After injury scare, Darrell Taylor may have a chance to play Week 7

Following an injury scare on the field in Pittsburgh, Seahawks DE Darrell Taylor may have a chance to play Week 7 against the Saints.

Seattle Seahawks defensive end Darrell Taylor was down on the field for nearly 15 minutes before he was carted off the field Sunday night in Pittsburgh. The scare was that Taylor had sustained a significant neck injury during the Week 6 contest.

Less than 24 hours later, coach Pete Carroll had nothing but good news to share Monday afternoon.

“His MRI stuff was clear, his CAT scan stuff was clear, and he does not have a neck injury,” Carroll told reporters. “He got jammed pretty good so we have to see what it’s like, but it may be more in his shoulder as we figure it out. He’s not out of the woods of playing this week so that’s a thrilling response to what it looked like and what everybody could have anticipated. We will see how it goes and he has to have a good week to do that.”

Taylor, and the rest of the Seahawks squad, have an extra day to recuperate this week as their next game isn’t scheduled until Monday night when they’ll host the Saints at Lumen Field.

“We will see what happens, but it was a really good report,” Carroll continued. “I know a lot of people were upset about that, for good reason, whenever they take a guy off like that, the threat is huge. Anyway, he came out great, so we will hope for the best and he may have a chance to go this week.”

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Preliminary neck CT scans are clear for Seahawks DE Darrell Taylor

The preliminary neck CT scans on Seattle Seahawks defensive end Darrell Taylor are clear, but there are more tests to be done.

Seattle Seahawks fans can breathe a sigh of relief . . .  the preliminary CT scans on defensive end Darrell Taylor’s neck have come back clear.

Taylor was carted off the field with a neck injury late in the game Sunday night during the Seahawks’ Week 6 contest against the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Immediately following the loss, coach Pete Carroll was able to provide an early update from the medical team on Taylor’s tests.

“The preliminary – I’m giving you the preliminary because I usually don’t do this but I want to give you something positive – they were clear,” Carroll told reporters. “The CT scans were clear. So, that’s a really good preliminary report for you.

“There are more tests to be done and stuff like that so we are thrilled about the news.”

Carroll should have further information by his morning radio interview on Monday.

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Seahawks RB Chris Carson day to day Week 6 with neck injury

Seattle Seahawks running back Chris Carson is day to day ahead of the Week-6 matchup against the Pittsburgh Steelers with a neck injury.

Although quarterback Rusell Wilson was the only Seattle Seahawk to sustain a new injury Week 5 during the loss to the Los Angeles Rams, there are a number of other banged-up players on the roster. One of those in question is starting running back Chris Carson, who was inactive Thursday night due to a neck injury.

Coach Pete Carroll tried to explain the situation during his Friday afternoon press conference.

“He’s got an old injury that you can see,” Carroll said. “It’s kind of, I don’t know if it’s chronic, but it occasionally pops up. It hasn’t been an issue in the past. He didn’t get hit, and that’s how he got hurt. It’s a condition he’s got probably from weightlifting and all of the stuff he’s done over the years. It could have been something a long time ago. It’s just flared up some, so we’re being real careful with him. He was too uncomfortable to play.”

Carroll wasn’t able to give a firm timeline for Carson’s return and didn’t sound too hopeful regarding Sunday’s matchup against the Steelers.

“I don’t know, this is a day-to-day thing with Chris,” Carroll explained. “We have to see how he responds. The short week did not help him at all so it’s too bad.”

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Rams QB John Wolford questionable to return to wild-card game after neck injury

Los Angeles Rams quarterback John Wolford is questionable to return to the wild-card game after a neck injury – Jared Goff has taken over.

The Los Angeles Rams are in Seattle to face the Seahawks in the wild-card round this Saturday at Lumen Field. Ahead of the matchup, the decision was made to start backup quarterback John Wolford over starter, Jared Goff, who just underwent thumb surgery less than two weeks ago.

Now, near the bottom of only the first quarter, Wolford has left the matchup after taking a hit to the head. Seahawks safety Jamal Adams’ shoulder pad was the culprit as Adams was sliding in on the play.

Wolford was immediately walked off the field and into the locker room for further evaluation. He has been deemed questionable to return with a neck injury.

Goff has entered the game at quarterback.

This story is continuing to develop.

