Cowboys DT Neville Gallimore begins practice window, DeMarcus Lawrence could play Thursday

Gallimore started the season on IR; he could be activated any time in the next 21 days. DeMarcus Lawrence could play as early as Thursday. | From @ToddBrock24f7

It’s been a long wait for defensive tackle Neville Gallimore to make his 2021 debut. But the wait is almost over, for both the Canadian-born third-round pick of last year’s draft and the Cowboys fans who have been eager to see if he can build off a solid rookie season and stellar training camp this year.

The Cowboys announced Monday that Gallimore has started his 21-day practice window after starting the season on injured reserve.

Dallas can activate the Oklahoma product at any time, though it would be an usually quick turnaround if he were made eligible to play Thursday night in New Orleans. The team’s Week 14 game, Dec. 12 at Washington, is a more likely target date.

Edge rusher DeMarcus Lawrence also returned to practice Monday; he could suit up Thursday night, which would be his first game action since Week 1’s loss to Tampa. He broke a bone in his foot in practice prior to Week 2.

Gallimore suffered a dislocated elbow in the Cowboys’ second preseason game versus Arizona in mid-August. At the time, a four-to-six week recovery window was given. The injury resulted in minimal structural damage, with nothing torn.

Dallas put Gallimore on short-term injured reserve to start the season, but it took him significantly longer than the required three weeks to be ready to return.

In nine starts as a rookie last season, Gallimore recorded 26 tackles (four for loss), was credited with one-half of a sack, and logged 12 quarterback pressures across 14 games.

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How did former Sooners perform in week 1 of the NFL season

Take a look at how each former Sooner performed in week one of the NFL season.

The first week of the NFL season is now in the books and it’s time to take a look at how former Oklahoma Sooners performed in their opening week matchups.

The week was highlighted by outstanding performances from the trio of former Sooners starting at quarterback. Kyler Murray, Jalen Hurts, and Baker Mayfield combined for 874 yards passing, and eight total touchdowns. Though Mayfield didn’t throw a touchdown pass, he had the highest passing yardage total and completion percentage in week one.

Not to be outdone by the quarterbacks, Sterling Shepard had one of his best games as a pro for the New York Giants and Joe Mixon helped lead the Cincinnati Bengals to an overtime win over the Minnesota Vikings.

Take a look at how each of the former Sooners in the NFL performed in week one.

CB Kelvin Joseph, DT Neville Gallimore among Cowboys moved to short-term IR

Six players now go on the Injured Reserve-Return list, meaning they can be made active after 3 weeks; five of those spots have been filled. | From @ToddBrock24f7

The Cowboys continued their personnel shell game on Thursday, changing the official designation on several players as they work to finalize the active squad before Week 1.

According to the team website, six players- cornerback Kelvin Joseph, offensive tackle Josh Ball, wide receiver Malik Turner, defensive tackle Neville Gallimore, tight end Sean McKeon, and linebacker Francis Bernard- have been placed on the Injured Reserve/Return list.

That classification is available only to players who were on the active roster; though hurt, all six were on the official 53-man roster when final cuts were made on Tuesday. Now they’ll make a short-term move to the IR-to-Return list, meaning each of them is eligible to come back to the active roster after three weeks.

Such strategic shuffling was all part of the Cowboys’ master plan. With those six active spots open, the Cowboys activated CeeDee Lamb, Damontae Kazee, and Carlos Watkins from the Reserve/COVID list. They also re-signed long snapper Jake McQuaide as expected, and they officially signed veteran running back Corey Clement, formerly of the Philadelphia Eagles and a casualty of the New York Giants’ camp cuts this week. Cowboys punter Bryan Anger will “be coming back, probably in 48 hours,” coach Mike McCarthy said on Thursday.

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Cowboys News: Dak, Gallimore, McKeon injury updates; who are first cut candidates?

The team got encouraging news on several injuries, plus a look at Jaylon Smith’s play from Friday night that looked more 2020 than 2018. | From @ToddBrock24f7

The weekend brought some clarity to the Cowboys’ list of dinged-up players. Dak Prescott looks to be healing on schedule, as up-and-coming players Neville Gallimore and Sean McKeon will be sidelined for just a little while (instead of a long while). Randy Gregory is expected back soon, as is Dalton Schultz. Cue the annual debate about whether preseason games do much of anything but cause needless injuries.

Plenty of other roster watching to do this week as the first cut date looms. Linebacker Jaylon Smith finds himself under the microscope again for a less-than-optimal performance versus Arizona, Zack Martin is recognized by his peers, Trevon Diggs carries some extra weight in his second season, and we look at how rookie lineman Matt Farniok could play a key role (or two of even three) in the Cowboys offense. All that, plus a look inside what Dak Prescott means when he says he’s “taking a mental rep,” and why fans coming to Cowboys home games should be on the lookout for a familiar face in the seat next to them. Here’s the News and Notes to get your week started.

