Cowboys News: Preseason schedule finalized, former player linked to one of Watson’s accusers

How will Dallas far against the NFL Champs and runner-ups? Will history cause complications? Could Parsons make a difference?

The Dallas Cowboys continue to go about their offseason business. The club is tight against the cap, but is searching for veteran help in the QB department to back up Dak Prescott. Another one in, another one out without making a deal. Meanwhile, fans trying to plan their offseason travel plans now know what games are on the regular season and preseason schedule and for what dates. The opponents had been announced, but now the dates and times are locked in.

A player from the late 2000s-decade has been anonymously called out by one of the massage therapists who is suing Houston Texans’ QB Deshaun Watson for sexual assault, for a similar incident that went unreported at the alleged time. In other legal news, Ezekiel Elliott’s dogs were loose on Thursday.

Can Prescott return to form? Can the defense continue their late-season turnover trend? Will the matchup with this AFC opponent shatter records? All this and more in the latest edition of Cowboys news and notes.

Gil Brandt: Cowboys LB Micah Parsons among rookies in best position to succeed

The legendary talent scout says Dallas’s first-round pick could step in and make an immediate impact on a defense that got gashed last year.

Gil Brandt knows a thing or two thousand about evaluating football players. He was instrumental in finding and scouting countless players over his tenure of nearly three decades as the Cowboys’ vice president of player personnel. From pioneering the process of grading collegiate football stars to scouring other sports for athletes who could transition to the gridiron, from seeking out small-school prospects to helping create the NFL combine, few men have demonstrated as keen an eye for identifying football talent.

So when Brandt singles out a Cowboys draft pick as one of the league’s rookies in the most favorable situations for immediate success, it’s worth noting. And Brandt says linebacker Micah Parsons has just such a stage set for him in Dallas.

Of the 259 players selected in this year’s draft, the numerous undrafted free agents, and the other invited players looking to make up the league’s rookie class of 2021, Brandt selected just eight that he thinks have the best chance- based on their team’s situation- to make a splash right away.

“It can be easy to forget,” Brandt points out in his NFL.com column, “that team fit and other surrounding circumstances can have as much to do with rookie success as anything.”

It’s those surrounding circumstances- particularly the Cowboys’ poor defensive showing last season- that gives the Penn State product a leg up on making his impact felt right from the jump in Dallas.

Of Parsons, Brandt says:

“For a variety of reasons, linebacker play slipped considerably in Dallas last season, and the Cowboys hope installing the 12th overall pick in new defensive coordinator Dan Quinn’s system will reverse that downward trend. Parsons’ skill set will enable him to both play a traditional linebacker role and help DeMarcus Lawrence rush the passer off the edge. The team apparently feels bullish enough about Parsons that one-time Pro Bowler Leighton Vander Esch — who has been slowed recently by injuries — had his fifth-year option declined in the days following the draft.”

By all accounts, Parsons got off to a strong start during the weekend’s minicamp, seeing time at the middle linebacker spot. The rookie will turn just 22 years old next week.

But the legendary 89-year-old scout is already impressed by what he sees.

[listicle id=669596]

[vertical-gallery id=669570]

[listicle id=671096]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Cowboys News: Most likely veteran to be cut? Prescott, rookie minicamp updates

The Dallas Cowboys have started their rookie minicamp practices, how are the rookies doing? Is Dak Prescott ready for practice? How are RBs?

The Dallas Cowboys rookie minicamp is through two days of practice. The excitement was definitely palatable with rookie defensive players shining, though will the stellar play continue when going against the veterans vs try-out quarterbacks? Micah Parsons and Jabril Cox seem to believe the chemistry and powerful play will continue, leaning on each other to make plays.

The air seems to have cleared between Nahshon Wright and Richard Sherman, what did Wright learn from Sherman to help him grow as a player?

While much of the rookie class is learning to be versatile with their position, it is becoming more and more clear what is needed from Quinton Bohanna. What’s Dan Quinn’s coaching style? Will Dak Prescott be ready for OTAs and training camp as a full participant? How is the running back situation? All this and more in today’s news and notes.

‘You get to be a Rambo player,’ Parsons soaks in return to football as Cowboys’ Mike LB

Micah Parsons made his return to the football field during Cowboys rookie minicamp and expressed his excitement for the upcoming season.

