Race Too Close to Call: Cowboys’ McCarthy to ‘have both guys ready’ for QB duty

Dallas is prepping two newcomers- Garrett Gilbert and Cooper Rush- for Sunday’s start versus Pittsburgh, but it may be a game day decision.

The Cowboys are set to trot out their fourth starting quarterback of the 2020 season, and their third in the last three weeks. But 48 hours before kickoff, the identity of the man who’ll take the reins of the 2-6 Dallas offense as the team faces undefeated Pittsburgh remains a mystery.

Perfectly fitting the theme of this week, it’s too close to call, even for head coach Mike McCarthy. He’s pulled the plug on the Ben DiNucci experiment; that much is known. But whether it’s newly-acquired Garrett Gilbert or newly-re-signed Cooper Rush taking snaps against the Steelers come Sunday, the coach has yet to decide.

“We’re still working through the process,” McCarthy told reporters Friday when asked who would get the Week 9 start. “I think the most important point, as far as the goal, is to make sure both Garrett and Cooper are ready. The reps aren’t being distributed equally- and I don’t really want to get into the specifics of it- but just learning from last week’s experience with all the pressure in the Philadelphia game, just to give us the best opportunity, my focus is to make sure both Garrett and Cooper are ready to play in the game.”

One has to believe that Gilbert, a sixth-round draft pick in 2014 who’s bounced around since as a journeyman backup, is the one getting more snaps in practice. He was the AAF’s leader in passing yards, attempts, completions, and passer rating for its eight-week lifespan in 2019, but has thrown just six balls in NFL action.

McCarthy, though, thinks the 29-year-old brings experience with him that doesn’t necessarily show up on a resume.

“He’s played a lot of quarterback. This guy grew up as a quarterback. His father was a quarterback. He knows how to play the position,” McCarthy said of Gilbert. “There’s no lack for confidence or know-how. It’s about getting the timing and the continuity in order as far as running the offense. I find him to have a lot of confidence. He’s been like that since the day he arrived.”

Rush, however, has a little more history and familiarity with the Cowboys on his side. He served as depth in the Dallas quarterbacks room for three seasons, and was cut only when the team signed Andy Dalton.

“I think you’ve got to remember Cooper went through the spring with us,” McCarthy pointed out in his Friday press conference. “He’s in touch with the language and the terminology changes from last year to this year. Conceptually, there’s not an understanding or a need-to-know issue at all.”

Apart from the percentage of practice reps each player is getting this week, McCarthy says the plays being practiced are the same for both passers.

“We’re operating off the same game plan for both.”

The coach admits the starting assignment could literally come down to a gut feeling he has on game day.

“That’s part of it. That’s why you just really pay attention to all the little things that go into playing the position. I think at the end of the day, we have two young guys that don’t have a ton of game day experience, but they’re both very smart. The game comes easy to them. But this is more about the timing and being connected and in touch with the cadence and the operation. These are things you normally knock out in training camp. We’re up against it a little bit with the time in front of us. But both Garrett and Cooper… they know how to play quarterback.”

One strategy McCarthy does rule out, though, is a series-by-series or a play-by-play rotation, similar to the one Tom Landry employed during the Cowboys’ 1971 season with Craig Morton and Roger Staubach.

“We will not alternate quarterbacks. We’re going to give one of them the football and tell them to take it and run with it. We don’t know how long we’re going to be in this situation. I think it’s best to have both guys ready.”

It will evidently be either Garrett Gilbert or Cooper Rush leading the team until Andy Dalton returns from COVID-19 protocol. But like so many other things around the country this first week of November, the answer of who actually got the job will come only after a couple extra days of wondering and waiting.

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Former Longhorns QB could make first NFL start for the Dallas Cowboys

Former UT quarterback Garrett Gilbert and Cooper Rush will be battling it out for the starting QB spot of the Dallas Cowboys per NFL Network.

After coming into the year with high expectations, the Dallas Cowboys’ season has nosed dived into a tankathon thanks to the current quarterback situation. Both starters —  Dak Prescott (ankle injury) and backup Andy Dalton (concussion) — have been out for multiple weeks now.

Dallas’ answer was rookie and former seventh-round pick Ben DiNucci out of James Madison. On Sunday Night Football against the Philadelphia Eagles, DiNucci was terrible. He threw for 180 yards on 40 throws, only 21 passes were caught by Cowboy receivers. DiNucci also coughed the ball up twice, both resulting in touchdowns for the Eagles.

Because of his poor play, the Cowboys have decided to not play DiNucci in Week 9 against the undefeated Pittsburgh Steelers. Instead, it will be a battle between two veterans, former Texas quarterback Garrett Gilbert and Cooper Rush per NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero.

Gilbert was signed by Dallas off of Cleveland’s practice squad after Prescott’s injury. He served as the main backup during the loss to the Eagles.

