Brandt: Five prospects that would fit as developmental QB for Cowboys

Alexander

What's it going to be then, eh?
Messages
62,482
Reaction score
67,294
Five prospects that would fit as developmental QB for Cowboys

By Gil Brandt
NFL Media senior analyst
Published: March 2, 2016 at 05:44 p.m.
Updated: March 2, 2016 at 06:11 p.m.

I feel Jerry Jones' pain. Okay, maybe not his pain but I can empathize with him as he contemplates the end of the Tony Romo era in Dallas and prepares for the future.

It's not a perfect comparison, but when I was with the Cowboys, we used to take a quarterback in the draft almost every year. We always felt that we could never have enough of them on the team.

We would take fliers on guys who had a big negative that kept other teams from rating them high on their draft boards. Like with Roger Staubach, we took him in the 10th round knowing we might have to wait for his four-year Naval commitment to expire. Even with Don Meredith playing for us in his prime and Roger waiting in the wings, that didn't stop us from taking Craig Morton with the fifth overall pick in 1964.

We had an inkling Don wasn't in it for the long haul; that's why we used our first-round pick on Morton. As it turned out, Meredith wasn't in it for the long haul; he retired at age 31 after taking a lot of abuse from defenders on the field and fans off of it for not being able to get the Cowboys over the hump and win a league title. In 1969, the reins were handed over to Morton, who had mostly sat behind Meredith for his first four NFL seasons.

In a lot of ways, Jones is in a similar situation today. He's been telling people recently that he sees Romo being his starter for "the next four to five years," and he'd like to find a quarterback who can play the Aaron Rodgers to Romo's Brett Favre. In other words, one who can sit and get a "Harvard degree" by learning behind Romo for several years.

Jerry told me recently that he will unequivocally not take a quarterback at No. 4, where the Cowboys draft this year. I believe him. It makes sense if you think Romo will make a full recovery from offseason surgery, will be your starter for at least three more years, and your team has a window of opportunity that will remain open by filling more glaring needs with the top pick in the draft.

It's not only a smart move, but I believe it's the only move, as tempting as it might be if a player like Carson Wentz is still on the board when the Cowboys pick. If I were Jerry, I'd wait on my quarterback in the later rounds, develop him, and let him learn from Romo. It's a luxury Dallas can afford. And if there's concern that the player you're developing will leave in free agency after his rookie deal runs out before seeing meaningful time on the field, well, I'm pretty sure Jerry can afford that, too.

If that is in fact the Cowboys' plan, there are several quarterbacks in this draft they should consider. Here are five I like who have a wart or two that I believe are all remediable with time and the right development:

Dak Prescott, Mississippi State: Prescott has good size and a lot of talent, and he showed off his athleticism at the combine. He's coming from a system -- a Tebow-like offense -- that will require some re-tooling of him as a player. He can be had in the third round.
http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap30...hat-would-fit-as-developmental-qb-for-cowboys
Jeff Driskel, Louisiana Tech: I'd take a stab at this guy. He was the No. 1 recruit in the country coming out of high school but injuries derailed him at Florida and he finished up at Louisiana Tech. He looked pretty good at the combine. For a big guy (6-foot-4, 234 pounds) he runs extremely well; he had the top speed of all the quarterbacks who ran at the combine (4.56-second 40). He has a pretty good arm and mobility. He has a chance to slip into the middle rounds (5-6) of Day 3 of the draft.
 

CCBoy

Well-Known Member
Messages
47,030
Reaction score
22,617
Jerry has done everything but come out and say he isn't taking a QB at 4. How is this not clearly evident to everyone?

But that all depends upon who's storyline is saying what...stirring the pot or not. Jerry at the origin for all of them. :)
 

NoLuv4Jerry

Well-Known Member
Messages
7,698
Reaction score
4,911
If this means they don't want Jason and the staffs inability to develop a QB wasted on the #4 overall pick....I am ok with this. Because this means this is a make or break year for Jason.
 

ABQCOWBOY

Regular Joe....
Messages
58,929
Reaction score
27,716
Five prospects that would fit as developmental QB for Cowboys

By Gil Brandt
NFL Media senior analyst
Published: March 2, 2016 at 05:44 p.m.
Updated: March 2, 2016 at 06:11 p.m.

I feel Jerry Jones' pain. Okay, maybe not his pain but I can empathize with him as he contemplates the end of the Tony Romo era in Dallas and prepares for the future.

It's not a perfect comparison, but when I was with the Cowboys, we used to take a quarterback in the draft almost every year. We always felt that we could never have enough of them on the team.

