2 former Wisconsin Badgers selected for 2020 Pro Bowl

Former Wisconsin Badgers quarterback Russell Wilson and center Travis Frederick were both named to the 2020 Pro Bowl rosters.

The 2020 Pro Bowl rosters were announced late Tuesday evening and two former Wisconsin Badgers, quarterback Russell Wilson and center Travis Frederick, were selected.

For Wilson, it is his seventh Pro Bowl appearance in the last eight years, and the nod may be coming in his strongest NFL season to date. The MVP candidate has completed 300 passes for 3,708 yards with an excellent 28-to-five touchdown-to-interception ratio.

The mega contract extension he signed with the Seahawks this offseason has more than paid off thus far, and he’ll look to get Seattle a first round bye in the team’s final two regular season games.

Frederick is making his fifth appearance in the Pro Bowl, an incredible accomplishment in his own right but even more impressive considering he’s coming off Guillain-Barre Syndrome.

He has picked up right where he left off in 2019 however, and will once again make the Pro Bowl roster alongside teammates Zack Martin and Tyron Smith.

The 2020 Pro Bowl will be played on Sunday, Jan. 26, 2020 and televised live on ESPN at noon PT from Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Fla.

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Cowboys’ Elliott, trio of his blockers named to 2020 Pro Bowl

Ezekiel Elliott was named to his third Pro Bowl on Tuesday; he’ll be joined in Orlando by a trio of teammates all making a return trip.

He may not win his third rushing title this season, but Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott will showcase his skills as one of the best in the game at this year’s Pro Bowl. And he’ll have some familiar faces clearing a path for him.

Elliott was named to the league’s all-star game on Tuesday, along with center Travis Frederick, guard Zack Martin, and tackle Tyron Smith. They will be the Dallas representives for the NFC in Orlando on January 26, provided they don’t have a bigger game to prepare for in Miami the following week.

For Elliott, it’s his third Pro Bowl selection in four seasons as a pro. Frederick makes his fifth appearance to the Pro Bowl roster, a remarkable capping achievement to his first year back from Guillain-Barre Syndrome. Martin has been named to the Pro Bowl every single year he’s been in the league; this is his sixth selection.

Smith earns his seventh trip to the all-star affair.

As the Pro Bowl draws nearer, there is a good chance that several other Cowboys will be added to the lineup as alternates, to fill in for players who are injured or otherwise unavailable.

News: Attractiveness of Cowboys potential HC opening ranked

Cowboys News and Notes for December 13 2019.

The Cowboys return home to AT&T Stadium this Sunday for a rematch with the Los Angeles Rams who sent them packing in the Divisional round of last year’s playoffs.  While the Cowboys could catch themselves looking past the Rams, focusing on the showdown with the Eagles, it’s imperative that they instead focus on chaining stringing together victories starting with this Sunday.

Can the Cowboys make a run in the postseason?  Players and coaches look to the recent postseason success of the New York Giants for inspiration, however, similarities between the two teams might not be as pronounced as thought.  While some fans may look forward to the Eagles next week, the Cowboys still have to go through the Rams and they are every bit as hungry for a victory as the Cowboys are.  Look for them to utilize Cooper Kupp and a multitude of other weapons against the Cowboys.  If the Cowboys do continue their systematic implode, look for the potential head coach opening to be as desirable as there is in the NFL.


Ranking the best and worst potential NFL head-coaching openings in 2019 :: ESPN

In less than three weeks, assuming tradition holds, there will be a slew of head coaching vacancies around the league. ESPN’s Bill Barnwell looks at the teams most likely to make a change and ranks the jobs from least desirable to most plum.

Unsurprisingly, being the Cowboys’ skipper is atop the rankings. “Arguably the most difficult job in the NFL,” it comes with an “unrealistic standard” that makes it both the “most enticing” and “least enticing opportunity” on the list, depending on your perspective.

Barnwell calls the team’s mostly-young talent the job’s most appealing strength; key-position playmakers like Dak Prescott, Ezekiel Elliott, Amari Cooper, Leighton Vander Esch, and Jaylon Smith are still entering their primes. There are contracts still to be offered that could leave Byron Jones on the outs, and there are weaknesses to be addressed- especially in the secondary and offensive line- but overall, a new coach in Dallas would inherit a wealth of skill in the locker room.