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Ian Rapoport is also reporting that the Cowboys are favoring to start Gilbert. It would be his first career NFL start after appearing in games for Cleveland and the Carolina Panthers.

However, he will still have to battle it out with Rush, a guy who spent the previous three seasons in Dallas as the backup quarterback. While head coach Mike McCarthy has never had Rush on his roster, offensive coordinator Kellen Moore understands exactly what he can bring to the table.

Dallas will be playing the final undefeated team in the league in Pittsburgh on Sunday. With how bad the Cowboys’ offensive line has been this season, Gilbert could be seeing T.J. Watt’s face a lot in the backfield.

The game will kick off at 3:25 p.m. CST and will be broadcasted on CBS.

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Madden simulation predicts how Tua Tagovailoa will perform in debut start

Former Alabama quarterback Tua Tagovailoa will get his first start this week against the los angeles rams. madden predicts how he will do.

Former Alabama quarterback Tua Tagovailoa was selected by the Miami Dolphins with the No. 5 overall selection in the 2020 NFL draft. After waiting five weeks, he saw his first in-game action against the New York jets where he completed two passes in the final two minutes of the contest.

Shortly after the game, Dolphins head coach Brian Flores announced Tagovailoa would be making a move to the top of the depth chart, making veteran quareback Ryan Fitzpatrick the second-string signal caller.

Having last week off, the Crimson Tide product has now had two weeks to prepare for his starting debut in Week 8 at home against the Los Angeles Rams.

There’s no way of predicting the future and seeing how the rookie will performs against the Rams’ strong pass defense.

Well, there’s no crystal ball to show us the box score for this Sunday’s game, but we can run a Madden simulation between the two teams and use that to hold us over!

Here’s what Tagovailoa’s debut as a starting quarterback looked like according to Madden 21:

First Quarter:

Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images

The Dolphins received the kickoff to open then game, and Tagovailoa wasted no time letting the ball fly. His first passing attempt was a 22-yard completion to tight end Durham Smythe.

Then, after a few more completions and some hefty runs by Myles Gaskin, Miami was deep inside the redzone. Having 12 yards between Tagovailoa and six points, he threw a bullet into a crowded corner of the endzone, looking for DeVante Parker. However, the pass was intercepted and returned 26 yards.

His first drive as a sarting quarterback in the NFL saw four completions on four passing attempts, until the interception, for 39 yards.

The Miami defense did their job and held Jared Goff and the Rams to a three-and-out, leading to Tagovailoa getting the ball back with a minute left.

In that minute, the 2018 Heisman finalist led a strong charge down the field to put Miami in the redzone as the first quarter expired.

First quarter stats: 8/9, 81 yds, 1 INT. 

Score: 0-0

Kyle Allen will be the 30th starting QB for Washington since 1993

With the news that Kyle Allen will start over Dwayne Haskins this weekend, Washington will have their 30th starting QB since 1993.

The quarterback carousel in Washington continues to churn, with no single player staying for more than what seemed like his 15 minutes of fame.

The latest drama is surrounding Dwayne Haskins, who was drafted with the No. 15 overall pick in the 2019 NFL Draft. After just 13 career starts, he was benched four weeks into the 2020 season, playing under a brand new coaching staff and running a brand new scheme yet again. It’s clear that Haskins was unable to live up to expectations this early in his career, but to write him off as a complete bust seems premature, although that’s what Washington seems to have done.

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In his place comes QB Kyle Allen, who started a total of 13 games with the Carolina Panthers in the past two years, throwing 19 touchdowns and 16 interceptions with a 6-7 record as a starter. He will now step into a familiar offense under the same coaching staff that he had with his former team, and hopefully, be able to lead them to a playoff berth in the NFC East.

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Is Allen the answer long-term at this position? Based on his past performances, it seems a bit unlikely, though you never know for sure. If we’re being honest, though, the likelihood that Washington’s never-ending list of unsuccessful starting quarterbacks keeps growing is high. That seems to be the one thing that this franchise can never figure out.

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Texas QB Sam Ehlinger expresses initial reactions to upcoming season

During media availability on Tuesday, Texas quarterback Sam Ehlinger voiced his opinions on the upcoming season.

Texas quarterback Sam Ehlinger did not shy away from letting his opinions be heard on Tuesday. Continue reading “Texas QB Sam Ehlinger expresses initial reactions to upcoming season”

Projecting the post-spring Michigan State football defensive depth chart

The MSU defense has a handful of surefire starters and a lot of intrigue behind them.

Sorry I’m late!! This post was initially meant to be published two weeks ago as a companion piece with the offensive depth chart projection and the soon-to-be-published special teams depth chart projection. Well, a surprise and prolonged hospital visit followed by the birth of a child (everyone is doing well) was set in my lap and here we are; with me two weeks behind on everything.

So I’m not going to waste much more time. Expedition is the mission.

