2020 NFL Free Agency: 12 wide receivers for the Saints to consider

The New Orleans Saints won’t lack for options at wide receiver in free agency, ranging from A.J. Green and Amari Cooper to Phillip Dorsett.

The number-one priority for the New Orleans Saints in the 2020 offseason has to be finding a wide receiver to run opposite Michael Thomas (after their quarterbacks riddle is answered, of course). Thomas put the team on his back for much of the 2019 season, breaking and resetting the NFL record for receptions in a single season, but he can’t be expected to do that every year.

Ted Ginn Jr. was the next-best wide receiver in catches, and he only had 30. After him, no other wideouts had more than 18. The Saints were able to win a lot of games and get into the playoffs by asking Thomas to make magic despite the extra coverage going his way, but their first-round exit spelled out how serious a problem this could be. Drew Brees needs more weapons at wide receiver, and Sean Payton has to recognize that.

While this is a draft class loaded with talent at that position, we shouldn’t expect the Saints to sit on their hands and wait for a rookie hopeful to drop to them in April. Their strategy for nearly two decades has consisted of filling roster holes through free agency so that they can go into the draft targeting the best players available. To that end, we’ve ranked a dozen possible free agents who fit the Saints’ needs, though maybe not their budget. Each tier is broken down by expected contract values.

Bank-Breakers ($10 million-plus per year)

Aaron Doster-USA TODAY Sports
  • Amari Cooper, Dallas Cowboys
  • Robby Anderson, New York Jets
  • A.J. Green, Cincinnati Bengals
  • Emmanuel Sanders, San Francisco 49ers

Each of these players should command double-digit salaries. They’ve proven themselves to be number-one receiving threats who can make plays in the NFL, even though they each bring their own challenges. Sanders and Cooper have to be seen as favorites to re-sign with their current squads, given how integral they’ve been to their recent success; it would take a serious recruiting effort by the Saints to land Cooper on even a one-year contract beneath his market value. And the 49ers didn’t trade multiple draft picks to acquire Sanders just to let him walk away uncontested in free agency.

As for Green: he missed the entire 2019 season with injuries and it’s possible the Bengals want to retain him as their go-to target for Joe Burrow, the rookie quarterback they’re inevitably set to draft first-overall. Conversely, Anderson played more snaps than any other free agent wide receiver (944) and curiously isn’t part of the Jets’ long-term plans, despite his quick chemistry with young passer Sam Darnold. There could be some off-field shenanigans at play here, which the Saints should be wary of.

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5 & 4 Possibles: Cowboys have FAs in spades, who they should book in 2020

An examination of the 2020 free agency period for the Dallas Cowboys with five to keep, five to go and five to pursue.

The tidal wave of change brought in by the hiring of head coach Mike McCarthy has engulfed the Dallas Cowboys franchise and once the waters recede and the situation calms, the team and the organization will likely have a very different look.  The effect is already evident on the coaching staff, where it appears only a select few, including OC Kellen Moore, have survived the sweeping alterations.

Soon, the roster will undergo the same transformation once the 2020 league year starts as the front office will look towards getting the team’s top free agents inked to new deals.  This activity will make for some tough decisions for both Jerry Jones and Stephen Jones, despite the club’s expected cap space of close to $90 million dollars.

The Cowboys have an incredible 24 unrestricted free agents and another five either restricted or exclusive rights players to mull over.  They will not keep all and may not even keep many as the new staff may have its own outlook on the talent and where they want to start remodeling to flesh out their version of the team.

Here are 5 suggestions for the team to keep.

Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports

Some of the keepers are very easy to identify.

QB Dak Prescott and WR Amari Cooper are not going anywhere.  Despite the anxiety that was created by the fact McCarthy had yet to speak to Prescott after a week on the job, he will be a Cowboy one way or another.  Whether it is a blockbuster long-term deal or franchise tag, he will be leading the team into the season.  Cooper is slightly less of a sure bet, but it is still very likely he gets a deal of some kind as well.  The cost to acquire him for less than two seasons of production is simply too much to bear, especially given how weak the 2019 draft class was without a first round pick.

That leaves three more.

WR Randall Cobb

(Photo by Tom Pennington/Getty Images)

Cobb’s history and relationship with McCarthy will likely be a deciding factor.  At a fairly modest price tag of $5-7 million and some juice still left in his legs, he could come back on a short term deal fitting a player of his age.  His familiarity with the offensive design will be invaluable as the staff installs their scheme that will feel very different to many, including the quarterback.


