotiated and reports concessions will be made in the testing and discipline areas (in exchange for a 17th game), things may be moving on multiple fronts that will allow NFL players to exist without marijuana testing or punishments.

–TB


Joe Theismann believes that Drew Pearson belongs in the Pro Football Hall of Fame :: Blogging the Boys

Joe Theismann is about the last guy one would expect to heap praise on a member of the Dallas Cowboys. But the Redskins legend said this week that he considers it “a shame Drew Pearson’s not in the Hall of Fame.”

That’s saying something, considering the Cowboys wideout torched Washington for 1,312 yards and seven touchdowns over his 21 career meetings with the Redskins. Most of those games featured Theismann at the helm throughout the mid- to late-1970s and early ’80s.

“He’s the only member of the All-Decade team that’s not in the Hall of Fame, which really is a travesty, ” Theismann continued. “It makes you look at the Hall of Fame and start to wonder why. Why and how can something like that happen?”

But Theismann’s support of Pearson runs deeper than even their storied NFL rivalry. Many fans may not realize that the two were actually high school teammates.

–TB


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