This is a somewhat informed/somewhat blind shot at projection what Michigan State’s depth chart currently looks like. This is based on previous roles and comments from coaches’ press availabilities. That’s the somewhat informed part. The somewhat blind part is that none of the new coaches–including the head one–have led these players in a real, live practice. That makes this difficult. What is clear is that on defense there are a handful of surefire starters and a lot of youth and intrigue behind them.

Let’s get to the defensive depth chart. Later in the week we’ll hit special teams.

Defensive Tackle

  1. Jacob Slade, Naquan Jones
  2. Jalen Hunt, Deshaun Mallory
  3. Maverick Hansen, Evan Brunning

Salde and Jones are the obvious starters. They paired well as a tandem backing up Mike Panasiuk and Raequan Williams in 2019 and have the most experience in the group. Ron Burton has alluded to the fact that they well be counted on to lead the line. Behind them Jalen Hunt is really intriguing. He was supposed to go to Iowa in 2019, but wasn’t going to academically qualify. The Hawkeyes went another direction and then Hunt did end up qualifying and MSU swooped in late to get him. Mallory appeared in a couple games last season and could be used as a backup nose tackle. The interesting thing to watch here is how MUS aligns on defense in 2020. They’ll be slowly transitioning from a base 4-3 to a 3-4/hybrid defense. This means slight position changes for the front seven, which could shake up the depth chart.

Projecting the post-spring Michigan State football offensive depth chart

Without the aid of spring ball, where do position groups sit on the offensive side of the ball?

Spring is an important time for college football depth charts. Practices in March and April set the stage for fall camp battles that may or may not happen as athletes jockey for starting positions. At programs with brand new coaching staffs–like Michigan State–that time is doubly important. Establishing the depth chart of a Mel Tucker’s new regime without the luxury of reports from spring practice or a spring game seems like a fool’s errand.

But I am a fool and these days I’m searching hard for any errand I can find.

The fall practices, training camps, or whatever we end up getting as a resolution from  college football returning during the COVID-19 pandemic will go a long way into shaping who is actually taking snaps once snaps are there to be taken. Mel Tucker has said himself that everybody has a clean slate with him. At some point that slate will have to start to dirty up a bit, as the time for evaluation shrinks by the day and the need for game preparation grows. We’ll see how it shakes out.

With that said, with the help of what we know from previous seasons and reading into press availabilities from assistant coaches, we can start to piece together what the Michigan State football depth chart probably looks like right now.

Today we will start with the offensive side of the ball and get to the defense and special teams later in the week.

Quarterback

  1. Rocky Lombardi or Theo Day or Payton Thorne

This is a totally wide open competition. Yes, Lombardi has the most experience of the bunch and it’s not close. But in the fall it will be almost two years since Lombardi has taken a meaningful snap as a starting college quarterback. And it’s not as if his run in 2018 was something that cemented his future as the starting quarterback. Sure, there were some good moments. But there were plenty of bad ones too. Plus, all three are learning a brand new offense. Lombardi’s advantage of being in the old scheme for three-plus years is out the window. Theo Day has almost no real game experience and his one shot against Penn State in 2019 was cut short when he called the wrong play just a few snaps in. Payton Thorne has yet to take the field at MSU. Had Mark Dantonio never left I would have picked Lombardi as the favorite to start, followed by Day and Thorne. With Tucker, I really don’t know. I’d probably just barely give the teeniest of edges to Lomardi with Day and Thorne in a dead heat for backup. Notice how many qualifiers I put in that sentence.

Watch: A Day in the Life Notre Dame Quarterback Ian Book

Ever wondered what it’s like to spend a day as Notre Dame’s starting quarterback? Find out now then see what we liked best about QB1’s day.

How many people are the right age to remember the show “The Life” on ESPN?  It was on when I was in high school and the show was pretty much ten minute segment following around your favorite and some of the most interesting athletes around and just seeing what a day in their life is like.

Alright, ESPN didn’t bring the show back but Notre Dame quarterback Ian Book sort of did Monday as he had a high school buddy film what a day is like in QB-1’s life.  Watch it here:

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A few quick thoughts:

  1.  How bad-ass would it be to wake up and have a Sports Illustrated cover with yourself on it hanging over your bed?  Not a photoshopped one but a real one.  Hat-tip for that, Ian.
  2. I’m impressed with his ability to make quality eggs.  I don’t think I made my first scrambled eggs until at least three or four years later in my life.
  3. Does anyone not have spend time on Zoom right now? Really missed the boat on that stock.
  4. Great job using the hand-sanitizer although I’m sure some would worry about the social distancing skills at the restaurant.
  5. I really want to see what one of Tommy Rees’s quarterback quizzes is like.  Nerdy but sounds awesome.

So there it is – now you know what it’s like to be the starting quarterback at Notre Dame during a national epidemic.