Cowboys announce 2 Frisco practices open to public

The Cowboys will return home from their West Coast trip and practice twice with live fans before their final preseason contest vs. Seattle. | From @ToddBrock24f7

The Cowboys have announced their practice schedule for the at-home portion of 2022’s training camp, including two opportunities for fans to attend sessions held at The Star in Frisco.

Following their Oxnard stay and road trips to Denver and Los Angeles, Calif., the team will return to the Metroplex to close out training camp. Practices inside the Ford Center on Aug. 23-24 will be open to the public and free to attend, with both sessions beginning at 6 p.m. Central.

The first practice, on Tuesday of that week, will be preceded by “Cowboys Night” festivities starting at 4 p.m. on the Tostitos Championship Plaza. Doors to the indoor practice facility will open at 4:45, and an opening ceremony will begin at 5:15 with remarks from Cowboys owner Jerry Jones.

There will be one additional opportunity that same week to see the squad in action before the start of the regular season. The Cowboys will host the Seattle Seahawks in their third and final preseason game of 2022 on Friday, Aug. 26. Kickoff will be 7 p.m. at AT&T Stadium.

Dallas opens the 2022 season at home versus Tampa Bay on Sunday, Sept. 11.

[listicle id=700015]

[listicle id=700002]

[listicle id=699795]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Prescott, Lamb, Parsons, Hooker shine in Cowboys’ Monday night practice

The team practiced at home for the first time this camp, and a packed house saw several stars- both on offense and defense- shine bright. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Monday marked the Dallas Cowboys’ first training camp practice in Dallas after a three-week stay in California, two preseason away games, and a joint practice session in Oxnard.

And Cowboys Nation turned out in droves for an in-person look at their team.

Quarterback Dak Prescott is hoping to see some action this Saturday night when the Cowboys play host to the in-state rival Houston Texans. But fresh off a follow-up MRI that confirmed his right shoulder is healing from a muscle strain according to schedule, the club is understandably taking it slow with their $160 million man.

Wide receiver Amari Cooper also made his way back to the practice field after using the Oxnard leg of camp of continue rehabbing from offseason ankle surgery. Fans and teammates alike were happy to have the 27-year-old back in the mix.

With Prescott merely easing his way back into throwing, backup Garrett Gilbert got in a good bit of work, including a long scoring pass to tight end Jeremy Sprinkle…

…and then another to tight end Blake Jarwin.

Gilbert also led the offense in a two-minute drill that ended successfully with CeeDee Lamb making yet another gorgeous grab.

But Monday night was also a chance for several defensive stars to show out, including the newest Cowboy. Safety Malik Hooker made quite the first impression with a tip-drill takeaway of a Ben DiNucci throw.

And rookie linebacker Micah Parsons continues to turn heads with his versatility and blazing speed.

While Parsons looks to already be the leader of the Cowboys linebacking corps, former safety Keanu Neal may be pressing veterans Leighton Vander Each and Jaylon Smith earlier and harder than some anticipated.

Yes, football is back in Frisco. Fans wanting to get a glimpse of the team for themselves have three more chances to attend open practice: this Friday (August 20th) at 10:15 a.m., next Friday (August 27th) at 11:15 a.m., and next Saturday (August 28th) at 10:15 a.m. All practice sessions are on local Dallas time, and all feature free admission.

[listicle id=675464]

[listicle id=672911]

[listicle id=675644]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Stephen Jones admits Cowboys mistake, should’ve ‘Signed Dak the first time around’

The team’s executive VP recalls his best and worst Cowboys moments, his biggest accomplishment, and the thing he’d do differently. | From @ToddBrock24f7

There have been “euphoric” moments, like the team’s landslide 52-17 win in Super Bowl XXVII. There have been crushingly low moments, like the 1994 NFC Championship loss to San Francisco despite having what was widely considered “the best team.” There have been draft pick busts, lost-cause seasons, players who slipped away, and personnel moves that tanked.

But ask Stephen Jones about his top regret in his time as executive vice president of the Dallas Cowboys, and the 57-year-old doesn’t need long to come up with an answer.