We would take fliers on guys who had a big negative that kept other teams from rating them high on their draft boards. Like with Roger Staubach, we took him in the 10th round knowing we might have to wait for his four-year Naval commitment to expire. Even with Don Meredith playing for us in his prime and Roger waiting in the wings, that didn't stop us from taking Craig Morton with the fifth overall pick in 1964.

We had an inkling Don wasn't in it for the long haul; that's why we used our first-round pick on Morton. As it turned out, Meredith wasn't in it for the long haul; he retired at age 31 after taking a lot of abuse from defenders on the field and fans off of it for not being able to get the Cowboys over the hump and win a league title. In 1969, the reins were handed over to Morton, who had mostly sat behind Meredith for his first four NFL seasons.

In a lot of ways, Jones is in a similar situation today. He's been telling people recently that he sees Romo being his starter for "the next four to five years," and he'd like to find a quarterback who can play the Aaron Rodgers to Romo's Brett Favre. In other words, one who can sit and get a "Harvard degree" by learning behind Romo for several years.

Jerry told me recently that he will unequivocally not take a quarterback at No. 4, where the Cowboys draft this year. I believe him. It makes sense if you think Romo will make a full recovery from offseason surgery, will be your starter for at least three more years, and your team has a window of opportunity that will remain open by filling more glaring needs with the top pick in the draft.

It's not only a smart move, but I believe it's the only move, as tempting as it might be if a player like Carson Wentz is still on the board when the Cowboys pick. If I were Jerry, I'd wait on my quarterback in the later rounds, develop him, and let him learn from Romo. It's a luxury Dallas can afford. And if there's concern that the player you're developing will leave in free agency after his rookie deal runs out before seeing meaningful time on the field, well, I'm pretty sure Jerry can afford that, too.

If that is in fact the Cowboys' plan, there are several quarterbacks in this draft they should consider. Here are five I like who have a wart or two that I believe are all remediable with time and the right development:

Dak Prescott, Mississippi State: Prescott has good size and a lot of talent, and he showed off his athleticism at the combine. He's coming from a system -- a Tebow-like offense -- that will require some re-tooling of him as a player. He can be had in the third round.
http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap30...hat-would-fit-as-developmental-qb-for-cowboys
Jeff Driskel, Louisiana Tech: I'd take a stab at this guy. He was the No. 1 recruit in the country coming out of high school but injuries derailed him at Florida and he finished up at Louisiana Tech. He looked pretty good at the combine. For a big guy (6-foot-4, 234 pounds) he runs extremely well; he had the top speed of all the quarterbacks who ran at the combine (4.56-second 40). He has a pretty good arm and mobility. He has a chance to slip into the middle rounds (5-6) of Day 3 of the draft.

Well crap..... Either Brandt is hitching a ride on what some are saying or Jerry is listening to Brandt again...... Crap!
 

hornitosmonster

Well-Known Member
Messages
9,965
Reaction score
5,312
There are no franchise QB's in this year's draft...high bust probability on all of them
 

gimmesix

Fat, drunk and stupid is no way to go through life
Messages
40,035
Reaction score
37,194
Jerry told me recently that he will unequivocally not take a quarterback at No. 4, where the Cowboys draft this year. I believe him.

I haven't been an advocate for taking the QBs in this draft if their value is being overinflated, but I'm against the line of thinking that we won't take one no matter what with that first pick. Jerry needs to just say we'll follow our board. If it doesn't have a quarterback near the top, then don't get one, but if it does, then don't pass on the player just because. That's a poor way to approach a draft.
 

ABQCOWBOY

Regular Joe....
Messages
58,929
Reaction score
27,716
What he doesn't say is that Roger was the Heisman Trophy winner (and probably should have been the first two time winner of the awared) and would have most certainly been a very high 1st round pick had he not joined the Navy. They drafted Morton with the 5th overall pick.
 

the_h0wey

Well-Known Member
Messages
3,156
Reaction score
2,228
Because Stephen litterally came out and said they would take a franchise QB over an immediate impact player at 4

Guess we will see who is really still calling the shots on draft day. Has Jerry handed over the reins to Stephen? He was able to talk ole Jerruh out of taking Johnny Football a couple years ago. Thank God.
 

Floatyworm

The Labeled One
Messages
23,022
Reaction score
21,202
If this means they don't want Jason and the staffs inability to develop a QB wasted on the #4 overall pick....I am ok with this. Because this means this is a make or break year for Jason.

Good point.

Last thing I want is to have this staff take a quarterback @4 and then completely mess up his head because of their incompetence.
 
Top