Of course, dealing with ultra-hands-on owner/general manager Jerry Jones “is both a blessing and a curse” for whoever occupies the role. “Every owner has some say in football operations, but nobody is as closely tied to their team’s decisions as Jerry,” Barnwell writes.

For evidence of how quickly things could have gone south under unchecked power at the top, look no further than the near-miss in 2014 when Jones wanted to draft Johnny Manziel and had to be talked into settling for five-time Pro Bowler Zack Martin instead. Or how Prescott fell to Dallas only because Paxton Lynch and Connor Cook- both targets of Jones- were gone.

Barnwell suggests that a young coach won’t “have the leverage to say no to Jones’s role in the puzzle,” and that the organization will likely miss out on candidates “who aren’t sufficiently impressive to keep Jerry out of the room but who are valuable enough to get an opportunity elsewhere.”

To that end, Barnwell points out, “It took Jones 14 years to go from hiring Jimmy Johnson to hiring [Bill] Parcells. It has now been 16 years since Jones hired Parcells. The timing might be right for Jones to make a superhire.”

–TB


Even with miserable season to this point Cowboys’ goals still attainable :: CowboysWire

Over the last month or so, the Cowboys look more like a team that’s picking near the top of next year’s draft than one looking to make the playoffs and go on a run.  Yet, here they are with a 6-7 record and everything they want to accomplish this season still out in front of them.  A win against the Eagles in Week 16 greatly improves the chances the Cowboys will host a playoff game in January.  As history has shown, once you’re in the dance anything can happen.  All that’s needed is a ticket.

–CM


Can the 2019 Cowboys mirror the 2007 Giants? Here’s why Jerry Jones’s dream scenario is unrealistic :: The Athletic

Cowboys fans waiting for the team to suddenly get hot in the home stretch and make a championship run may want to just skip to the next item. While owner Jerry Jones has held up the 2007 Giants, the “less-than-impressive” wild cards who ruined the Patriots’ perfect season in Super Bowl XLII, as an example, history would likely have a tough time repeating with the current Cowboys roster.

Working against Dallas in that effort? A losing record thus far in road games, a pass rush that hasn’t lived up to elite billing, and a quarterback whose play seems to be trailing off as the season progresses. Oh, and the fact that since the Giants pulled that upset twelve years ago, only two playoff teams finishing 9-7 (the best the Cowboys could do) or worse have even made it to the Super Bowl.

But may the odds be ever in Jerry’s favor.

–TB


Stars in Dallas because of Staubach & Cowboys :: The Hockey Writers

For sports history buffs, a fascinating look at how America’s Team actually played a major role in relocating an NHL franchise.

When Norman Green, owner of the Minnesota North Stars, was looking to move his struggling and underachieving hockey club out of the Twin Cities in the early 1990s, he got input from none other than Cowboys legend Roger Staubach. The two had met in the ’70s through a mutual acquaintance in real estate; in the field himself after retiring, Staubach returned the favor by advising Green on sites around Dallas that might support pro hockey.

Jerry Jones and Tom Landry also have bit parts in the story that eventually led to the Minnesota North Stars becoming the Dallas Stars. To this day, fans of the NHL’s current-day Minnesota Wild claim that their biggest rival in the league is the team that once upon a time pulled up stakes and bolted for the Lone Star State… at the suggestion of several Dallas Cowboys.

–TB


Travis Frederick again nominated for Walter Payton Man of the Year :: CowboysWire

Each year, all 32 teams submit a player they nominate for the Walter Payton Man of the Year award which is given for outstanding service in the community.  Travis Frederick was nominated for the Cowboys this season due to his contributions to both Make-A-Wish and the Salvation Army.  His Blocking out Hunger Foundation aims at reducing childhood hunger around the metroplex.

–CM


Rams Preview: Kupp remains threat despite defenses chipping away at McVay :: CowboysWire

The Rams and Cowboys both started off the season dominating the first month of play.  Then the wheels fell off on both teams the next two months, however, the Rams seem to be gelling at the right time while the Cowboys continue to implode.  The Rams certainly aren’t the offensive juggernaut they were last season, but they have more than enough weapons to give a reeling Cowboys’ defense fits, starting with Cooper Kupp.