“Probably would have signed Dak the first time around,” he said with a big laugh, “and it would have been better for everybody.”

Jones sat down for a wide-ranging interview with KXAS-TV recently, and while Jerry’s oldest son touched on the larger-than-life Cowboys greats he’s been fortunate enough to be around, like former quarterbacks Troy Aikman and Tony Romo, most of the conversation revolved around things like legacy and family.

Jones called the construction of AT&T Stadium and the creation of The Star in Frisco as the team’s headquarters, for instance, the front-office decision he’s most proud of, as both sites have set the bar for other teams’ facilities across the sports world.

Those projects came well after the Jones family had turned around the once-struggling franchise, taking the Cowboys from basement-dwelling laughing stock to the most valuable franchise in sport and one of the most recognizable brands on the planet.

Jones was a novice regarding the business of football when his father bought the team in 1989. He credits much of his on-the-job learning to Cowboys personalities like longtime scouting director Larry Lacewell, as well as coaches that included Jimmy Johnson, Barry Switzer, Bill Parcells, and Jason Garrett.

Interestingly, Jones also believes the introduction of the salary cap in 1994- in the middle of the team’s dynasty run- helped him, at 30, earn a reputation as one of the league’s financial masterminds.

“It was a new system, and so no one knew it,” Jones told the affiliate’s Pat Doney. “[Former Giants GM] George Young didn’t know it, [former Bills, Panthers, and Colts GM] Bill Polian didn’t know it, and of course, it’s a lot easier to learn something when you’re young.”

But the man for whom Super Bowl wins became a family business says his best football memories of all are the ones he shared with his own son. As quarterback, John Stephen led his high school squad to back-to-back Texas state titles in 2016 and 2017, with both victories coming in the Cowboys’ home stadium.

“I’ll say it and Jerry will actually say it, and I think he means it, too,” Jones admitted. “I enjoyed that more than our three Super Bowls that we won. It was just amazing to see that go on and happen right before our eyes. Enjoyed every minute of it.”

Those high school championships are no doubt wonderful for the Jones family, but the Cowboys’ global fanbase would overwhelmingly prefer to add another Lombardi Trophy (or two or three) to that spiffy display case at The Star.

[listicle id=673137]

[listicle id=672901]

[listicle id=673461]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Report: Cowboys owner Jerry Jones to bid on hosting NFL combine

The league has announced that it will accept bids to host the annual event, which has been held in Indianapolis since 1987.

Since 1987, Indianapolis has been the home of the NFL Scouting Combine, which has become a spectacle in its own right as football fans across the nation get a one-stop-shop look at all the college prospects hoping to turn pro. Sensing an opportunity to elevate the five-day “Underwear Olympics” into a traveling event on par with the NFL Draft or Super Bowl, the league is taking the show on the road.

And nobody loves putting on a show more than Jerry Jones.

The Cowboys owner will reportedly bid on hosting the combine at the team’s facilities in 2023, according to sources of the Dallas Morning News‘s Calvin Watkins. The league informed teams on Wednesday that the annual combine would accept bids to move the combine after next year.

“The League, in concert with the Combine Executive Committee, is considering ways to grow the Combine as a tentpole event, while at the same time enhancing the prospect experience and partnership,” the memo read in part, per NFL.com.

Sweetening the deal in Dallas’s favor is the Cowboys’ ability to host major events at both the cavernous AT&T Stadium, where the team plays its games, and The Star in Frisco, the 91-acre headquarters that boasts multiple practice fields for drills, a 12,500-seat indoor arena, an on-site hotel, and medical facilities within a sprawling entertainment district.

Jones has said openly that he had The Star complex constructed with an event like the combine in mind. If paired with the stadium 37 miles away, though, there would be logistical details to work out for teams and players, to be sure.

AT&T Stadium hosted the Super Bowl in 2011 and the NFL draft in 2018.

A Dallas combine would be very different from the annual event that has evolved within the Indiana capital, as media members have long since developed a very specific routine there, right down to which tables at St. Elmo Steak House- two blocks from Lucas Oil Stadium- are best for rubbing elbows with team staffers and agents in hopes of an after-hours scoop.