OT Cameron Fleming

(AP Photo/Roger Steinman)

Capable swing tackles are a valuable commodity in this league for all teams, but more especially the Cowboys.  With Tyron Smith sitting out three games per season over the past four campaigns, a veteran who can step in and not be a huge liability is priceless.  Dallas has an option on his contract they can exercise and they would be wise to do so.


CB Anthony Brown

(AP Photo/Ron Jenkins)

Bringing back Brown may not be the most glamorous commitment but it may be the most practical given the decisions that will have to be made.  Brown will be rebounding from a triceps injury and should be relatively easy to sign back to return and provide a veteran buffer as the Cowboys go after youth at the position in April.

Other possibilities: DT Kerry Hyder, K Kai Forbath, LB Joe Thomas, CB C.J. Goodwin


You can chat with or follow C.C. on Twitter @boozeman811.

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Amari Cooper says Garrett’s rotation ‘took me out’ on Cowboys’ key play

The leading wide receiver of the Dallas Cowboys was on the sideline for the biggest play of the season, and the given reasons don’t add up.

Few who know what they’re talking about when it come to football personnel doubt that the 2019 Cowboys are loaded with talent. It’s what set the bar so high coming into this season. It’s what made the team the favorite in so many games. It’s what has kept the experts picking the team to eventually turn it around against seemingly overmatched opponents. It’s what makes the current 7-8 record and sudden status as a postseason outsider so surprising.

And it’s the Cowboys’ embarrassment of riches at skill positions that makes their personnel package for the most important play of their year downright staggering. With the Week 16 game, a season sweep of the Eagles, and a playoff berth all hanging in the balance but within reach, top wideout Amari Cooper and nine-year veteran Randall Cobb were not on the field. Questions about why were met with answers that don’t quite add up… and may help seal the fate of head coach Jason Garrett.

Despite another slow start and playing from behind all afternoon, Dallas was still- perhaps inexplicably- in a position to steal a win in Philadelphia on Sunday and claim the NFC East throne. Quarterback Dak Prescott had led the offense 69 yards and were set up inside the Eagles’ 20 at the two-minute warning. After that break, Prescott was sacked for a loss of four yards. Next, Prescott and Cooper were unable to connect on a third-down deep shot to the end zone.

The following play represented the Cowboys’ last best chance. From shotgun formation on 4th and 8, Dallas lined up with running back Ezekiel Elliott in the backfield, receivers Michael Gallup and Tavon Austin split wide, and tight ends Jason Witten and Blake Jarwin working midfield.

Amari Cooper, the squad’s leading receiver with 75 receptions, 8 touchdown catches, and 1,097 yards on the season, was standing on the sideline.

“Coach just took me out,” Cooper told reporters after the game. “I had just ran a deep ball. Took me out.”

Prescott’s final throw went to Gallup in the end zone. The second-year Colorado State product made a leaping try, but Philadelphia cornerback Sidney Jones knocked the ball away. Replay officials reviewed the play for possible pass interference, as Jones had seemingly hooked one of Gallup’s arms, but the play stood without a penalty.

Gallup played well, hauling in five catches for 98 yards on the day and passing 1,000 yards on the season. He’s been a bright spot in a frustrating season, but on this critical play, he was the clear-cut number-one option for the Eagles’ secondary to cover. It left many to wonder why Cooper, a three-time Pro Bowler reportedly in line for a massive contract extension, and Cobb, specifically brought in for 2019 to be a legitimate threat from the slot, weren’t also in the huddle.

“We had an opportunity outside to [Michael Gallup],” Garrett said of the play call in his postgame press conference. “We had different routes going inside so the ball can go any of five places on that play based on the coverage they get. Obviously in those two-minute situations, those guys ran a lot of plays in a row. Each of those guys, particularly Randall, came up big at different times. We had a great matchup outside, but unfortunately we weren’t able to cash in on it.”

Cooper had just four catches in this game on 12 targets. A high quantity of drops led to some speculation that Cooper had been benched for poor play, much like cornerback Chidobe Awuzie had been earlier in the game.

Cooper is the league leader in dropped balls since 2015, according to Pro Football Focus, but Dallas knew what he was when they traded for him. Occasional drops are nothing new for Cooper. Nor is his baffling tendency to disappear in road games (although the rest of the world is just now figuring this out). No, even for the Cowboys coaching staff, the deciding play of the season would be an uncharacteristically odd time to suddenly yank Cooper for habits he’s had his entire career.

“On my behalf, I know I didn’t play my best game at all,” Cooper told the media. “It was terrible.”

The Alabama alum has been dealing with some nagging lower-body injuries this season; was there something physical limiting him on Sunday that took him off the field on that key fourth down?

“I’m good,” Cooper said afterward. “My body’s okay. You know, you have nicks and bruises at this point of the season, but in terms of anything limiting me? Nah.”