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McCarthy: Vander Esch ‘didn’t miss a beat’ in practice, Jerry Jones praises Gregory’s intellect

The Cowboys’ 2020 season has been largely defined thus far by the players the team has lost over the course of five games. Heading into Week 6, coach Mike McCarthy found himself in the unusual position of talking about getting some players back. And …

The Cowboys’ 2020 season has been largely defined thus far by the players the team has lost over the course of five games. Heading into Week 6, coach Mike McCarthy found himself in the unusual position of talking about getting some players back. And owner Jerry Jones compared one of them to a Hall of Fame legend.

At the top of the list, linebacker Leighton Vander Esch looks to be on track to make his return this week versus Arizona. Defensive end Randy Gregory could be back as soon as Week 7 against Washington after being reinstated by the league. The third-year linebacker suffered a broken collarbone in the first quarter of the team’s season opener; Gregory has not played since January 2019 in the Cowboys’ playoff loss to the Rams.

McCarthy said that both players are trending in the right direction, but emphasized that the team’s Friday and Saturday sessions will be key factors in getting them back on the field.

“I thought Leighton and Randy had very good practices,” the coach told reporters of the Thursday workout. “Leighton looked like he didn’t miss a beat in there. Today will be a big practice for him. It’ll be the first time in pads, going through the full Thursday-type practice because we’re on an in-season Thursday schedule; I know it’s Friday. So this will be a big day for him. It was great to get Randy in the team reps and in the pass rush segments. We have a pass-under-pressure drill that he definitely showed up in. He looked good. They both looked good. I’m anxious to see them both practice today, and really, how they come in tomorrow will be probably the most important part of their week of physical preparation.”

Vander Esch is ahead of schedule in terms of recovering from his collarbone issue, but the neck injury that caused him to miss seven games last season and required surgery in January is still fresh.

Jones says that despite the undeniable spark the Boise State product would bring to the struggling Cowboys defense, the team won’t rush him back before he’s ready.

“He will not go back out there if he is vulnerable in any way- inordinately vulnerable- as to, certainly, the injury he has dealt with,” Jones told 105.3 The Fan on Friday. “I’ll assure you of that. You can bet if he hits the field, he has a complete go and a solid go to go out. We would not risk additional injury because of that injury, whether it’s to where he was injured or how he’s playing because he was injured. All of that, you can feel real good. If you see him on the field, he should be out there.”

McCarthy knows that Gregory’s road back will be just a little longer. But the club’s 2015 second-round draft pick has taken an important step by returning to practice this week.

“It’s a work in progress,” the coach told reporters during his Friday press conference. “I though Randy did a great job; he was full-speed yesterday. Today is really the day that I think he’s really looking forward to. He’ll be part of the padded work for the first time. We’ll evaluate everything he does. At the end of the day, until you clearly make that decision, the training staff and the medical staff have to feel good about him. Based on what he did yesterday, he’s definitely heading in the right direction.”

The former Nebraska standout has appeared in just 30 games (including postseason) as a Cowboy, but has proven to be a game-wrecker when he’s active.

Jones raved about Gregory in his latest radio interview, but said that what the 27-year-old brings to the Dallas pass rush is far more than just a freakish physical skill set.

“He’s an impact player. Always has been,” Jones shared. “And when he’s been on the field for us, he’s impactful, to overuse the word. With that in mind, he’s obviously smart, has high football IQ- he made the highest SAT test of anybody we’ve ever drafted. Anybody. He really has good intellect. Charles Haley also had one of the highest intellects we’ve ever had, and you see how he used that to be a good pass rusher. But Gregory has unique physical abilities and has unique ways to- we call it “Gumby.” He’s not only an excellent athlete, but he’s got Gumby, which means he can bend and torque and get in good positions to impact the discourage the passer, much less sack him. I’m looking forward to seeing him on the field.”

Invoking a fictional claymation character and a five-time Super Bowl champion Hall of Famer all in one answer demonstrates just how highly Jones and the Cowboys organization regard Gregory.

Bringing a player deserving of that praise to the current iteration of the Cowboys defense- not to mention adding the Wolf Hunter back into the lineup- may just be enough to salvage a season on the verge of slipping away.

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Tyron Smith to miss rest of ’20 season, Cowboys coach confirms

An already disappointing 2020 season has taken a devastating turn for the worse for the Dallas Cowboys.

An already disappointing 2020 season has taken a devastating turn for the worse for the Dallas Cowboys. Starting left tackle Tyron Smith will undergo surgery to deal with an ongoing neck issue, head coach Mike McCarthy announced on Friday morning. Smith will miss the remainder of the season.