Indianapolis is expected to bid to keep the event, as it brings a huge financial windfall to the city each February. Other cities like Los Angeles and Las Vegas- both with new facilities- are also thought to be interested.

The Cowboys have facilities on par with or superior to any team in the league, and if the league is determined to make the combine a true “tentpole” event, one has to imagine that fans could be invited to purchase tickets to attend at least some portion of it.

A non-stop media circus, the undivided attention of every NFL team’s fanbase, butts in seats, and credit cards at the ready: a Cowboys combine would be the most Jerry Jones thing ever.

[vertical-gallery id=670875]

[listicle id=672466]

[listicle id=672383]

[lawrence-newsletter]

NFLPA tells players to stay away from team facilities over COVID concerns

The players union is recommending a second straight virtual offseason; the Cowboys have had 25 players work out in-person already.

With the number of Americans who have been fully or partially vaccinated against COVID-19 growing daily, it may seem like things are getting back to normal everywhere. But the NFL’s approximately 2,000 players are bracing for yet another virtual offseason over coronavirus concerns.

On Tuesday, the players’ union recommended to players on all 32 teams that they not attend their clubs’ voluntary workouts, scheduled for most to begin on Monday.

As reported by NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, the memo sent by NFLPA executive director DeMaurice Smith and union president JC Tretter paints a picture of league facilities that are actually worse off than they were at this time last year, when skyrocketing virus numbers effectively shut down a large portion of American businesses across all sectors and forced citizens into quarantined lockdowns.

The letter reads, in part:

“As we have made clear throughout bargaining, the COVID status in the country is as perilous as it was at this point last year; a number of players recently tested positive at team facilities; COVID weekly positive rates are as high, if not higher than, at this point last offseason; and NFL players who contracted COVID last season can become infected again.”

Most ominously, the letter goes on to argue that a second straight virtual offseason program “gives us the best chance to completing a full NFL season in 2021.”

Pelissero reported earlier that the Denver Broncos had become the first team to announce that they would boycott their team’s in-person voluntary workouts. The Seattle Seahawks followed suit, as did the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

But the Cowboys actually lead the league in in-person workouts at the facility thus far this offseason, with 25 players having made an appearance at The Star in Frisco, as per a Pelissero source.

 

Quarterback Dak Prescott famously installed a practice field at his house last offseason; several of his Cowboys teammates made appearances and took part in passing drills at the backyard gridiron with The Star off-limits.

Despite precautions, running back Ezekiel Elliott was diagnosed with COVID-19 last June. Backup quarterback Andy Dalton missed time during the season with COVID complications as he recovered from a concussion. Defensive tackle Walter Palmore tested positive during the season, as did a third player as recently as January 1.

News of the union’s recommendation that players stay away from their team facilities comes on the same day that the league informed clubs that Tier 1 and 2 employees “should be expected to be vaccinated unless they have a bona fide medical or religious ground for not doing so.” No vaccine, no admittance to “football only” restricted areas of team facilities and no working in close proximity with players.

That mandate specifically excludes the players themselves, but it drives home the heightened state of watchfulness that the league is operating under just days before offseason programs are set to begin.

The league has already announced expectations that there would be fans in the stands in 2021, but for the second year in a row, there is suddenly some question- at least among the leaders of the players union- as to whether there will be teams on the field.

[vertical-gallery id=665911]

[listicle id=668182]

[listicle id=668143]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Lil’ Yachty: NFL allows team war rooms for 2021 draft, what will Jerry do?

The NFL informed teams that their regular facilities can be used for the 2021 draft, with certain safety precautions to be enforced.

Last year’s NFL draft was arguably the first big event-with-a-capital-E that demonstrated just how unusual life in a pandemic was going to be. Football fans got an unprecedented look inside the real at-home lives of their teams’ coaches and general managers as cameras broadcast them making their picks live- and self-quarantined, when that was still a new term- from their basements, rec rooms, home offices, living room sofas, kitchen tables… and, in the case of Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, aboard his 357-foot superyacht.