Garrett confirmed Cooper’s health status when asked. “He wasn’t [hurt]. We were rotating Tavon in there. Had a couple good opportunities with Tavon, and unfortunately, we weren’t able to cash in on them.”

Austin has made a handful of important plays for Dallas this season, none bigger than Week 15’s 59-yard touchdown versus the Rams, his only score of 2019. But with just 12 catches and 176 total receiving yards on the year, his presence over Cooper or even Cobb on the play that could have won the division is puzzling, even for a team that says it wants to attack with multiple players and in different ways.

If Cooper was on the sideline because he was winded (or because the team was stuck in hurry-up mode), why not call a timeout before the 4th-down play? The Cowboys still had all three of them at that point. A stoppage might have allowed the team time to work up a higher-percentage play, and it certainly would have given the twenty-five-year-old time to sufficiently catch his breath for one more route.

But Garrett kept the timeouts in his pocket, saving them for the defensive stand that started when the Eagles took over on downs. The Cowboys did stop the clock three times, but it only prolonged the inevitable. Dallas lost the game, control of the NFC East is no longer in their hands, and the playoffs are a long shot. Garrett’s job is in serious doubt, and he’ll be answering more questions about apparently sticking with some mysterious “rotation” instead of having his best players on the field at the most important moment.

“It’s very disappointing,” Cooper said of being held out. “Obviously, you want to be out there, try to make a play for the team.”

Cooper even seemed to have a play in mind that he felt would have worked against the Eagles defensive backs.

“Just the way they were playing, we could have ran more deep routes. I feel like the ‘go’ ball was a good route to run tonight, but we didn’t really get to it.”

Except they did get to it. It’s the route Cooper ran on third down, on the incompletion right before he reported to the sideline, according to Cooper himself.

“I had a ‘go’ ball on the play before, and I was taken out.”

Whether the main weapon of the team’s receiving corps was sidelined on the biggest play of the year because he needed a breather or because of too many drops or because it was hurry-up time or because that’s just the way the rotation happened to go in that moment, it’s one of many, many, many things that will leave an awful taste in the mouths of everyone associated with the club in 2019.

It simply makes no sense. And, like almost everything else about this Cowboys season, the more it’s dissected and picked apart and analyzed, the less sense it makes.

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2020 Draft Watch: SMU WR and Dallas native James Proche could reinforce Cowboys’ corps

The Dallas Cowboys may look to add targets in the 2020 NFL Draft. James Proche can be a prime candidate if Randall Cobb departs.

Even with the abundance of salary cap space the Dallas Cowboys are projected to have in 2020, they are now up to 24 pending unrestricted free agents  and some starters will be playing elsewhere shortly. One name that tops the list of potential goodbyes is slot receiver, Randall Cobb. Naturally, the Cowboys will look to replace these losses through both free agency and the 2020 NFL Draft.

Assuming No. 1 wideout Amari Cooper is retained, and Cobb is shown the door, a glaring hole at slot receiver would be created, and the overall depth of the unit would require improvement. Enter James Proche.

Hailing from Southern Methodist University (SMU), it is easy to draw the line to Dallas for a plethora of reasons. An estimated 5-foot-11, 185 pounds, Proche’s frame suggests he projects best in the slot, something his film backs up. Additionally, his skill set translates well as a flanker or “Z” receiver, a relatively thin spot on the roster.

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The redshirt senior was exceptionally productive during his Mustangs tenure, cementing himself as a semifinalist for the Biletnikoff Award, given to college football’s best wide receiver.

According to Sports Reference, Proche is second in the nation in receiving, totaling 102 catches, trailing only Texas’ Devin Duvernay. He has also tied with Oklahoma Sooner CeeDee Lamb for the third-most receiving touchdowns in the FBS, scoring 14 times. While production is far from a surefire way to measure prospects, it is certainly a good sign.

Thankfully, a deeper dive into his film reveals an intriguing skill set and one that fits well with Kellen Moore’s offense.

Games Watched: Temple (2019), Cincinnati (2018), Tulane (2018)

Strengths

Despite his size, Proche’s body control is awe-inspiring, surpassing many bigger-bodied WRs in this 2020 NFL Draft class. In this regard, he plays much bigger than his frame would suggest. Proche retains the ability to make plays along the sidelines and over the middle of the field, where he will be making his money in the NFL.

He can win 50/50 balls at encouraging rates and is physical at the catch point, even against defensive backs that have inherent size advantages.

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Unsurprisingly, Proche’s success doesn’t come without strong hands.