Cowboys first-round pick Micah Parsons made his last appearance on a football field during the 2019 Cotton Bowl against Memphis. During that game, the Penn State phenom took over with 14 tackles, two sacks, two forced fumbles, and two pass deflections. That was the last time he was in a real practice as well.

During a Q&A session following Dallas’ initial rookie minicamp practice for the 2021 draft class, Parsons opened up about what it was like to be back on the field.

Last time I hit a sled….Cotton Bowl practice.

The first rep we got the rust off. The second rep was like, I’m back now. That is how it is. We just wiped the dust off and acted like it was brand new.

Now back in a football regimen, Parsons soaked in the moment with the fellow members of the 2021 Cowboys draft class.

It felt extraordinary just to get back out there and being with some of the guys I got drafted with. This is a special class. This class is going to impact the team and we are going to keep getting better. I’m just super excited to be part of this team. This team has a great chance to do great things. Once we click and the young guys get xxx we are going to be really, really good football team.

Parsons is expected to make an impact quickly and will play Mike linebacker, taking over the middle of the defense for defensive coordinator Dan Quinn’s scheme. In Seattle, Quinn had All-Pro Bobby Wagner in that role and could see Parsons reaching for that level of success.

Will and Mike are just alike. I’m just coordinating and being a dominant force. They wouldn’t move me there if they didn’t have a need a Mike. Mike linebacker you get a chance to force. You get to be a Rambo player. You can to matchup on running backs. You get a chance to play in the box. That is what I do best. You watch what I did in college. I was able to go sideline to sideline. I can go both ways. Always be around the ball. They know that is what I do best. I am excited to start there.

When working his way to the NFL, Parsons had a mentor in former Pro Bowl linebacker Lavar Arrington, who stayed in contact with him since his time in Penn State. Parsons worked out in California during the offseason and spent time with Arrington, gaining wisdom from the NFL vet.

I lean on him a lot from a mental aspect of how to be a pro, what mistakes he made. You know you’ve got to learn from other people’s mistakes, what they did well, what they didn’t do well. Lavar does a great job explaining. I leaned on him a lot when I was in California training. I went over there at least once a week and we talked every day –whether we were playing chess, board games, didn’t matter.

After rookie minicamp comes to a close after a week, Parsons will be joined by the likes of veteran starters Jaylon Smith and Leighton Vander-Esch. The pair could potentially be competing with the Penn State product but that hasn’t stopped them from growing a connection as teammates and friends.

It’s all love and it’s all business. I don’t think there’s ay love lost. I’m not trying to come in here and tell these guys what to do I’m just trying to earn my place. I’d say that’s a little I’ve got to find my place on this team and become a factor to even think about things like that so I’m still working. I was drafted but there’s so much more I’ve got to accomplish and prove before I can worry about taking anybody’s spot. These guys have been in the league and made their point already so I’m just blessed to be able to learn after them and hopefully make my way to become a type of player like them or better.

Learning from Pro Bowlers, Parsons could make an immediate impact for the Dallas defense and it starts this summer during the rest of minicamp and full OTA’s.

[vertical-gallery id=670209][vertical-gallery id=670875][listicle id=671011][lawrence-newsletter]

‘Now it’s a job:’ Will McClay’s scouting report on all 11 Cowboys draft picks

The team’s VP of player personnel offers advice for the team’s rookies ahead of minicamp and gives his thoughts on each player.

Welcome to the NFL, rookies.

Friday marks the start of minicamp for 29 NFL teams, including the Cowboys. Drafted prospects, undrafted free agents, and others simply invited for tryouts- 31 players in all- will go through three days of initial evaluation at The Star in Frisco as they prepare to compete with the team’s veterans for a spot on the final roster.

Will McClay, the Cowboys’ vice president of player personnel and the man who had a hand in each one of them being given the opportunity, had a final word of advice for the youngsters.

“This isn’t college anymore,” McClay said, in part. “Now it’s a job.”