One year later, the 2021 draft will help showcase how things in the world are gradually returning to normal.

NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero is reporting that the league has informed clubs that they will be allowed to draft from their regular war rooms in their team facilities and with in-person support staff.

Pelissero points out that coaches and GMs will have the alternative option of once again drafting from home or even a neutral-site location. Each team’s plan must be submitted to the league by March 26, however, for approval from Dr. Allen Sills, the NFL’s chief medical officer.

TV cameras will be installed wherever each team’s brain trust will be, but it is assumed that most will choose to utilize their regular facilities.

Last April, Jones famously conducted the Cowboys’ 2020 draft from the luxurious Bravo Eugenia. After a universally-lauded haul that netted the club CeeDee Lamb and several other highly-rated prospects who somehow fell to Dallas, Jones joked then that he may make the floating war room a new Cowboys tradition.

It’s hard to imagine Jones and his draft team not actually assembling at The Star in Frisco to make this year’s picks, no matter how swimmingly last year’s draft at sea went.

Those gathered in the Cowboys draft room next month will have to abide by several rules and precautions that are carrying over from the pandemic, even with growing numbers of individuals having been vaccinated against COVID-19. No eating or drinking will be allowed in the draft rooms, for example. Proper distancing and mask-wearing will be mandatory.

The draft will be held April 29 through May 1. The live in-person event, hosted this year by the city of Cleveland, will move ahead as planned, with appropriate safety protocols in place there as well.

[listicle id=665843]

[listicle id=665898]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Prescott on Cowboys’ COVID bubble: ‘Healthiest team wins’

Dak Prescott and ‘most’ of the Cowboys players are holed up in the hotel attached to their team headquarters as 2020 training camp begins.

The COVID-19 era will undoubtedly leave its mark on the 2020 NFL season, in whatever form it ends up taking. From the mechanics of how players and coaches interact with one another to fans’ attendance at games to the various pieces of equipment that have instantly become a standard part of present-day football gear, the game will change as a result of the pandemic.

But it’s the less obvious things, too. The unexpected ways the virus will force teams to alter their tendencies, their gameplans, their strategies, their very philosophies. Football has always been about the Xs and Os. But in 2020, it could come down to one simple tenet: The healthiest team wins.

Those were the words of Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott as he spoke to media members via videoconference on Wednesday. But he wasn’t speaking about the normal on-the-field injuries that typically turn a football season into a war of attrition decided by twisted knees, sprained ankles, and gimpy hamstrings. He was talking about the global pandemic that has claimed 166,000 lives in the US, has altered even the most basic routines of the majority of Americans, has forced millions to shelter in place at home… and inspired a sizable contingent of the Cowboys players to voluntarily sequester themselves in the hotel attached to their team headquarters.

“I’m already there,” Prescott said of The Omni Frisco Hotel, located at The Star. “For me, it’s about trying to stay as safe as I can, as healthy as I can. Without knowing the true future of where this season’s going to go, I think it’s important for us as players to try to create the biggest bubble- or the smallest bubble, I guess you can say- that we can amongst players, because as long as this season gets to play out, I think part of it is: The healthiest team wins. So that’s something we’ve come together as leaders and taken on this option to stay in this hotel. So we can try and stay healthy, we can all be there for each other, we can set an example for the young guys about avoiding downtown, or about avoiding other people and where people can go. Because what’s important right now is this football team, this season, and not only our health, but the health of our families, so I think this is the best way that we can make sure that that happens.”

While the exact number of Dallas players living at the hotel is unknown, Prescott estimated it to be “most of” the roster. The arrangement, paid for by the team, will dramatically limit those players’ exposure to people and places in their normal daily lives, hopefully reducing their risk- and the collective risk of the team as a whole- of contracting the virus.

“Once again, I can’t be mad at the guys for their personal reasons, or their family matters, that they may not want to come into the bubble or come into the hotel. But I know and trust they’re being grown men and doing the things they need to do and the things necessary to keep their health safe and to not put themselves in jeopardy of getting this deal and coming in here and giving it to anybody else.”