His ability to make the highlight grab is well-documented throughout his film. They remain impressive through traffic and all phases of the catch process, touting proper technique and hand-eye coordination. He can fight through contact to make contested catches well, yet another area of his game that plays bigger than his size.

As a route runner, Proche sports somewhat encouraging traits, particularly on his intermediate and deep routes. Here, his cuts are sharper, and he can show off an expansive route tree. He shows the ability to create and maintain separation on intermediate crossing routes, reaching a second gear to beat his man.

The data may not be readily available just yet, but on the field, the SMU product seems to be a well-rounded, above-average athlete.

He won’t blow up the combine or make a living as a pure burner, but his play speed is far from problematic. This can be seen in his effectiveness as a deep threat, where his athletic traits promote lucrative upside. Proche has the short-area quickness and acceleration to make defenders miss immediately after the catch. His play strength comes through in his ability to block smaller defensive backs, though his technical prowess and competitive toughness may be more likely culprits.

Weaknesses

A peculiar quirk in Proche’s game is the inverted development of his routes.

Where his deeper routes see more success, his routes behind the sticks tend to fall behind. He can round out or smoothen out-breaking routes, allowing for opposing cornerbacks to utilize their recovery speed to make a play on the ball. He lacks the same deception he can conjure when dismantling defenses downfield.

In the red zone, more weaknesses come to light. Proche struggles to make an impact as a horizontal separator in the red zone, something derived from poor play at the line of scrimmage. Without imposing (or merely average) height, he tends to not play above the rim in the red zone. This works to render him significantly less useful inside the opponent’s 20-yard line.

His size continues to plague his game, limiting his upside at the next level. His frame inherently limits his catch radius, demanding more accurate throws from his future quarterback. As prior stated, his play in the red zone is diminished by his physical traits. He fails to take on stronger defensive backs successfully when blocking, as he can get bullied by the most physically-dominant CBs.

At the line of scrimmage, Proche can be stifled at the line of scrimmage more often than one would like. His struggles against press coverage can be traced back to a lack of creativity. In part, this plays into his scheme fit as a slot receiver or flanker, where he is bound to see more of a cushion.

Moreover, Proche is yet to maximize the quality athletic traits that he has at his disposal. With the ball in his hands, the Dallas native is yet to consistently make defenders miss in the open field. When stretching the field, he can struggle to track balls with regularity, though the flashes are apparent and outright insane.

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Summary

Proche’s collegiate accomplishments are impressive enough, but to produce how he did without elite physical traits is innately impressive. He has the potential to be a slightly above-average starter at slot receiver, and at worst, is serviceable depth. His special teams value only adds to the versatility he brings to the table.

Though the level of competition in the American Athletic Conference is a minor concern, his skills can quickly translate into a day-one starter. His best work is done over the intermediate parts of the field between, from sideline to sideline.

As far as player comparisons go, his ability to contort his body and play through traffic despite physical hindrances is reminiscent of Julian Edelman. For Dallas, Proche can step in and start in the slot or develop while providing depth and kick/punt return value.

He will likely end up with a third-round grade, but very well could be available early on the draft’s third day. A Dallas kid through and through, the Cowboys simply make sense for James Proche.

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Bennett’s fiery tirade to Cowboys warns of ‘the enemy against greatness’

Being with the Cowboys for just a month didn’t stop DE Michael Bennett from laying into his teammates after their Thanksgiving day loss.

It’s often said that a football team, over time, inevitably takes on the personality of its head coach. Save for a few notable exceptions, most members of the Dallas Cowboys sound in media interviews a lot like coach Jason Garrett. They’re measured in their responses. They don’t reveal a lot of meaty information. They don’t engage in speculation or hyperbole or a lot of self-congratulations. Win or lose, up or down, they sound pretty much the same. They’re often uninteresting, even flat-out boring.

So it went over like a miniature firestorm when it hit social media in the moments following the Cowboys’ limp performance against Buffalo- in their home stadium, in front of a nationwide audience, on their traditional holiday- that somebody behind the closed doors of the team’s locker room was going off. Very loudly and rather emphatically.

It was reported shortly thereafter that defensive end Michael Bennett, with the club for only a month, was the one who lit up his new teammates.

Afterward, many of them were asked about the moment, which had been audible throughout many of the tunnels underneath AT&T Stadium.

“That’s passion,” receiver Randall Cobb told media members. “That’s passion. We love this game; we want to win ball games. We’re not coming out here to lose ball games. Unfortunately, it goes that way sometimes. That’s just passion. I think it was a great message, and I think it was well-received.”

“Emotional locker room,” quarterback Dak Prescott said in his postgame press conference. “Just an exchange of words about us sticking together. Anything and everything outside of that locker room doesn’t matter. Simple as that.”