–CM


Cowboys QB Dak Prescott goes to the tape … on his fingers :: Dallas Morning News

There were some concerns initially as Prescott showed up on the injury list with a sprained left wrist and injured index finger on his right hand.  Prescott has been taping his fingers in practice and intends to do so on Sunday against the Rams.  The coaching staff has stated that these ailments have not affected Prescott’s ability to run the offense.

–CM


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Travis Frederick again nominated for Walter Payton Man of the Year

The Dallas center will wear the special helmet decal for a second time and look to join teammate Jason Witten as a winner of the award.

The Dallas Cowboys have announced that center Travis Frederick is the team’s 2019 Walter Payton Man of the Year nominee.

Each of the 32 teams across the league selects its own Man of the Year, with each nominee put forward to win the national award, presented by Nationwide. The prestigious award honors an NFL player “for outstanding community service activities off the field, as well as excellence on the field,” according to a press release from the league Thursday morning that includes the names of all 32 current nominees.

“Every day, in cities and towns across America, NFL players give of themselves to make our communities better. This year, as we celebrate our 100th season and the 50th year of the Walter Payton NFL Man of Year Award, NFL players have continued to raise the bar on community engagement and impact,” said NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell. “The 32 nominees for this year’s award are the best of the best and truly embody the spirit of Walter and his legacy of leaving the world better than he found it.”

First established in 1970, the national award was renamed in 1999 after the late Hall of Fame Chicago Bears running back Walter Payton.

Frederick, in his seventh season out of Wisconsin, has been one of the league’s top offensive linemen for his entire career, earning four Pro Bowl appearances. He has also been extremely active on the community service front, giving his time and energy to causes like The Salvation Army and Make-a-Wish Foundation of North Texas. He is a frequent visitor to Dallas area hospitals and schools, and his Blocking Out Hunger Foundation is making a huge impact combating childhood hunger in and around the Metroplex.

A first-round draft pick in 2013, Frederick was previously named the team’s Man of the Year nominee in 2017 as well. He spent the entire 2018 season making a recovery from Guillain-Barre Syndrome and returned to the field in 2019.

Frederick and the 31 other current nominees will wear a special helmet decal beginning with this week’s games and continuing through the end of the season. Winners of the award- like Jason Witten in 2012- get a Man of the Year patch that they wear on their jersey for the duration of their playing career.

Cowboys fans can help support Frederick’s chosen cause by voting on Twitter using a special hashtag. The nominee whose hashtag is used the most between December 12 and January 12 will receive a $25,000 contribution to their charity of choice; the second- and third-place finishers get lesser donations made in their name.

The 2019 Walter Payton Man of the Year will be announced during NFL Honors, the league’s awards special that airs the night before the Super Bowl. This year’s announcement will take place on February 1 in downtown Miami.

Travis Frederick on phantom tripping call: ‘I don’t understand the rule, evidently’

The Cowboys center was as perplexed as everyone else at the two tripping penalties called against Dallas in New England in the Week 12 loss.

Listen to any interview ever done with Travis Frederick, and it’s clear he’s a pretty cerebral guy. He was a National Honor Society member in high school, even graduating early so that he could enroll in a spring football camp at Wisconsin. While in Madison, he earned a degree in engineering mechanics with an emphasis in computer engineering. For his pregame warmup, the 320-pound center runs detailed wide receiver route trees with linemate Zack Martin. Quarterback Dak Prescott has called him “a genius.” Suffice it to say, he’s a smart dude. So to suggest that Frederick doesn’t understand one of football’s fundamental rules would border on absurd.

Yet the seventh-year veteran was quick to question his own football intelligence after an unusual tripping penalty was called against him late in the fourth quarter of the Cowboys’ 13-9 loss in New England.

“I don’t understand the rule, evidently,” Frederick told reporters after the game. “I need to get a clarification on that. When I tried to get a clarification on that, the umpire was nowhere to be found.”

The flag came on a 3rd-and-1 play, negating a first-down pickup by running back Ezekiel Elliott and leaving Dallas instead in a 3rd-and-11 situation that ultimately ended with a turnover on downs.

The tripping penalty is a rarity in the NFL, generally reserved for flagrant and obvious cases of a player flailing to bring another down while being desperately out of position. This was not that.