 

The hotel is becoming quite the home away from home for Cowboys personnel this year. Mike McCarthy also took up residence at The Omni for a time after his hiring in January as the team’s new coach. In the early days of his Dallas tenure, as he began the work of assembling a new staff, living at the hotel made the daily commute to his new office as quick and simple as an elevator ride.

McCarthy voiced approval of the players’ self-imposed bubble on Wednesday, acknowledging that it’s a luxury some other teams don’t have, and one that will benefit more than just his guys.

“Being connected to the Omni, it’s frankly just natural that we do the best that we can to create an environment to keep our players safe. Plus with the education and keeping up with the current protocols and as we continue to go through this challenge of battling COVID, that there are updates and upgrades. It’s only going to make us safer as a football team and, frankly, it’s only going to make us safer in a personal realm of educating our families and bringing the same focus and education into our own homes. Just very fortunate for the setup that we do have here. So we’re really looking at trying to create an Oxnard-type environment here at The Star. I think we’ve knocked it out of the park, and our players have totally bought into it and they’re excited about it. We’re off to an excellent start as far as handling this challenge.”

As for Prescott, he says his hotel accommodations won’t put much of a crimp in his day-to-day life.

“I’m not much of a going-out guy anyway,” the 27-year-old admitted, “so it’s been pretty easy for me, for the most part.”

For most of the Cowboys bunking in at The Omni, living next to a practice field might be a unique experience. For Prescott, though, it’s just a change of scenery. The quarterback, who’s bringing down $31.4 million this season under the franchise tag, had a full-size football field installed at his home recently.

“Obviously once COVID came around, it was tough to find a place to throw. It was very tough. I’ve always dreamed about having a football field in my backyard, so that was something that I kind of put the foot down and said, ‘Hey, let’s get it going. It can give me somewhere every offseason.’ You can’t plan for things like this, but when things like this come around, I’ll just be able to have it, and it’s obviously private access, and we can get the work we need. That was kind of the thought in creating that field in my backyard, and it’s been very beneficial. Just having the guys out there, being able to throw, being able to get a lot of work, and we’re going to hit camp running because we’ve been working for a good amount of time now.”

 

Cowboys wide receiver Amari Cooper confirmed to ESPN’s Todd Archer that he and several other receivers, tight ends, and running backs have worked out “consistently” with Prescott over the offseason, often on the quarterback’s backyard field.

Prescott, clearly, is all in on the 2020 season and will command one of the most promising offenses the team has featured in years.

Still, COVID-19 has made for uncertain times and unexpected changes of plans. The Mississippi State product was asked during Wednesday’s press conference if he considered opting out of the 2020 season, as over sixty other NFL players chose to do proactively out of concern over the virus.

“Never crossed my mind,” Prescott shot back. “Football has always been my safe haven. It’s always been a place for me to find peace. Especially with everything that’s happened in my life personally, especially in the place that this world is in, I think that football’s a safe heaven and it’s peace for a lot of people. It never crossed my mind to opt out and to not be here with the guys and to not be where I love to be doing what I’ve been blessed to do. Obviously, there are some concerns. But for me, it’s just about being as safe as I can, following the guidelines that the team and NFL have laid out for us to not put yourself in jeopardy of contracting this COVID thing.”

For those who have chosen to play on, the voluntary bubble at the team’s own facility presents the safest way to keep playing and preparing for an upcoming season. And should the quarantine prove effective at keeping the Cowboys healthy through training camp, Prescott is keeping the door open on possibly extending his stay into the regular season if the virus’s spread dictates.

“Right now, we’ve kind of talked about it as players more just for the camp, but who knows? As we go into this season, obviously, hopefully, doctors and people can still give us more updates of what’s going on in COVID and going on around not only our area, our community, our state, but this country. Right now, we’re just going to take it for the camp, but it may continue to go on. As I said, I think that the healthiest team has one of the best shots to win this so we’re going to do the best that we can to put ourselves in that small group.”