As for the specifics of what Bennett told the team, his fellow players felt it wasn’t for them to say.

“We’re not going to get into that,” Cobb stated. “What happens in this locker room stays in this locker room.”

But Bennett himself revealed some of the themes of his impassioned speech and why he felt it was necessary for him to speak up, even as a newcomer among a collection of high-profile superstars.

“Because it’s important that we understand that it’s a small window that we have,” Bennett said, as per Michael Gehlken of The Dallas Morning News. “We’ve got all the great players. The only thing we’ve got to do is execute in adversity. The enemy against greatness is the unwillingness to change. We’ve got to be able to change some of the things that we’ve been doing to demand more from ourselves and become the people we want to be.

“Every opportunity is in front of us, but it’s just on us to capitalize. To win, you’ve got to sacrifice a lot. It’s going to hurt. It’s painful. You play through injury, but you do it because you have to. To win that championship, to win that [Vince] Lombardi [Trophy], there’s no feeling like that. And that takes a lot.”

Bennett, an 11-year veteran who’s spent time on four different teams before being traded to Dallas from New England after just six games, won a Super Bowl ring with Seattle following the 2013 season. His perspective as a champion makes him the rarest of commodities on the current Cowboys roster.

“The champions are the people that get remembered,” Bennett said when asked about his speech, according to Gehlken. “They don’t remember who got the biggest contract. A whole bunch of great players got great contracts, but they don’t get remembered as champions. Champions are the ones who get the gold plates and the jackets and they understand what it takes to win. That’s just a certain mind-set. That’s just a certain ability to play tough in adverse moments.”

Bennett’s words seemed to hit home for his new teammates in Dallas after their Thursday night debacle.

“It’s all about the men in this room,” edge rusher DeMarcus Lawrence offered. “Looking each other in the eye, looking each other in the mirror and really making that turn about what they really want in this life and what they want out of this career and out of this game.”

Even immediately after a demoralizing loss that has fans calling for their coach’s head, Bennett’s address created a sense of optimism heading into the final quarter of the schedule.

“No one’s down on themselves,” defensive lineman Robert Quinn said in his postgame comments. “Guys know what’s at stake. But we’ve got to look ourselves in the mirror come tomorrow- or tonight, actually, I should say- and see what we can do better… We got four games left, we still got a shot. No need to hang your head. So let’s get it fixed.”

“No belief has been lost,” Prescott echoed. “No confidence has been lost. This is simply execution. This is on players. That’s kind of what that conversation was. Credit the leaders, credit Michael Bennett, those guys that started that. It was a great conversation, lot of great words passed. But it’s all about us executing and just getting the job done. Starts throughout the week about us just doing things better.”

Owner Jerry Jones had been the vocal one in the media all week, after calls for Garrett’s job increased to deafening levels following the squad’s Week 12 loss to the Patriots. But Jones, much like the head coach he’s defended for a decade, has opted for a calm and measured approach in dealing with both his coach and his players.

“If I had thought that calling somebody out or going in there and giving them a Knute Rockne talk would have made any difference as to how we execute or how we do,” Jones told reporters, “then I’d bottle that and sell it to a lot of different places. That’s not the way this thing works.”

Sometimes, though, it is the way this thing works. Sometimes a team needs a fiery Knute Rockne speech. Sometimes a dressing-down at maximum volume is exactly what the situation calls for. But Jones is right: coming from the billionaire owner, it falls flat. Coming from a head coach who is practically expected to lose his job, it feel’s disingenuous. Coming from a player who’s never held a Lombardi Trophy, it’s just talk. Maybe Michael Bennett was the only guy in that room who could provide that spark. Maybe that’s part of the reason the Cowboys went out and got him mid-season.

The last four games of 2019 will reveal whether Bennett’s spark actually lit a fire under this Cowboys team.

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Jerry Jones: ‘Zero chance’ at storybook ending to 2019 if Garrett fired

There’s an old trick that authors use when writing a work of fiction. At any given moment, in almost any situation, the idea is to make things as difficult as possible. Make the challenges bigger. Make the outlook bleaker. Make the circumstances …

There’s an old trick that authors use when writing a work of fiction. At any given moment, in almost any situation, the idea is to make things as difficult as possible. Make the challenges bigger. Make the outlook bleaker. Make the circumstances more dire. Give the hero more to overcome along the way than seems even possible, and it makes the victory that much sweeter and more satisfying in the end.

The Dallas Cowboys are still working on the story of their 2019 season. Their Thanksgiving Day meltdown at the hands of the Bills will certainly go down as one of its darkest chapters. But owner Jerry Jones is optimistic that there could be a plot twist coming on the very next page, and that this team has a surprise ending waiting in the wings.