Cowboys Neville Gallimore out 4-6 weeks with dislocated elbow

The Cowboys may have dodged a bullet as Gallimore is set to be the team’s premiere defensive tackle to start the season. | From @KDDrummondNFL

The Dallas Cowboys got a big break on Saturday as they learned the extent of a scary injury suffered in Friday night’s loss to the Arizona Cardinals. Dallas, already thin at defensive tackle, saw promising second-year standout Neville Gallimore writhing in pain on the turf after being involved in a tackle pile. Injured by teammate Brent Urban, Gallimore was in obvious discomfort even as he left the field, gingerly holding his left arm close.

Head coach Mike McCarthy didn’t sound very optimistic in the post game presser, indicating the team would learn more once back in Dallas. The evaluation has been made and the good news is the injury is not season ending. Gallimore suffered a dislocated elbow, but had minimal structural damage. According to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, he’ll miss four-to-six weeks of action.

That means that Gallimore could potentially return as early as Week 2, when the club travels to Los Angeles to take on the Chargers. The Cowboys open the NFL season on the road against the Super Bowl champion Buccaneers on Thursday, September 9, which is one day shy of the four-week mark. The team then has 10 days to prepare for the Chargers and if things play out for the better, Gallimore could be back in the starting lineup by then.

Dallas is thin, but they did get a great effort out of rookie Osa Odighizuwa on Friday night. Also, the team has not let on what their plans are for another three-technique in Trysten Hill, who hasn’t yet practiced this offseason. He’s currently on PUP. Dallas also has players such as Urban and Ron’Dell Carter who could play on the interior as well.

Hailing from Oklahoma, Gallimore took over the starting job in 2020 when Hill went down with the ACL tear he’s still recovering from. The coaching staff has raved about the second-year jump he’s made after a tumultuous 2020 for the entire organization.

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Neville Gallimore suffers elbow injury in Dallas Cowboys preseason game

According to Michael Gehlken of the Dallas Morning News, Gallimore suffered a hyperextension of his left elbow. 

Heading into his second season with the Dallas Cowboys opportunities abound for defensive tackle Neville Gallimore. The presumed starter at the three-technique defensive tackle spot had little competition for snaps and was expected to make a huge leap after a strong finish to the 2020 season.

His sophomore season may have suffered a setback after suffering an injury early in the Dallas Cowboys preseason game against the Arizona Cardinals. According to Michael Gehlken of the Dallas Morning News, Gallimore suffered a hyperextension of his left elbow.

According to Ian Rappoport of NFL Network, Gallimore will have an MRI of the elbow on Saturday to determine the severity of the injury. After further evaluation of the injury, a treatment plan and a timeline for return can be developed.

It’s a huge loss for a Dallas Cowboys defense that struggled mightily on defense, in particular the interior defensive line.

For Neville Gallimore, this is an unfortunate setback to what has been a promising training camp.

Update:

Per Ian Rapoport, Neville Gallimore will miss 4-6 weeks. At the long end of the time frame, that would take Gallimore to the last weekend in September, which would be only 2 games missed if there are no setbacks.

Cowboys DT Neville Gallimore exits game with left arm injury

After a major-injury-free first preseason game, the Cowboys saw their second-year DT go down with a left arm injury, leaving the game. | From @CDBurnett7

As a rookie, Cowboys defensive tackle Neville Gallimore showed sparks as a playmaker in the middle of the Dallas defense. Things opened up for Gallimore when both Gerald McCoy and Trystne Hill suffered season-ending injuries. Gallimore became the starter, and after an impressive rookie campaign for the third-round pick, he was anticipated to be a starter in 2021.

After not suffering any major injuries in the first preseason game, Dallas saw Gallimore go down against the Cardinals. In the second defensive drive, the Oklahoma product went down with what appeared to be a left arm injury, needing attention from trainers, and went straight to the locker room.

Gallimore suffered the injury at the bottom of the pile with fellow defensive lineman Brent Urban. He had 28 total tackles as a rookie to go along with four quarterback hits. Dallas’ depth at defensive tackle is among the worst in the league. Losing Gallimore for any extended period of time could be a big issue for the club’s defense.

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Dan Quinn talks Parsons, Cowboys’ front 7 through first phase of training camp

Dan Quinn had good things to say about many of the Cowboys defenders in a post training camp media session. We go through the quotes on the linebackers and linemen at the top of the depth chart. | From @AsaHenry_55

From the moment Dan Quinn arrived in Dallas he has been commended by those close to the team for his infectious passion for football and clear plan for fixing one of the league’s worst defenses. The good news for Quinn is that he doesn’t need to get the Cowboys to the top of the defensive ranks, as just getting to league average would be a massive improvement upon 2020.