[vertical-gallery id=652312][vertical-gallery id=652002]

[vertical-gallery id=650773]

[vertical-gallery id=650630]

[lawrence-newsletter]

2020 Cowboys Training Camp: The nuts, bolts, Plexiglas dividers, contact tracers of it all

The Cowboys have made sweeping changes to their daily procedures and their sprawling facilities in order to host training camp in 2020.

Training camp will look very unusual for the 2020 Dallas Cowboys. From the Plexiglas dividers in the palatial locker room to the tarped-off seats in the team’s temporary meeting hall, from the mandatory monitoring checkpoints to the ultraviolet lightboxes for sanitizing phones and jewelry, right down to the proximity trackers the players will be wearing on their wrists.

All of those very out-in-the-open COVID-era add-ons will make for a surreal camp unlike any other. But there will be plenty of other behind-the-scenes changes, too, all implemented in hopes that the upcoming season can be salvaged amidst a global pandemic that has claimed 160,000 lives in the United States alone. Training camp will go on, but it sure won’t be business as usual.

Perhaps the most noticeable difference on Day One of Cowboys camp, though, will be the mercury. It’s not the heat, the old saying goes, it’s the humidity. For Friday, the first scheduled day in shells, Cowboys players and coaches will get a Texas-sized helping of both.

Temperatures are forecast to hit 101 degrees in north Texas on Friday, but it will feel like 106. By way of comparison, it will max out at a lovely 83 in Oxnard, California, where the Cowboys typically set up shop in August.

For his first camp as Cowboys coach, Mike McCarthy plans to subject players to the elements as much possible, using the natural-grass practice field at The Star in Frisco.

“My personal goal is to be on the grass,” he said during last week’s conference call with reporters. “That’s just personal preference.”

That preference is understandable, given McCarthy’s camp history. The grass at St. Norbert College, site of McCarthy’s 13 training camps as coach of the Packers, will be chilling (relatively) in 81-degree temps in Wisconsin on Friday.

“But really, the weather and those types of things will factor into it,” McCarthy continued. “We’re prepared to go outside every morning. That’s the plan. But I’m sure there will be days or a day or two that we may come inside the Ford Center. It’s very beneficial to have that flexibility, but my goal is to be on the grass as much as we can to start camp.”

Besides, McCarthy didn’t add, the Ford Center is being repurposed as the team’s meeting room.

The 12,000-seat indoor stadium and practice field is holding considerably fewer occupants after its recent alterations. Seats- and even entire rows- have been blocked off to keep players safely spread out during coaches’ presentations and sit-down sessions. The gorgeous movie theater normally used for such meetings simply doesn’t allow for social distancing.

For smaller breakout groups, the team can split and scatter.

“When the team breaks into units,” writes The Dallas Morning News‘s David Moore, “the defense goes to the northwest concourse to meet, and the offense takes the southwest corner near Tostitos Plaza.”

Meeting areas in stairwells and hallways. A thinned-out weight room. Reduced seating in the dining hall. Many areas of The Star have had to undergo a COVID-era redecorating. It’s awfully nice to have a 91-acre campus to work with.

The sprawling size of the team’s headquarters actually gives Dallas multiple options on how to reconfigure things, a luxury that few other organizations have. Take, for example, the clear Plexiglas dividers between the lockers.

“The Cowboys have more locker room space than most clubs,” Moore points out. “The main locker room houses 78 players. There’s a back room, normally reserved for rookies in camp, that has an additional 27 lockers. There are another two rooms with a total of 100 lockers at the adjacent Ford Center for high school football. There are at least two other auxiliary rooms that can be used for additional lockers or to store and sanitize equipment between practices.”

According to Moore, “the team could have set aside two empty lockers between every occupied space and made it work.”

Locker partitions means the chess board Amari Cooper leaves up for his matches with Chidobe Awuzie will stay put away for this season. In fact, should any two players get too close to one another, their contact trackers will issue a warning.

“A flashing red light comes on if you get too close,” rookie center Tyler Biadasz said.

The Kinexon trackers, picked up by the players each morning to be worn either on the wrist or attached to a belt loop, monitor players’ movements as they move throughout the facility. They’re set to go off if two of them are within six feet for more than a few seconds. The devices are left at The Star overnight, to be charged and sanitized in preparation for the next day.

