You are biased on running ability not being top shelf. You are biased against his throwing skills. How far in consecutive years did he take the Longhorns in consecutive years...cry again on a personal reason for popularity.
No thanks at all. Football is still a learnable sport at the point of entrance and especially for the quarterback position,
You still cry about every thing born in Texas?
Quinn Ewers, QB
In a quarterback class that has a lot of question marks as a whole, Ewers is one of the most challenging prospects to figure out. On one hand, he's shown flashes of being elite in the short to intermediate game with great accuracy, touch and velocity on his passes. On the other hand, his deep ball is still inconsistent and he at times makes questionable decisions in crucial situations. He completed 50 of his 59 pass attempts with five incompletions and four drops, with his final three deep balls all being ducks. Where Ewers falls in the draft will depend on how teams view his upside, and if the Cowboys are looking to tab Ewers are their young quarterback to bring along behind Dak Prescott, he'll likely need to be selected on Day 2.
f there is a blueprint for the Cowboys replacing a Hall of Fame-caliber starting lineman, it came last offseason with the departure of Tyron Smith. The Cowboys were immediately earmarked to take a tackle in a very deep offensive line class, and did so in the first round with Tyler Guyton. The fact Guyton was not dominant from the jump speaks more to the Cowboys’ pedigree at finding plug-and-play linemen, and less about him being anything close to a bust. This is still a player with all of the tools and raw ability to be a well above average starting tackle. Penalties and consistent technique were Guyton’s biggest issues as a rookie, both things new coaches can be eager to fix right away.
Where the Cowboys have undoubtedly stepped back at tackle is with their depth, losing Chuma Edoga to the Jaguars. Bass, Richards, Thomas, and Matt Waletzko are all somewhat capable players here, but with some having the position flex to play elsewhere, it is very unclear who will even establish tackle depth for Dallas right now, and who can be trusted.
Throwing skills will be worked upon to strengthen offensive production. This would apply to Ewers as well. He can be trained as both Romo and Prescott both were. Now is a good time for his growth. Not a runner, that vision develops with time on the field.
https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/202...actions-roster-free-agents-trades-zack-martin