Even a by-the-book reading of the rule doesn’t really apply. As defined by the 2019 NFL Rulebook: Rule 3, Section 40, “Tripping is the use of the leg or foot to obstruct any opponent (including a runner).” Rule 12, Section 1, Article 8 makes tripping a prohibited act.

Did Frederick lift his leg as he shifted himself around to help double-team Patriots linebacker Dont’a Hightower? Without question. Was he attempting to trip Hightower? That’s a tough case to make.

And yet, the officials did. What’s more shocking? They did it twice.

Earlier, six-time Pro Bowl tackle Tyron Smith drew a tripping flag, too. It turned a 2nd-and-13 into a 2nd-and-23, effectively stalling the Dallas drive and leading to a punt that was blocked to give New England a short field (and eventually a touchdown) in the first quarter.

It turns out it has happened twice against the same team in the same game before, and it happened against Dallas, too.

One of the most seldom-seen penalties? Called against Dallas twice in the same game? Several Cowboys were understandably skeptical.

“I know it was my first time hearing the call,” wide receiver Amari Cooper told the media in the visitors’ locker room. “And then to hear it twice in one game, it was kind of… it was just different. I’d never heard that call. I don’t even know what it is. I’m guessing it’s tripping somebody? Like, putting your foot out and tripping them?”

“I mean, that’s been all season long, so it’s no surprise,” Prescott said during his press conference in reference to iffy calls working against the team. “It’s nothing new. As I’ve said before and I’ll continue to say, I’m just going to play the play. That’s my job; I’ll let those guys do their job.”

“I see the definition of whether you’ve made a move, and got your toe down,” owner Jerry Jones told a crowd of reporters, “Whether it’s tripping or not, I don’t want to go to those two particular tripping calls, if you will. I don’t want to go to that.”

Coach Jason Garrett was blunt in his reaction to the tripping flags after the game: “I’ve never seen that before.”

Most who were watching the game seemed to concur.

Even ESPN’s NFL officiating analyst weighed in.

That the penalties came in a game against the Patriots and coach Bill Belichick- with their history of leveraging every possible advantage- made the whole episode even more curious.

That theory calls to mind last season’s Week 7 game versus Washington, in which long snapper L.P. Ladouceur was flagged for a “snap infraction” on a late field goal try. The call moved the Cowboys back five yards; kicker Brett Maher missed the subsequent attempt, and Dallas lost the game. Then-Redskins coach Jay Gruden had reportedly gone to officials prior to the game and warned them to watch Ladouceur’s movements, the exact same ritual the veteran has employed in his snaps for 15 NFL seasons. Ladouceur went through his mechanics. The Redskins jumped. The flag was thrown. The Cowboys were moved backward in a critical moment.

It worked for Washington in 2018. And it’s certainly plausible that Belichick used the same strategy this past weekend in Foxborough.

Even if officials were badgered by a coach into seeing trips that weren’t really there, Frederick took the high road afterward.

“I don’t know how, exactly, the calls come out. I don’t know how that works, and we’re frankly not allowed to talk about the referees and their calls. It’s a call that was made, and you’ve got to try to put yourself in a better situation so that something like that doesn’t make a tremendous impact on the game. You’ve got to able to try and take those type of things out of the game altogether.”

Defensive end DeMarcus Lawrence said, as a defender, he knows what tripping actually looks like.

“I get tripped up every time,” Lawrence said in postgame interviews,  “but, I mean, it’s cool. I ain’t going to sit here and cry about it. If the refs want to call [expletive], let them call the [expletive]. It’s all about what we do… Everybody knows it was no such thing, that a foot was thrown out or anybody was tripped.”

“It’s all up and down,” Lawrence concluded. “They make the rules; we just play the game.”

After one of the rarest penalties in the sport was called on Dallas twice in the same game, it sure seems like the Cowboys weren’t the only ones playing games on Sunday.

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

–TB


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

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

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

–TB


Belichick: Prescott is ‘Super Impressive’

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

— KD


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

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

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

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

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

–TB


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

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

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

–TB


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

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

–TT


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

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

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

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

–TB


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

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

–TT


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

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

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

–TB


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

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

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

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

–TB


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

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

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

–TT


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

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

–TT


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

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

–TT


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

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

–TT


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

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

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

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

–TB


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