In fact, many of the efforts meant to maximize players’ safety happen away from the team’s view. Two different vendors do a daily deep clean of the building. The entire HVAC system has been outfitted with air purification and ionization filters. Special washing machines even treat the laundry generated by the team- 700 pounds per day- so that the jerseys and towels themselves continuously kill germs and prevent their own re-contamination.

Players, coaches, and staff have their own high-tech routine each day. To gain access to the facility, every individual must go through a touchless scanner. Facial recognition programs not only verify the person’s identity, but also take their temperature.

And the actual COVID testing is a completely separate process. Thermal scans. Nasal swabs. A litany of screening questions to be answered. Want the antibody test? There’s a blood draw required for that.

But there’s only so much the next-gen precautions and extra protocols can do. It’s still football, a sport that requires a lot of close-up physical contact of large groups. And not every safety measure available is being adopted quite so readily.

At least one equipment manufacturer is testing a shield that would be worn inside the facemask, meant to block respiratory droplets expelled into the air. It has not met with wide acceptance; Cowboys linebacker Leighton Vander Esch is one of the skeptics.

“I need to breathe when I’m playing,” Vander Esch said, per Calvin Watkins of The Dallas Morning News. “And it’s one thing to have an eye shield on, but to have that other part on your helmet, some guys can wear it … but I’m probably not going to do it. We’re sweating, we’re hitting, and doing all that. I don’t think we’re going to get around it just by wearing a little shield on our chin.”

For now, Vander Esch and the rest of his teammates are already jumping through a considerable number of new hoops just to get ready to play football in 2020.

[vertical-gallery id=652002]

[vertical-gallery id=650773]

[vertical-gallery id=646270]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Report: Despite concerns, DeMarcus Lawrence shows up for Cowboys camp on time

The two-time Pro Bowler had voiced concerns about exposing himself and his pregnant wife to the coronavirus, but reported to camp Tuesday.

The Tank has reportedly rolled into Frisco.

According to sources cited by ESPN’s Ed Werder, Cowboys defensive end DeMarcus Lawrence joined other team veterans in reporting to the start of training camp on Tuesday. Lawrence’s arrival follows a week of soul-searching for the superstar edge rusher, as he wrestled with whether to stay away from the team due to concerns over COVID-19.

Lawrence’s wife Sasha is pregnant and expecting a child in October, the couple’s second. Just last week, the two-time Pro Bowler made it clear: he wants to play in 2020, but the health of his family would ultimately be the deciding factor.

“Shoot, I love to ride with my brothers and play the game,” he told ESPN on July 19. “When I have to take that away from myself, it’s hard and I don’t want to make a decision like that. But I also have to make sure I’m taking care of my family. Family is number one. After the game of football is done, that’s the only thing I have to depend on, so I’ve got to take care of them.”

That same day, Lawrence echoed concerns shared on social media by Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson regarding the league’s coronavirus protocols- or lack thereof- and his own wife’s pregnancy.

The Cowboys were informed on Monday that their Infectious Disease Emergency Response (IDER) plan had been approved by the NFL Players Association, allowing training camp to open on time.

Lawrence and the team’s other veterans reported to the club’s facility at The Star in Frisco on Tuesday for the first of three COVID-19 tests. They are required to pass all three before they will be allowed to enter the facility.

Cowboys cornerback Maurice Canady and wide receiver Stephen Guidry have already elected to opt out of the upcoming season. According to Werder, all players have until August 3 to choose follow suit.

[vertical-gallery id=650773]

[vertical-gallery id=651057]

[vertical-gallery id=650836]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Cowboys, NFL teams must divide personnel into tiers for COVID access

ESPN reports that a league memo directs team facilities to be closely regulated, with only some team personnel allowed in certain areas.

As society gradually re-opens during the COVID-19 pandemic despite soaring infection and positive rates in many states, new rules have been imposed at most places of business in order to limit interpersonal contact, minimize high numbers of people in confined spaces, and restrict individuals from being in places deemed unnecessary to them. One-way aisles at the grocery store, rolling headcounts, additional ID checks, and designated zones for certain people or activities have become the new normal.