“It’s become official, just speaking to everybody involved,” McCarthy told media on a conference call on Friday, “Tyron will continue the process of going through surgery. This is a correctable situation. He obviously will not be available the rest of the season. Clearly, the focus is on him personally. I think the surgery is scheduled for next week.”

Smith missed the second and third games of this season with stingers but returned last week to play all 82 offensive snaps in the team’s loss to Cleveland. But more missed practices this past week led to medical consultations, which have now convinced the seven-time Pro Bowler to shut it down for the year.

McCarthy said Smith’s stingers have been a recurring problem dating beyond just the 2020 season and will only continue if not treated through the scheduled procedure.

“My understanding is it’s something that he’s been dealing with for some time,” McCarthy said, “and I’ve also been told that it’s a correctable surgery. If he doesn’t have the surgery, he’ll just continue to deal with this in the manner of how this season has gone. This is something that needs to be done.”

Now the club will be forced to continue to shuffle linemen, as they have all season long, as they simultaneously deal with the absence of starting right tackle La’el Collins and center Joe Looney.

“Your offensive and defensive linemen are clearly vital to your success,” said the coach. “It’s something that we feel very strong about, our linemen and the depth of our linemen. The game starts at the line of scrimmage and the importance of playing to that mindset will never change here.”

Rookie center Tyler Biadasz has stepped into the starting lineup. Terence Steele and Brandon Knight have also played, with varying degrees of success thus far in 2020. New bodies have been added to the practice squad just this week, but McCarthy wouldn’t divulge details about exactly who will play where come Sunday.

“We’re always going to try to put our best players out there that are ready for the challenge. And it’s not as much about what’s their personnel grade or the perception of where they rank. There’s a lot that goes into this. You have eight offensive linemen that play; obviously, you want to have the five that play with the highest level of cohesiveness, connection, communication. That’s something you continue to work on.”

The war of attrition rages on. While 2020 seems to have taken a costlier toll on the league’s superstar players than in years past, losing players to injuries has always been a part of the game.

“Make no mistake about it, ” Jerry Jones explained on 105.3 The Fan on Friday. “You don’t play pro football unless you factor in injury. You know you’re going to have them; you just don’t know where and what area you’re going to have them in. That’s what makes this such a challenging game. That’s why it’s so great when you win: because you’ve gone through a lot of challenges.”

McCarthy also chalked the injuries up to business as usual but admitted that losing so many offensive linemen in such a short span has made it especially tough for the team to find its footing this season.

“It’s life in the NFL,” he offered. “It just comes at you different ways. The unfortunate part of this game is, players have injuries. When they all come in the same position this quickly… We’re always starting that season where you’re trying to get the young guys to close that gap with your experienced players. And just to have this type of volume of losing your top three tackles this quickly, it makes the challenge a little tougher.”

The team may be losing No. 77 on the field, but the two-time All-Pro still plans on making his presence felt around the facility, doing what he can to help coach up the younger players who will be tasked with taking his place protecting Dak Prescott, and blocking for Ezekiel Elliott as the Cowboys try to turn the season around.

“After speaking with Tyron, that was one of the first things that he made the point of with me,” McCarthy said. “He wants to be here and make sure he’s helping the tackles every single day. I think that speaks to him as a man and a leader.”

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Seahawks place defensive end Rasheem Green on injured reserve

The Seahawks have placed defensive end Rasheem Green on the injured reserve with a stinger – he can return to the roster after three games.

The Seattle Seahawks have added another defensive player to the injured reserve this week. Coach Pete Carroll announced Friday afternoon that defensive end Rasheem Green was headed to the IR with a neck injury (stinger).

“It’s just going to be a couple more weeks, so this was the right way to handle this,” Carroll told reporters after the team walkthrough. “We’re expecting him to come back to us. He’s just got to get through the process to make sure he can pass his tests. It’s going to be a couple weeks, we think, so this is going to work out OK in terms of putting him down, and he’ll be available to return.”

Green now joins defensive back Marquise Blair and linebacker Bruce Irvin on the injured reserve, although their seasons are over due to torn ACLs and upcoming surgeries. Green can return to the active roster once he sits out the required three games.

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Cowboys’ Jones, McCarthy less confident now on Tyron Smith: ‘We’ll see at gametime’

The Cowboys coach and owner held separate interviews, but both talked about backup plans if LT Tyron Smith cannot play Sunday vs. Atlanta.

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At 7:30 Friday morning, Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy said he was “not alarmed” by left tackle Tyron Smith missing practice the day prior due to a neck issue. By 11 a.m., though, he had disclosed to the media that Smith had not participated in the morning’s walk-through, and team owner Jerry Jones had called the seven-time Pro Bowler “a game-time decision.”