“Adversity gives you an opportunity to really write a hell of a story about how to come back,” Jones said after the 26-15 loss.

But judging by Jones’s postgame comments, he is not willing to go so far as to kill off one of his major characters. Despite a tenure defined by mediocrity and punctuated by countless head-scratching decisions, coach Jason Garrett, who has led a seemingly-talent-laden team to six losses in their last nine games, will remain in place.

“This is not the time,” Jones said of a possible coaching change with four games left in the regular season. “For me, I’m looking ahead at another ballgame, and I’m looking ahead at winning four or five straight and helping write a story that they’ll talk about, how it looked like you were down and out and got it done. And I mean that. I mean that. That’s the way that I’m operating. Every decision that I make over the next month will be with an eye and mind to get us in the Super Bowl now.”

Cowboys players echoed that optimism, even if a story that ends in this roster and coaching staff ripping off a four-game win streak feels like pure science fiction.

“We know what we need to do,” linebacker Jaylon Smith told reporters after the loss. “Four games left, and winning is the name of the game.”

“We feel real good about our chances,” running back Ezekiel Elliott told the media afterward. “We feel really good about what we have in store for the rest of the season.”

As bad as the Cowboys looked hosting their traditional holiday contest, the team didn’t lose any ground in their chase of a divisional crown. Still clinging to a better record than the Eagles but with a more difficult slate of opponents ahead, Dallas players feel they need to win out in order to claim the NFC East and make the postseason.

“We can still win our division and go to the playoffs,” cornerback Jourdan Lewis said after the game. “That’s what it is. Of course, we wanted to win this one, but at the same time, we’ve got to look forward and do our best to get to the playoffs.”

“We know we can do that because we control our destiny,” quarterback Dak Prescott said from the podium in his postgame press conference. “We control the work that we put in, we control how we approach each and every day, we control the way that we prepare to get ready for these games. I have so much confidence in the men in that locker room, the character that they have, and I wouldn’t want to be, honestly, in this position with anybody else except those men. so confident in what we’re going to do.”

Prescott has spent months praising the character of the men in the locker room and expressing confidence in what they’re going to do. Problem is, they’ve only done it against bad teams. Thursday’s beatdown by Buffalo was just the latest dismal showing against the exact kind of quality opponent that Dallas would see should they qualify for postseason play.

The result was an embarrassing loss that left recently-added defensive end Michael Bennett screaming at his new teammates in the locker room.

“It was very disappointing,” wideout Amari Cooper told the press, “just with everything that’s at stake, where we are in the season. A loss in general is just very disappointing, but to lose in this fashion with where we are is just devastating.”

“We’re definitely in the low of this season,” receiver Randall Cobb said in postgame interviews, “but the bright side is we’ve got four games to go. And anything can happen in those four weeks, and we kind of control our own destiny at this point.”

“We’re just pissed,” Elliott summed up. “We’re pissed at how we’ve let this season go. But the good thing about it is we control our own future. We’ve just got to find a way to go out there and win the rest of these games.”

“All it takes is winning one game and getting the thing rolling,” Cobb offered hopefully.

What it won’t take to get things rolling, according to the man who writes the checks? A Week 14 firing of his head coach.

“I wouldn’t make a change and give us a chance to do what I want to dream about doing,” Jones said. “I wouldn’t do that for love nor money. I’d give us zero chance if we did that.”

“He understands it,” Prescott said of the club’s impassioned owner. “He understands that we need everybody in that locker room- players, coaches, everybody that’s a part of it- to get to where we want to be.”

Fans may have soured long ago on Garrett’s maddeningly-even-keeled style and are understandably frustrated by the the lackluster results he’s getting from his players. But Jones isn’t ready to give up on Garrett, with whom he’s had a relationship since even before he joined the Cowboys as a practice squad player in 1992.

“I know Jason very well,” Jones said. “I’ve had a wonderful opportunity to spend a football life with him, so I know him very well.”

But sometimes an author can get too attached to his longstanding hero. And no conflict is too great that there isn’t hope that the hero can rise to the challenge and overcome the odds, no matter how improbable.

After a thoroughly gutting Thanksgiving Day plot twist, Jones is still thinking about how the 2019 disaster epic currently being penned in Dallas can get its storybook ending:

“The way that I’m going to handle this is encourage everybody to basically look to the possibility of winning out and end up doing something that people will write about 30 years from now and being a part of that. I like that story tonight as I eat my turkey.”