With the NFL continuing to move toward an on-time start to the 2020 season, look for many similar procedures to be put into place at the 32 team facilities across the league, including The Star in Frisco, home of the Cowboys.

According to a memo sent to all teams and obtained by ESPN, the league is mandating each club develop its own response plan- complete with detailed protocols and personnel “tiers” that will dictate who can go where in places that include the locker room, training room, sidelines, and practice fields. Even for team employees, there are apparently no all-access passes inside the facility.

“Teams must assign tiers to all their employees, who wear a tiered photograph credential to spell out their access,” reports NFL insider Adam Schefter. “NFL teams must designate their Tier 1, Tier 2 and Tier 3 employees and turn the plans into the league office seven days before the first mandatory reporting date for players for the 2020 NFL season.”

That exact reporting date remains unknown, but Schefter notes that 26 teams are scheduled to begin their training camps on July 28.

As per ESPN’s summary of the memo:

“Tier 1 will consist of players, coaches, trainers, physicians and necessary personnel who must have direct access to the players.

“Tier 2 will consist of general managers, football operations employees, other assistant coaches, video personnel, security and other essential personnel who may need to be in close proximity to the players and other Tier 1 individuals who may need to access restricted areas. Only individuals assigned to Tiers 1 and 2 will be permitted access to restricted areas, and there will be limits on the number of individuals from each team that can be assigned Tier 1 and Tier 2 access at any given time.

“Tier 3 will consist of certain operational personnel, in-house media and broadcast personnel, field manager, transportation providers and individuals who perform essential facility, stadium or event services but do not require close contact with Tier 1 individuals. Team and other personnel who work exclusively in areas of team facilities that are or will be completely cordoned off from the rest of the facility do not need to be credentialed in one of the three access tiers.”

Schefter, citing sources, explains that “there already have been heated discussions within teams as to who ends up in which tier as the teams’ personnel try to cement their positions in the protocol.”

This latest tier system is the latest step in players and support staffs returning to their facilities, as coaches have already been allowed back in the buildings. Guidelines for social distancing, cleaning, and the use of personal masks have already been spelled out for teams.

The ESPN report points out that each team’s Infectious Disease Emergency Response (IDER) “will be subject to review and approval by the NFL, NFLPA, and the Infection Control for Sports, formerly known as the Duke Infection Control Outreach Network.” Also, the network states, “The NFL and NFLPA say they may perform surprise inspections of sites to ensure compliance with the protocols.”

Of course, the creation of 32 IDER plans may be little more than a massive exercise in futility, as many health professionals continue to cast serious doubt on the likelihood (and certainly the wisdom) of even having a football season.

The NFLPA’s medical director has already advised that players refrain from gathering for private workouts with teammates or voluntary joint practices before the start of training camp.

Even some players are now publicly expressing skepticism about the NFL’s optimistic timeline.

“I think everybody’s nervous, because the norm is that we just go to work,” Devin McCourty of the New England Patriots told ESPN’s Mike Reiss. “We put in a lot of work, we bond together, we lift, we’re in close quarters. It feels like that’s all being taken away from us, so I don’t know how to react. I don’t know what’s it’s going to be.”

“When you think about the future, if it’s hard for 10 guys just to get together to do little passing drills or anything of that nature, to think about somewhere between 53 and 90 guys in a training camp, it’s going to be insane. So I don’t know how that’s going to turn out,” his brother (and teammate) Jason McCourty added.

Pittsburgh Steelers defensive end Cam Heyward feels that the first game of the 2020 preseason, set to be played August 6 between the Steelers and Cowboys, is a bad idea.

“It’s just my point of view,” Heyward told the Tribune-Review. “But I think the Hall of Fame Game is probably out. We talk so much about safety. Why would we want to expose two teams to an extra game a week early?”

On June 15, it was revealed that Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott has tested positive for the coronavirus, along with at least one other Dallas player.

[vertical-gallery id=649076]

[vertical-gallery id=646597]

[vertical-gallery id=646270]

[lawrence-newsletter]