Quinn has been very hands-on while installing the defensive scheme and teaching new techniques, which has allowed him to get a good gauge of his new players and their progress this offseason. During Friday’s  media session the former Atlanta Falcons’ head coach gave positive reports on numerous defenders who will need to have solid seasons for Dallas to achieve its goals.

Linebacker continued to be a main topic of conversation, which was expected as many viewed the position as Dallas’ most competitive and intriguing entering training camp. The other group that will play a massive role in improving the rush defense, the defensive line, received the second-most attention.

‘Finally get to make some contact:’ Cowboys players ready for first padded practice

Younger players are especially excited to put on pads in Oxnard, but coach Mike McCarthy wants to ensure that things don’t get too physical.

Let’s get physical.

Wednesday’s practice will have plenty of extra pop for the Cowboys in Oxnard as players will be wearing pads for the first time in 2021. And after Tuesday’s session, the last of four practices in just helmets and shorts, everybody is ready for football to feel more like football.

“The pads are coming,” head coach Mike McCarthy told reporters before Tuesday’s on-the-field session. “We all have time clocks in this training camp environment, and it’s time to get going. We’ve had three install practices where we’ve been able to do a lot of teaching, get a lot of drill work done, really focusing on the football as much as we possibly can. The game management- we’ve done more of that for the first three practices than the norm- but we’re really starting to get into some more football situations. Especially with the pads coming on tomorrow [Wednesday], I think the heightened importance of the O-line and D-line play definitely show up when you do put the pads on.”

For at least one of those linemen, defensive tackle Neville Gallimore, everything leading up to now has been just warm-up. The serious work begins when the pads go on.

“That’s what we’re looking for. That’s when the real training camp starts, for sure, ” the second-year man out of Oklahoma said Tuesday. “Tomorrow we get the pads on, we really get a chance to get that true feel. Obviously up the tempo, up the physicality. Personally, that’s what I’m looking forward to. You guys are going to see the real show tomorrow.”

Right guard Zack Martin, entering his eighth season, knows strapping on the pads is a big step in the yearly ritual of getting ready for opening day. This time it’s perhaps especially important for Martin, who missed a combined six games due to injury in 2020 and was even pressed into making a start at tackle along the way. But the six-time Pro Bowler says he’ll treat Wednesday as just another day at work.

“I think it’ll be good,” Martin said. “I think Coach has obviously done a nice job kind of getting our legs underneath us here with these four days. We’re moving pretty good out there. Obviously, it’ll be a little more physical tomorrow, but practice is pretty much practice.”

For younger players, padded practice is a second chance to make a first impression with the coaching staff. McCarthy admitted that the addition of pads flips a switch in some guys and helps coaches get a truer sense of the player.

“It always has, it always will,” McCarthy commented when asked if pads change the evaluation process. “Certain guys look better in pads than they do without pads. That’s the fact.”

One of those youngsters, though, has already turned heads in camp. Third-round pick Nahshon Wright has shown considerable promise at cornerback thus far. But the Oregon State product expects to still turn things up a notch further when the pads go on.

“I think it’ll get a little more physical,” Wright told 105.3 The Fan on Wednesday morning. “I think this is the reason why we play, because we like the physicality of the game. It’ll be good to be back in pads for the first time in a few months.”

But for all the hype about the Cowboys getting back into full football gear, McCarty and the staff are quick to point out that it’s still just practice. There will be no full-on tackling as the team follows new guidelines that specify a very deliberate ramp-up to tackle football.

“Some of these rules that have been put in place for the CBA, I think, are very healthy,” McCarthy said. “As a coach, there’s some things you’d like to adjust, but they do give you a teaching progression. And I think, like anything that you’re trying to do- whether you’re teaching footwork development or more of a spacing and open-field movement drill- you have to do that in an OTA, and then bring it to a heightened environment that we’re in without pads, and then go into pads. That’s a very good progression.”

McCarthy and the Cowboys were recently fined by the league for “excessive contact” during OTAs back in late May. Training camp thus far has been a largely hands-off affair. The absence of body armor has only helped the two-hand-touch vibe.

“They like to joke around and say ‘The Underwear Olympics,'” third-year safety Donovan Wilson laughed, “but tomorrow, we put the pads on. We’ll get to fly around and finally get to make some contact out there.”

Not too much, though. If the first day of training camp is like the first day of school, the first padded practice often results in a schoolyard brawl as players sometimes have different notions of how much contact is appropriate. Video clips always seem to surface of in-practice fights, but McCarthy hopes to keep what he calls “extracurricular activity” out of Oxnard.

“We’ll definitely talk about our first padded practice,” the coach offered. “I think it’s important to go through practice etiquette and the ethics of what go on in a padded practice. At the end of the day, the extracurricular activity- that was kind of cool in the ’90s, but I’m not cool anymore. It’s a waste of time… We want to get our work done, we want it done the right way. But I think some of those things that went on in the past, I don’t really have much patience for.”

