WATCH: Dak Prescott shows off accuracy in Cowboys pregame

The Cowboys quarterback went 51-of-52 in his pregame warmups throws, signalling a big step toward being ready for Week 1. | From @ToddBrock24f7

For the second preseason game in a row, Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott put on a whole show well before the coin flip.

Last week in Arizona, Prescott tossed passes during warmups to teammates including Amari Cooper and Ezekiel Elliott. He hadn’t yet fully returned to team practice, but his pregame workout showed he was getting closer. Prescott was even targeting Saturday night- eight days later- for a possible return during the team’s exhibition game versus Houston.

Prescott won’t play tonight against the Texans, but he was once again on the field prior to kickoff throwing. Before a home crowd filing into AT&T Stadium, Prescott made a total of 52 passes.

According to Michael Gehlken of the Dallas Morning News, he completed 51 of them.

That’s a 98% completion percentage.

Yes, it’s just warmups. Granted, it wasn’t full-speed. True, there was no defense. Heck, no one was even wearing a uniform. But 51-of-52 passing is a very good day in any book.

“He threw with authority and accuracy before the game,” Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said Saturday on 105.3 The Fan, per Gehlken. “If we were lining up against Tampa tonight, he’d be starting, and we’d feel great about it.”

So much for talk that Prescott and the team are hiding something regarding the $160 million man’s arm.

Dakkuracy is one step closer to being back.

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WATCH: Cowboys QB Dak Prescott throwing in pregame warmups

All eyes were on Dak Prescott as he took to the State Farm Stadium field and hurled several passes to Amari Cooper and Ezekiel Elliott. | From @ToddBrock24f7

The most eagerly-anticipated action of Friday night’s Cowboys-versus-Cardinals preseason tilt happened well before kickoff as Dallas quarterback Dak Prescott went through a series of throws as he continues to recover from a muscle strain in his right shoulder.

Prescott was never considered a likely participant in the team’s second exhibition contest, but his on-the-field work during pregame warmups signal that he is closer to making his return, and will no doubt fuel speculation that he may meet his goal of playing in the team’s next game, an August 21st matchup with the Houston Texans at AT&T Stadium.

Prescott was seen on about the 35-yard-line at State Farm Stadium. making a variety of throws to both running back Ezekiel Elliott and wideout Amari Cooper, himself just coming off the Physically Unable to Perform list.

The Cowboys will travel to Dallas after the Cardinals game, following a three-week stay in Oxnard. Back in the Metroplex, Prescott is scheduled to get a follow-up MRI on his shoulder, a precautionary measure only, according to the team.

The Cowboys have said they fully expect Prescott to be ready to start in Week 1 against the reigning Super Bowl champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

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Travis Frederick had one warm-up ball for Cowboys career; wants it now as souvenir

The newly-retired center has shed playing weight and his trademark beard, but he wants his warmup ball as a keepsake of his Cowboys career.

Somewhere at The Star in Frisco, there’s a football with Travis Frederick’s name on it. Maybe his name isn’t literally scrawled across the leather in black Sharpie. Or maybe it is. The ball could be on a shelf or in a locker or at the bottom of a mesh bag. It might be tucked away for safekeeping in a trainer’s desk. Either way, it’s Travis Frederick’s football. And he would like it back.

The 29-year-old center retired from football back in March after a heavily-decorated career with the Cowboys. He played five seasons, took 2018 off as he successfully battled Guillain-Barre Syndrome, and then returned in 2019. He was in the league for seven seasons. He played six. He earned a Pro Bowl nod in five.

And in that entire time, Frederick apparently warmed up with just one football. The same one, week in and week out, year after year. Now it’s the lone souvenir from his playing days he’d like to keep.

The nugget comes buried at the end of a Fort Worth Star-Telegram piece last week on Frederick. Writer Mac Engel details how life has already changed for the 2013 first-round draft pick after walking away from the game this offseason.

Frederick has dropped thirty pounds or so; he says, “That’s the dream: To get skinny.” He’s down two ring sizes and a shirt size already.

And the trademark beard has been shaved off.

During a call with Engel and ESPN’s Todd Archer, Frederick talked about his charity work with The Blocking Hunger Foundation, providing food and meals to children of lower-income families. He spoke of possibly entering the business world, maybe in the tech sector. He shared his plans to move back to Wisconsin.

And he talked about the Cowboys, now moving on without him. Joe Looney and rookie Tyler Biadasz are expected to compete for the starting center job this offseason. While Frederick has left a hole in middle of the offensive line, he’s confident that his former teammates will find success.

“The team is set up extremely well,” Frederick is quoted as saying. “The front office did a great job of getting people in place. On paper, it looks like a really, really solid team. They have a chance to go far. I’m excited to see them and watch them, and hopefully provide some outside guidance. I know whoever takes over at center will be well-cared for.”