ESPN’s Todd Archer got McClay’s scouting report on all 11 of the Cowboys’ draft picks as they prepare for their first day on the company payroll. Here are excerpts from his comments:

Micah Parsons set to start Cowboys minicamp at middle LB

The first-rounder says he’ll start the team’s rookie camp at the position he played in college and is already scouting the 2021 schedule.

Micah Parsons raised a few eyebrows during draft weekend when he announced that he wanted to wear his familiar No. 11 for the Cowboys. Now, about to tackle his first day of minicamp as an NFL rookie, he’s also secured the position he prefers to play.

“Right now, I’m at MIKE linebacker,” the 21-year-old told the team website, referring to the middle linebacker role he filled at Penn State. “Looking at the playbook, this is a position for me to go sideline to sideline and make a lot of plays and really stop that run, how I’m supposed to do.”

As rookie minicamp kicks off on Friday, the Cowboys will feature just 31 players, according to the team. Leighton Vander Esch, Jaylon Smith, Keanu Neal, and fellow rookie Jabril Cox will all figure into the linebacker mix this season as well; the exact spot Parsons eventually occupies could obviously change by the time the competition across the line of scrimmage is wearing different colors.

To that end, the first-round selection is also quickly adjusting to the idea that in the pros, there are no non-conference matchups to ease into things once the season begins. He’ll be making his NFL debut against none other than five-time Super Bowl MVP Tom Brady, who himself was drafted out of the Big Ten in 2000… before Parsons had even celebrated his first birthday.

“I was, like, ‘Wow,'” Parsons smiled when asked about the Cowboys’ upcoming schedule. “It’s definitely weird coming into the NFL. You’ve got Tom Brady [in the] first game, then you’ve got [Patrick] Mahomes down the line. I said, ‘We’ve got all the nice running backs.’ I said, ‘That’s cool. Whatever. Can’t do nothing about it.’ Got to play ball no matter what, right?”

And starting now, Parsons in playing ball in the NFL.

[listicle id=670943]

[vertical-gallery id=669570]

[listicle id=670907]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Parsons, Cowboys incumbents shaping up as one of NFL’s top 2021 position battles

NFL.com’s Bucky Brooks sees one of the incoming Dallas linebackers becoming the new centerpiece of the defense… possibly this year.

Every coach wants competition in training camp. Whether it’s through the signing of veteran free agents at key spots or the restocking of the roster via the draft, the goal is to let on-the-field action during summer determine who is still on the field when autumn rolls around.

And while some competitions are a mere formality, there are some positional battles whose outcomes are truly up in the air and could genuinely result in a changing of the guard when final depth charts are announced.

The Cowboys may have one of the league’s most interesting such battles brewing in the middle layer of Dan Quinn’s defense. So says NFL.com analyst Bucky Brooks, who believes “it is only a matter of time” before the club’s first-round pick in 2021 pushes out one of the team’s veteran linebackers.

Penn State’s Micah Parsons, selected 12th overall in this year’s draft, is expected to make waves in the Dallas defense in his very first year. While it would be a welcome turn of events for Cowboys fans who were frustrated by 2020’s porous play, an uptick in the team’s linebacker play could come at the eventual expense of either Leighton Vander Esch or Jaylon Smith.

“Perhaps the Cowboys will find a way to feature Parsons, Smith and LVE as the starters in their 3-4 scheme,” Brooks writes. But sooner or later, he continues, Parsons will likely become the centerpiece of the defense:

“Parsons is an ultra-explosive athlete with exceptional instincts, awareness and pass-rush ability. He adds a dimension to the defense with his playmaking skills, and it will be hard for the veterans to fend off the youngster in a battle. That said, Dallas defensive coordinator Dan Quinn might come up with a few packages that enable Parsons to complement what Smith and LVE do as tackle-to-tackle defenders with big thump ability.”

While Parsons, Vander Esch, and Smith may indeed share time as a three-headed monster this season, it seems unlikely that the trio will remain intact in the long term. The Cowboys have already declined Vander Esch’s fifth-year option, making the upcoming campaign something of a prove-it year for the Boise State product who has endured multiple injuries of late. 2021 also marks the last of the guaranteed money on Smith’s current megacontract; his recent play wouldn’t seem to be living up to the front office’s sizable investment.