The next 48 hours in Dallas will be pins-and-needles time as the Falcons bring Grady Jarrett, Takk McKinley, and Dante Fowler to town, looking to exploit a Cowboys offensive line that’s already minus La’el Collins. That unit would be a shell of its usual self if Smith is also unable to go.

“We’ll see at gametime what we’ve got,” Jones said during a phone chat with 105.3 The Fan, when asked about Smith’s status.”The good news is that the people who would replace him- the combinations of people- have had more time to work on it than we had this time last week. This year, we’re allowed to dress- activate- one more player; it has to be an offensive lineman, by the way. So what we’re talking about is a common thing and a common concern.”

The concern level may be more than common; given the player in question and the particular opponent coming in. Smith also sat out the Cowboys’ 2017 meeting with Atlanta; his replacement Chaz Green infamously allowed six sacks to Falcons defensive end Adrian Clayborn in a humiliating defeat.

Literally moments after Jones’s comments, while speaking with reporters on a conference call from The Star, McCarthy confirmed that Smith’s neck injury occurred during the individual portion of drills on Thursday. Fridays are now a “regeneration day” for the team under McCarthy, so player action for the day was limited to what the coach terms “a mock game.”

Smith did not participate in that glorified walk-through.

Wideout Amari Cooper and defensive end Aldon Smith were also listed as questionable on the injury report. Jones said the team would consider them to be gameday decisions as well, sticking with the textbook definition of the “questionable” designation.

McCarthy, however, reported that both of those players went through the mock game and expects both to be ready for Sunday.

Of Smith, though, he sounded less confident than he had just four hours earlier.

“I don’t have all the information,” McCarthy admitted. “But I know how he wants to go. He’s a pro, and he’s doing everything possible with the training staff. So we’ll see. We have time. We have another 48 hours. We’ve just got to make sure we do what’s best for him personally, and we’ll go from there.

“Frankly, we’re just going through the process, gathering information. As far as the plan, you’re always working different scenarios. We’ll continue to do that today and tomorrow. Really, we’ll see how Tyron is tomorrow; that will probably be the determining factor.”

It’s unclear what the contingency plan would be if Smith cannot play, but McCarthy explained that he would prefer to sub in one player for Smith and keep the rest of the line intact rather than move around multiple players along the line.

“I think you always would prefer to go one-for-one if you can because of continuity between each position, It’s so important, the reps. But you also have to factor in the possibilities of other combinations. And the third component of that is we’re in the matchup challenges of gameday. That is really done during the Monday/Tuesday game plan. So any time you put together the personnel groupings on offense, you also have the combinations of how you’re going to rotate both the offensive and defensive lines.”

While Zack Martin and Connor Williams have taken snaps at the tackle spot simply as a matter of course, McCarthy declined to dive deeper into who might have to play where to cover for a Smith absence.

He did get a follow-up question about Alex Light, the offensive lineman signed on Wednesday. Light spent time in Green Bay in 2018 and 2019, as well as this year’s August camp, so he has familiarity with both McCarthy and new Cowboys offensive line coach Joe Philbin.

What he doesn’t have much of, though, is experience, having appeared in just 16 games. Terence Steele, Brandon Knight, Tyler Biadasz, Connor McGovern… none of the options up front have a ton of snaps on their resume. But some or all may suddenly find themselves pressed into service on an offensive line that is suddenly a patchwork of Plan Bs.

“We will have an extra offensive lineman that we dress out, not necessarily just because of Tyron, that do[es] give us some more depth there on the gameday situation,” Jones said. “But we’ll be working with different combinations, and, obviously for competitive reasons, we’ll keep that kind of under our hat.”

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Cowboys’ McCarthy ‘not alarmed right now’ about Tyron Smith’s status for Week 2

The Cowboys coach says the team will monitor the seven-time Pro Bowl left tackle’s neck issue before Sunday’s home opener versus Atlanta.

Dallas enters Week 2 of the season already looking to backup plans at several key positions. Watching linebacker Leighton Vander Esch and tight end Blake Jarwin get helped off the field in the season opener was bad enough. But news that left tackle Tyron Smith missed Thursday’s practice with some sort of neck issue brings a whole different sense of doom and gloom over Cowboys Nation.

Coach Mike McCarthy wasn’t ready to hit the panic button quite yet, but he knows the readiness of his seven-time Pro Bowl lineman is something that will be monitored closely as Sunday’s kickoff versus the Falcons approaches.