Frederick hopes his treasured warm-up ball has been well-cared for, too. According to Engel, Frederick called team owner Jerry Jones in March to inform him of his decision to retire, and then immediately followed that phone call with another. This one was to the club’s equipment managers, asking for his ball. But with the facilities having been closed at the time due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the ball was ostensibly locked away somewhere in the building. Frederick would have to wait for the world to return to normal to be reunited with his keepsake.

That Frederick had a single lucky warm-up ball is perhaps not surprising. On gamedays, the Wisconsin native had his own unique pregame routine with guard Zack Martin. The two 300-pound linemen would famously spend 45 minutes running full-blown receiver route trees and throwing passes to one another as a way to get loose before team warmups.

For Travis Frederick, the man whose grip on the ball started each play for the Cowboys, he’ll now rely on the team’s equipment staff to deliver his ball back to him to symbolically close out the center’s short but stellar career.

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News: Vander Esch ‘week-to-week’, Gallup ‘No.1 receiver’, Belichick calls Dak ‘super impressive’

Previewing Sunday’s showdown between Dak Prescott and Tom Brady, outsmarting Bill Belichick, and cashing in on Dak’s pregame dance moves.

So much to discuss as Sunday’s showdown draws ever nearer. The Cowboys look like they’ll be dealing with a surprise scratch in the middle of the defense, while there’s plenty of talk about the two quarterbacks this game will feature. Everyone is trying to predict what Patriots coach Bill Belichick will or won’t do, and what the Cowboys should or shouldn’t do in this one… all while one of the player units in Dallas suggests it’s all just business as usual.

All of that, plus an early look ahead at running back contracts and unrestricted free agents for 2020, breakdowns of both the Dallas offense and defense, and the perfect holiday gift for the Cowboys fan who’s still trying to learn “How to Dak.” That’s ahead in this edition of News and Notes.


Sources: Cowboys LB Leighton Vander Esch (neck) out vs. Patriots :: ESPN

Updating Thursday night’s big news, linebacker Leighton Vander Esch is expected to miss Sunday’s matchup with New England.

“Vander Esch’s injury flared up in practice, which led to an MRI. He will have another MRI in three weeks, according to a source,” reports ESPN’s Todd Archer. Also citing sources, Archer says the second-year star is now considered “week-to-week.”

Longtime veteran Sean Lee will take over for Vander Esch as the team’s weakside linebacker. Joe Thomas is slated to move into Lee’s spot on the strong side, but he has missed two practices this week with an illness.

–TB


Brady vs. Prescott: A one-sided battle is on tap in Cowboys-Pats :: Cowboys Wire

Metrics nerds, get your popcorn ready. Travis Somers presents all kinds of graph goodness in this look at the two quarterbacks who will lead their teams against one another at Foxboro Stadium on Sunday.

Come for the visual eye candy of data plotted out on an X/Y grid and all the pretty colors; stay for the eye-opening conclusion about how the Cowboys’ young star actually compares to the most decorated passer in league history.

–TB


Belichick: Prescott is ‘Super Impressive’

Not much else to say here but watch the reverence  (second vid) the Patriots head coach has for the Cowboys QB ahead of Sunday’s matchup.

— KD


Tom Brady: I’ve disliked the Dallas Cowboys since birth :: Boston Herald

As a San Francisco kid who grew up during the 49ers’ dynasty of the 1980s and saw Dwight Clark make “The Catch” in person as a four-year-old, Tom Brady was perhaps genetically hardwired to hate America’s Team.

“I’ve really not liked the Cowboys since coming out of the womb,” the Patriots quarterback said this week.

“They’ve actually had a great, winning organization, and have got a lot of great players in their history,” Brady said. “Guys that I, just as a Niner fan, you know — you play the Cowboys and every time they’d hand it to Emmitt Smith, it’d be a 5-yard gain. And you’d pull your hair out.”

Brady is 4-0 in his playing career against Dallas.

–TB


Cowboys not changing mentality for defending champ Patriots :: The Mothership

For all the hype and hoopla surrounding Sunday’s showdown with the New England Patriots, the guys in the trenches say they’re approaching this week’s game like any other.

On the Miller Lite Cowboys Hour, offensive linemates Zack Martin and Travis Frederick dispelled any notion that they’re changing their mentality for Week 12 simply because they’ll be squaring off against the defending Super Bowl champions.

–TB


Examining what the Cowboys are up against in Bill Belichick’s singular coaching mind :: The Athletic

“Take away what they do best,” they say. Well, no one’s better at it than New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick, who has been making winning look easy for going on two decades. The Cowboys offense will present a unique challenge in Foxborough, but here’s a look at what has made things in New England so different for so long.

–TT


Should the Cowboys focus on blitzing Tom Brady? :: Blogging the Boys

The Patriots do just about everything well, but if there’s a weakness to be found, it may in Tom Brady’s performance when under duress.