And while Parsons could conceivably make one of those veterans expendable, don’t forget that Dallas also has Jabril Cox looking to force his way onto the team. The LSU linebacker lasted until the fourth round of the draft, but has already been named the biggest steal of the incoming rookie class.

Of course, there’s also free agent safety Keanu Neal, who is undergoing a switch from safety and is already listed on the team website as a linebacker… and third-year project Luke Gifford, a diamond-in-the-rough at the position who’s simply had terrible luck with preseason injuries.

Vander Esch, Smith, Parsons, Cox, Neal, Gifford. A competitive positional battle in training camp is one thing. But the 2021 Cowboys’ linebacker corps might just have a full-blown cage match on its hands.

[vertical-gallery id=669570]

[listicle id=670614]

[listicle id=669532]

[lawrence-newsletter]

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.

Micah Parsons and his family had the best reaction to being drafted by the Cowboys

“If it’s Dallas I’m going to cry, bro.”

Former Penn State linebacker Micah Parsons knew the one team he really wanted to play for in the NFL – the Dallas Cowboys.

Before last week’s draft he said playing for Jerry Jones’ franchise would be a dream come true for him and it was something he always wanted to do.

Well, last Thursday night the Cowboys made that dream come true when they used the No. 12 pick in the first round on Parsons.

In this awesome video below we get to see how much this meant to Parsons, who said before hearing his name get called: “If it’s Dallas I’m going to cry, bro.”

Well, it was Dallas and the moment he got the phone call from Jones and the celebration after with his family are so great:

And just like that, his dream came true.

[mm-video type=video id=01f4n8qs4sgsttzyaz17 playlist_id=01f09m93q11d4tbgfy player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01f4n8qs4sgsttzyaz17/01f4n8qs4sgsttzyaz17-1c01ca528256ace4aaaed820a42f8475.jpg]

Cowboys LB Jabril Cox named draft’s biggest steal

After drafting linebacker Micah Parsons 12th overall, the Cowboys snagged Jabril Cox in the fourth round, making him the top steal of Day 3.

When the fourth round began on Day 3 of the 2021 draft, the Cowboys would end up doubling down on the linebacker position. After taking Penn State’s Micah Parsons with the No. 12 pick, the club circled back around to take Jabril Cox out of LSU, who many had as a second-round talent.

It’s no surprise he was considered a steal and according to ESPN, he’s the top undervalued pick on the draft’s final day who will make an impact in 2021. Mike Brenner of Pro Football Focus explains why.

“The fact that the Cowboys even drafted Cox should tell you how high they were on his services. The Cowboys took the LSU linebacker in the fourth round despite a relative logjam at off-the-ball linebacker, with Leighton Vander Esch, Jaylon Smith, newly signed free agent Keanu Neal, and first-round pick Micah Parsons in the fold.

“Cox was the 45th-ranked player on PFF’s draft board and has earned coverage grades over 80.0 in each of the past three seasons between North Dakota State and LSU. He saw only 41 targets this past season, but Cox still picked off three passes and broke up four more. He may not play right away, but don’t be surprised when he locks down a starting role in Dallas.”

The coverage skills of Cox are his strong suit entering the NFL. According to PFF, Cox didn’t allow a single touchdown nor was he penalized in 352 coverage snaps in which he defended 41 targets. In 1,114 coverage snaps during his college career, Cox only allowed two touchdowns and recorded eight interceptions which made him falling to the fourth round a bit of a head-scratcher considering how teams need coverage linebackers to defend the pass in today’s NFL. However the Cowboys aren’t complaining.

Cox can also make plays against the run. He uses his speed (ran a 4.52 in the 40-yard dash) and quick change of direction to pursue plays from the backside and in space.

He’ll have to compete for snaps in a loaded linebacker room that features Jaylon Smith, Leighton Vander Esch, Keanu Neal, and fellow rookie Micah Parsons. However, with his array of skills defensive coordinator Dan Quinn shouldn’t have a problem finding a role for him.

The linebacker position struggled in 2020 for the Cowboys due to injuries and poor play. With the selection of Cox and the aforementioned Parsons, the Cowboys are hoping that particular unit is a strength in 2021.

[vertical-gallery id=670209][listicle id=670377][listicle id=670399][lawrence-newsletter]