In fact, despite the more obvious holes in the Cowboys lineup, he admits that offensive line is his biggest concern right now.

“Going into the game, I would say yes,” McCarthy told 105.3 The Fan on Friday morning. “Every season, it’s on that list of firsts. You have your first game, you have your first road game, you have your first different types of situations: two-minute drills at the end of the half and end of the game. You go through this all the time, especially in Year One. But this is our first time- experience- with a player, maybe two, that may or may not play come Sunday. It’s part of being a good team, so you have to work through these things. We need everybody; that’s always been my approach as a head coach.”

A player… that may or may not play come Sunday.

That’s a scary thought, particularly for Cowboys fans who recall what happened the last time Smith didn’t suit up against Atlanta. Quarterback Dak Prescott is likely still having middle-of-the-night flashbacks to the six sacks Smith’s replacement allowed that day.

“We’ll see how Tyron is,” McCarthy concluded. “I’m not alarmed right now, but it’s something that we’re looking at.”

That dreadful Falcons tilt took place in Atlanta in 2017. This time, the two teams will meet in Arlington. So the Cowboys will at least have home cooking on their side.

Or will they? Much has been made of home-field advantage in 2020, with most stadiums devoid of fans on opening weekend. The Cowboys will buck that trend on Sunday, allowing AT&T Stadium to be at approximately 25% capacity.

Between piped-in crowd noise and the natural up-close intensity of professional football players trying to beat the tar out of each other, many have argued that empty venues are only strange to fans watching at home, that the players are too locked in to care.

But McCarthy noticed a difference this past weekend in Los Angeles. And he believes it will be good for the Cowboys to play in front of Cowboys fans, even if it’s fewer than usual.

“I would think so. Without a doubt, just going off the experience of last week,” McCarthy confessed. “The fans are such a huge part of the game: just the gameday environment, the enthusiasm, and everything that goes into it. The players really feed off of that. You’ve just got to ‘make your own music’ is the way we’ve talked about it. It’s the way we’ll approach it. I think it will definitely help.”

Of course, a strong showing from the offense will help encourage the fans in attendance to make a little more of their own music. The much-ballyhooed debut of Team Fortyburger never got out of first gear on Sunday night, putting up a pedestrian 17 points.

Many pundits in the days since have pointed to a lack of pre-snap motion in coordinator Kellen Moore’s offensive game plan. When ranked by how much motion each team used in Week 1, the top half of the league went 13-3; the bottom half- where Dallas sat- combined for a 3-13 mark.

McCarthy appreciates the numbers, but emphasizes that it was just one game.

“You have to be honest about statistics. There’s a place for them. But it’s Week 1. To think that Kellen was able to call everything on his call sheet that he may have anticipated going into the game, that’s just not how it works. Shift and motion, you’ll see that in our game plans each week, and how much we use will depend on the flow of the game.”

The flow of the game, certainly on offense, could change dramatically depending on whether No. 77 is on the field for the Cowboys.

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Doctors recommended Branden Jackson not play this season to be safe

To prevent further injury to his neck, the Seahawks’ doctors recommended defensive end Branden Jackson sit out the season.

The Seattle Seahawks placed defensive end Branden Jackson on injured reserve Sunday after he gave the team quite the scare during the first mock game of the year at CenturyLink Field.

Jackson collided with a teammate during the scrimmage and was knocked unconscious for a brief time before being carted off to an ambulance. Thankfully, Jackson was able to return to the team meetings the following day.

Coach Pete Carroll, at the time, was unsure of any long-term damage as a result of the injury, but the team has decided to play it safe this year.

“It’s a situation where (doctors) don’t recommend him playing this season,” Carroll told reporters Sunday afternoon. “He really came out of that episode OK, but the testing did show him that he had a physical trait that they want to protect, so everybody has been convinced that the best thing to do is for him not to play this year. I don’t know that that’s forever, but I do know for right now. He’s not injured right now, but he’s susceptible — it’s similar to situations a couple of our other guys have had in the past. We’re erring on the side of long-term health and taking care of our guys.”

Carroll compared Jackson’s situation to that of Kam Chancellor and Cliff Avril, both of whom retired because of neck injuries. Carroll is hopeful that Jackson could return in the future.

“He is a great team guy, we love him on our team, and he’s got such spirit,” Carroll said. “He’s got great versatility too in his play, but he’s just been such a great guy in this locker room. We’re going to miss him. I asked him to stay around as long as he wants to be with us all along, and I hope he’ll be able to do that.”

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