McCarthy expects Cowboys practice to stay business-as-usual… even if the dress code officially changes starting Wednesday.

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‘Finally get to make some contact:’ Cowboys players ready for first padded practice

Younger players are especially excited to put on pads in Oxnard, but coach Mike McCarthy wants to ensure that things don’t get too physical.

Let’s get physical.

Wednesday’s practice will have plenty of extra pop for the Cowboys in Oxnard as players will be wearing pads for the first time in 2021. And after Tuesday’s session, the last of four practices in just helmets and shorts, everybody is ready for football to feel more like football.

“The pads are coming,” head coach Mike McCarthy told reporters before Tuesday’s on-the-field session. “We all have time clocks in this training camp environment, and it’s time to get going. We’ve had three install practices where we’ve been able to do a lot of teaching, get a lot of drill work done, really focusing on the football as much as we possibly can. The game management- we’ve done more of that for the first three practices than the norm- but we’re really starting to get into some more football situations. Especially with the pads coming on tomorrow [Wednesday], I think the heightened importance of the O-line and D-line play definitely show up when you do put the pads on.”

For at least one of those linemen, defensive tackle Neville Gallimore, everything leading up to now has been just warm-up. The serious work begins when the pads go on.

“That’s what we’re looking for. That’s when the real training camp starts, for sure, ” the second-year man out of Oklahoma said Tuesday. “Tomorrow we get the pads on, we really get a chance to get that true feel. Obviously up the tempo, up the physicality. Personally, that’s what I’m looking forward to. You guys are going to see the real show tomorrow.”

Right guard Zack Martin, entering his eighth season, knows strapping on the pads is a big step in the yearly ritual of getting ready for opening day. This time it’s perhaps especially important for Martin, who missed a combined six games due to injury in 2020 and was even pressed into making a start at tackle along the way. But the six-time Pro Bowler says he’ll treat Wednesday as just another day at work.

“I think it’ll be good,” Martin said. “I think Coach has obviously done a nice job kind of getting our legs underneath us here with these four days. We’re moving pretty good out there. Obviously, it’ll be a little more physical tomorrow, but practice is pretty much practice.”

For younger players, padded practice is a second chance to make a first impression with the coaching staff. McCarthy admitted that the addition of pads flips a switch in some guys and helps coaches get a truer sense of the player.

“It always has, it always will,” McCarthy commented when asked if pads change the evaluation process. “Certain guys look better in pads than they do without pads. That’s the fact.”

One of those youngsters, though, has already turned heads in camp. Third-round pick Nahshon Wright has shown considerable promise at cornerback thus far. But the Oregon State product expects to still turn things up a notch further when the pads go on.

“I think it’ll get a little more physical,” Wright told 105.3 The Fan on Wednesday morning. “I think this is the reason why we play, because we like the physicality of the game. It’ll be good to be back in pads for the first time in a few months.”

But for all the hype about the Cowboys getting back into full football gear, McCarty and the staff are quick to point out that it’s still just practice. There will be no full-on tackling as the team follows new guidelines that specify a very deliberate ramp-up to tackle football.

“Some of these rules that have been put in place for the CBA, I think, are very healthy,” McCarthy said. “As a coach, there’s some things you’d like to adjust, but they do give you a teaching progression. And I think, like anything that you’re trying to do- whether you’re teaching footwork development or more of a spacing and open-field movement drill- you have to do that in an OTA, and then bring it to a heightened environment that we’re in without pads, and then go into pads. That’s a very good progression.”

McCarthy and the Cowboys were recently fined by the league for “excessive contact” during OTAs back in late May. Training camp thus far has been a largely hands-off affair. The absence of body armor has only helped the two-hand-touch vibe.

“They like to joke around and say ‘The Underwear Olympics,'” third-year safety Donovan Wilson laughed, “but tomorrow, we put the pads on. We’ll get to fly around and finally get to make some contact out there.”

Not too much, though. If the first day of training camp is like the first day of school, the first padded practice often results in a schoolyard brawl as players sometimes have different notions of how much contact is appropriate. Video clips always seem to surface of in-practice fights, but McCarthy hopes to keep what he calls “extracurricular activity” out of Oxnard.

“We’ll definitely talk about our first padded practice,” the coach offered. “I think it’s important to go through practice etiquette and the ethics of what go on in a padded practice. At the end of the day, the extracurricular activity- that was kind of cool in the ’90s, but I’m not cool anymore. It’s a waste of time… We want to get our work done, we want it done the right way. But I think some of those things that went on in the past, I don’t really have much patience for.”

McCarthy expects Cowboys practice to stay business-as-usual… even if the dress code officially changes starting Wednesday.

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