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Swing State: 3 plays epitomized Cowboys rough loss to Patriots

Analyzing the 3 biggest plays in the Cowboys’ 13-9 defeat to the Patriots using EPA and Win Probability metrics from nflscrapR.

It was yet another close defeat for the Dallas Cowboys, losing 13-9 to the New England Patriots on Sunday. The Cowboys are now 0-4 in games decided by four or fewer points in 2019. The difference between winning and losing came down to a few plays deciding the final outcome, the case in most close contests. The Cowboys needed to play their best brand of football in all three facets against the vaunted Patriots, and they fell short of the mark.

Here are the biggest plays of the game as measured by Expected Points Added (EPA) and Win Probability (WP) with data from nflscrapR. EPA measures the value of a play based on down, distance to first downs and field position.

No. 1 Chris Jones punt is blocked by Matthew Slater

EPA: -2.8. DAL WP Shift: 42% -> 37%

Neither team was able to gain much of an advantage through the first quarter. It was at the end of the Cowboys’ third drive when momentum would shift to the Patriots.

New England’s special teams unit proved to play a big part in the game and it started with All-Pro special teamer Matthew Slater. The blocked punt gave the Patriots perfect starting field position at the Cowboys’ 12-yard line.

The short drive was completed with a 10-yard touchdown pass from Tom Brady to rookie wide receiver N’Keal Harry to take an early 7-0 lead.

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No. 2 Dak Prescott pass short right intended for Amari Cooper INTERCEPTED

EPA: -4.6. DAL WP Shift: 26% -> 18%

It was still early in the game but after a touchdown by the Patriots the Cowboys might have felt pressed to score some points of their own. On this play Cooper ran a simple crossing route, but Stephon Gilmore is one of the best man-cover corners in the NFL.

It showed on this play as he basically ran Cooper’s route for him. Gilmore’s interception gifted the Patriots’ offense with ideal field position on their second consecutive drive.

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In spite of the turnover the Cowboys’ defense managed to hold the Patriots’ offense to a field goal try. After a successful kick the score was 10-0 early in the second quarter in favor of the Patriots. Miraculously, the Cowboys were very much in the game, but the early deficit was self-inflicted.


No. 3 Prescott pass deep left to Randall Cobb for 47 yards

EPA: 4.2. DAL WP Shift: 20% -> 36%

The Cowboys’ offenses has featured one of the most explosive passing attacks in the league. Cooper has been the team’s biggest contributing factor to this, but against Gilmore, his role was neutralized. It meant the team’s other receivers needed to have a big game in order for their offense to function as intended.

Those plays were few and far between.

The Cowboys’ biggest gain came on a 47-yard play from Prescott to Cobb in the fourth quarter. Cobb gained 42 yards after the catch but he would lose the ball on the play. He was able to recover the ball for some additional yardage, so altogether the play netted 59 yards.

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This was quite the swing for the Cowboys, but they would settle for a field goal on the drive. A successful attempt brought the score to 13-9; unfortunately for them it would become the final score of the game.

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Quick hits, key stats and instant analysis of Cowboys 13-9 loss to NE

The Cowboys had another chance to prove themselves this season, but failed to score a touchdown in a 13-9 loss to New England.

It could’ve been a statement game, but it was more than the New England rain that ruined the Cowboys’ chances against the Patriots Sunday afternoon. The conditions were indeed miserable but it wasn’t hard to see which side was more prepared to succeed in them.

Dallas entered the game with hope but left with question marks and a 13-9 defeat on their ledger. Time is running out for the Cowboys in 2019 as they currently sit just a single game above .500 with five games left to play.

It was over when . . .

. . . Amari Cooper’s 20-yard reception on 4th-and-11 was reversed, turning the ball over to the Patriots and effectively ending the game. It briefly looked like Dak Prescott would have a shot to steal one in Foxborough, but the would-be game winning drive ended after just five plays.

Game balls

RB Ezekiel Elliott

Elliott accounted for 126 of Dallas’s 308 total yards. He took 21 carries for 86 rushing yards, slugging out tough runs in the wet conditions, especially in the first half. The team leaned heavily on Elliott and he delivered in moving them down the field.

WR Randall Cobb

Cobb’s recent surge continued, as he led the team in both targets (seven) and receiving yards (86). His 59-yard pickup and averted disaster in the fourth quarter was the Cowboys’ longest play of the game, and set up their best shot to reach the end zone.

Hot Boyz defensive line

The Dallas pass rush kept the Patriots offense in check, harassing Tom Brady for most of the game (two sacks, one fumble). DeMarcus Lawrence, Michael Bennett, and Maliek Collins combined for six tackles for loss and two QB hits, and Robert Quinn also recorded an early strip sack. They really forced the issue, and kept the Dallas offense in the game.