Connor Livesay writes: “Heading into last week’s matchup against the Eagles, Tom Brady ranked 28th in yards per attempt (4.0), 27th in passer rating (47.9), a 4:3 TD:INT ratio, and is only completing 34% of his passes when under pressure.”

Harassing Brady will be of critical importance, but only if the Cowboys can do it without sending too many blitzers. That’s because one of Brady’s strengths is utilizing screen passes to backs James White, Rex Burkhead, and Sony Michel… and unfortunately, stopping the screen attack hasn’t been something the Dallas defense has excelled at in 2019.

–TB


Classic matchup: Dallas Cowboys’ ‘America’s Team’ vs. New England’s ‘We are all Patriots’ :: ESPN

A comparison between two of the best runs in NFL history, the Dallas team that garnered the “America’s Team” moniker and the Bill Belichick version of the New England Patriots. There’s a trip down memory lane, an NFL record that’s on the brink, and a look at the animosity that the two teams’ success has wrought over the years.

–TT


Amari Cooper confident in WR depth vs. Pats :: The Mothership

Given the Patriots knack for shutting down the thing that’s working best for their opponent, it’s fair to say that keeping wideout Amari Cooper in check will be a priority for the New England secondary. That unit “has been outstanding, ” team staff writer David Helman notes, “anchored by strong play from Stephon Gilmore and Jason McCourty, and nabbing 19 interceptions on the year.”

Cooper himself, though, thinks that strategy is a double-edged sword. “We have a lot of guys that can make plays, so if they try to take me away and just focus on me, I don’t think that’d be the wisest approach,” he said. “You saw what Gallup and Cobb did last week, going for over 100 yards. If they do try to take me away, we have other guys that can make plays.”

–TB


2 under-the-radar keys to Cowboys finding weakness in Belichick’s defense :: Cowboys Wire

Joey Ickes breaks down a favorite New England technique for negating an opponent’s primary receiver and offers a pair of strategies that Kellen Moore could use in response.

The entire article is worth the read, but one of those tactics has been screamed at the TV by every Cowboys fan out there at some point this season: let Dak Prescott use his running ability.

The second ploy involves a few names that the casual fan- and hopefully the Patriots- might not expect. And a former New England assistant confirms that this particular plan of attack hits one of Belichick’s personal bugaboos.

–TB


All the NFL running backs who could get paid in 2020, and why recent deals look like disasters :: ESPN

Ezekiel Elliott’s is among the running backs’ deals examined in this piece by ESPN’s Bill Barnwell, and the results aren’t pretty. Elliott is very good, but he hasn’t recaptured that dynamic play that he flashed throughout his rookie season when he took the league by storm. This year, the new rookie in town, Tony Pollard, has made the Cowboys more efficient when he spells Elliott. Caveat: sample size.

Elliott isn’t holding the Cowboys back by any means, but they have actually been slightly more efficient on offense with backup Tony Pollard on the field than him. Elliott has been on the field far more frequently, but the offense has generated 0.21 points of additional expected points per play with Pollard on the field and 0.17 points with Elliott in the lineup.

–TT


Decoding Kellen Moore: Explosive passes become routine as Cowboys offense transforms before our eyes :: The Athletic

A team’s record has the capacity to make the general NFL fan either overestimate or underestimate a team on that fact alone. This is certainly the case with the Dallas Cowboys, whose offense is as good as any in the league. Offensive coordinator Kellen Moore and quarterback Dak Prescott have their half of the team rolling in terms of explosive plays and third down conversion. That and more in Bob Sturm’s weekly breakdown of the offense.

–TT


The Richard Report: Cowboys defense allows Detroit a worrisome number of big plays :: The Athletic

It takes two to tango, and in Week 11 the defense failed to hold up their end of the bargain. As explosive as the offense has been, the defense let a backup quarterback match them in that regard. That kind of performance is the exact opposite of the “bend but don’t break” approach that’ s been preached for years in Dallas.

–TT


Top 50 pending NFL unrestricted free agents for 2020 :: The Athletic

The Cowboys dominate this list of upcoming free agents with five players listed on it. Two of them, Dak Prescott and Amari Cooper, are guaranteed to continue their careers in Dallas, but the others on the list have futures that are up in the air, including one of the newest members of the team.

–TT


‘How to Dak’ shirts now available :: Cowboys Pro Shop

Nobody knows how to push their brand quite like Jerry Jones. First, it was the “Zeke Who?” shirts that poked fun at the owner’s perceived slight of Ezekiel Elliott during the star running back’s holdout. Then it was the fun the team had with the black cat who appeared during the Week 9 win over the Giants, even putting him on the stadium’s video screen during player intros the following week.

Now it’s Cowboys Nation’s ongoing love affair with quarterback Dak Prescott’s pregame warmup routine.

The 100% cotton tee is available in all sizes for both men and women, and features the above graphic on the back. On the front, the Cowboys star and Prescott’s jersey number appear above the left breast. The shirt sells for $24.99.

–TB


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