Key stat: 15%

The Cowboys were just two of 13 on third-down attempts in the game. On the season, they’ve been able to convert third downs 52% of the time, but New England’s league-leading defense was able to end drives and get off the field.

The Patriots themselves were only slightly better on third downs, going three of 14, highlighting just how close this game was.

Quick Hits:

  • The difference in the game however, was special teams. The Dallas special teams ranked just 25th by DVOA, and committed multiple gaffes against the Patriots that cost them both points and valuable field position. It was an embarrassing and eye-opening effort for the Dallas coaching staff, especially compared to the opposite sideline.The Patriots blocked a punt which led to the only touchdown of the game, and utterly confused the Dallas punt team late in the third quarter, causing them to take two penalties and resulting in just a 32-yard kick. Brett Maher also missed his seventh field goal of the season.
  • Dak Prescott went toe-to-toe with Tom Brady, nearly matching him across the board. It wasn’t the best game for the the MVP candidate however, who to put on gloves after starting without them. Prescott finished 19 of 33 for 212 yards, an interception, and no touchdowns.
  • Tyron Smith was flagged three times, and committed one of the two tripping penalties called against the Cowboys offensive line. Travis Frederick committed the other, setting them up for failure during their comeback attempt.
  • WR Amari Cooper was held without a catch for just the third time in his career. He’s been uncharacteristically quiet for the past two weeks, ceding big plays to Cobb and Michael Gallup.
  • The Dallas run defense had another poor game, allowing 101 yards on the ground to the Patriots. Sony Michel’s 85 rushing yards were the most he’s recorded in a game since Week 6 against the Jets. New England only averaged 3.7 yards per rushing attempt, but still seemed to spring costly runs with ease. The Cowboys also had issues bringing down players, especially evident during WR Jakobi Meyers’ 32-yard catch and run in the second quarter.
  • Jeff Heath’s valiant pass break up was the defensive play of the game, providing yet another highlight for the polarizing DB. He laid a legal hit with his shoulder to force out the ball, but paid the price in obviously aggravating his injured shoulder.
  • This game represented yet another opportunity for this Cowboys team to establish itself amongst the league’s best, and yet again they fell just short. Perhaps the sea really has parted between them and the true title contenders this season, or eventually these close games will start to end in their favor. However, it still pains to think about this team’s true potential, and what they’re capable of.
  • At 6-5, Dallas next faces the Bills on Thanksgiving Day. It’ll be a quick turnaround, and no easy task entering a crucial part of the season.

[lawrence-newsletter]

Fantasy football: 5 sleepers to start, 5 starters to bench in Week 12

Five sleepers to start and five starters to bench in fantasy football Week 12.

It’s crunch time in fantasy football.

A little scouting and you can avoid a crucial late-season loss or do just enough to cross the finish line with a win this week. We’ve got you covered with a quick scouting report to help you out.

Here are five sleepers to start and five starters you’ve got to sit in fantasy football Week 12:

Atlanta Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan. Credit: Bob Donnan-USA TODAY Sports
Starts

QB Matt Ryan

After two decent games on the road from him the past two weeks, Matt Ryan and the Falcons return home. There he’s going to meet the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. There’s a few reasons to go with Ryan in Week 12. First, his team is on an unforeseen two-game winning streak. That could continue because of him. The Falcons’ backfield is banged up, but the Bucs also sport the second-best run defense in the NFL. In addition, they have the second-worst pass defense. Do the math.

RB Phillip Lindsay

Phillip Lindsay has been steady as she goes over the past few weeks. He’s had outings of 59, 92, and 67 yards in his past three games, respectively, with a touchdown coming in the 92-yard outing. But having said that, the Bills defense is a formidable one, but not against the run. The third-best defense overall in Buffalo is actually 18th against the run and only slowed down their opponent last week because the Dolphins are the Dolphins.

Fantasy sleepers for Week 12 of the NFL season

Touchdown Wire’s Pat Yasinskas examines nine under-the-radar players who could give your team a jolt down the stretch.

With injuries and byes, there’s a good chance you’re looking for fantasy sleepers this week. With that in mind, Touchdown Wire presents nine fantasy football sleepers for Week 12 of the NFL season:

9. Bo Scarbrough, RB, Detroit Lions

Raj Mehta-USA TODAY Sports

Scarbrough was brought up from the practice squad before Sunday’s game with Dallas. He ended up getting the bulk of the carries ahead of J.D. McKissic and Ty Johnson. He rushed 14 times for 55 yards. That should earn him more carries going forward, and he’s got a favorable matchup Sunday against Washington.