Ree-dik-u-liss

jday

Well-Known Member
Messages
9,321
Reaction score
13,284
So, here we are…two preseasons games deep. Everything I thought these Cowboys would be is what they have been thus far in two games but for reasons completely different than what I initially thought. Confused yet? You shouldn’t be confused at all…not if you have followed anything I’ve written since the draft. I thought Zeke was a homerun pick in the first round. I thought he would usher in an era similar to 2014 and yet despite all the encouraging signs we as Cowboys fans have seen in the first 2 preseason games, he has contributed to none of it. It’s not his fault. Understandably, the coaching staff is being careful with their fourth overall pick who reported tightness in his leg early in camp.

Despite his absence, we are seeing exactly what I expected to see as a result of him playing. But I wasn’t just hanging my hat on Zeke as the answer to a winning 2016 Cowboys. I also had high hopes for Collins and Tapper, the two rookie additions to the defensive line. I didn’t expect them to earn Pro Bowl honors in their first year; but I do expect them to contribute in a significant way in what is likely to be a rotation of up to 10 players in a given game (probably less, but a few will likely make the team in Lawrence and Gregory’s absence). Based on what I had read of Frazier and Brown, the Safety and Corner (respectively) the Cowboys drafted, I also thought they could help what many would describe as a substandard secondary. Factoring those defensive contributions with what Zeke is capable of doing on offense behind their top tier offensive line, I thought it should be easy for anyone to understand why this team as a whole is going to be really good.

The crazy thing is they have been really good without the help from any of the aforementioned rookies. Did you notice that special italicized inflection I placed on the word “aforementioned?” You did? Good. There was a reason for it. Because one rookie has contributed…in a very big and surprising and shocking and confusing and an I-need-to-reassess-the-laws-of-nature-from-the-ground-up kind of way.

Dak Prescott was not the Cowboys first choice. Let that sink in. He was no one’s first choice. Had he been, he would have been drafted before the Cowboys had a chance and truth be told, had that happened, the draft could have gone a lot differently if one of the other highly-touted QB’s had fallen to Dallas at the fourth overall pick. After all, finding an adequate backup and a future successor to Romo was one of the many stated priorities for the offseason by the front office.

Despite that, to be honest, I did not do my homework on Dak prior to the draft. I looked at QB’s only long enough to see that anyone the Cowboys would take a serious look at would likely be gone by the time the Cowboys were on the clock and so I assumed they might grab some one in the latter rounds if not a UDFA, once again gambling on Romo’s health. I expected that because a good QB (even of backup caliber) is hard to find and the Cowboys had a lot of other starting areas that needed to be addressed. So it didn’t surprise me at all when the Cowboys took Dak with a compensatory fourth round pick.

I recalled him from a previous blog conversation before the draft suggesting that snake-oil-salesman-Jerry Jones might try to take this kid and sell him to the world as the next Cam Newton…this was obviously said in jest at the time. Following the draft, I sat down with the intent of learning all I could about every pick, save Zeke whom I already knew because he was my pet cat. I read articles. I read scouting reports. I watched tape. At the time, I made a few notes. The first thing that jumped out of me was his quick release. Like Romo, once he finds a target, his wind up and release executes in nano-seconds. See for yourself…for the exception of the pseudo-Hail Mary to Butler against Miami last Friday night, from the moment he locks in on his target to the moment of football release is faster than you can say one-one-thousand.

The second thing I noticed was his ability to make plays with his feet. At first, it occurred to me we may have another Tim Tebow. Another guy who is a great leader of men and who is definitely a gamer/competitor, but he may not be a skilled enough passer to get the job done at an NFL level. But as these thoughts poured through my head, simultaneously my head processed highlight after highlight after highlight with Dak being a one-player offense. None of his former offensive line was drafted…nor were his receivers or running backs. He was the only one from that dynamic offense (the little-engine-the-could scourge of the SEC) that was drafted to the NFL…the only one. And we are starting to see why.

The third thing I noticed after watching him for a while is that he was/is not a run-first quarterback. He only ran when it was the best option and given his surroundings it was the best option often. But make no mistake, he could/can still throw the football on a rope. After a while of watching Dak become a legend in Mississippi, I dismissed any premature excitement as I instantly felt the scouts must know something I don’t; surely none of what he was doing in college would translate to the NFL. Surely!!!???

But, once again, two games in you would be hard pressed to find any difference in Dak the legend at Mississippi State and Dak now, potential back up QB for the Dallas Cowboys. The only thing that has changed is the jersey and the vehicle Dak is driving. In response to another thread about Dak I made this analogy: In Mississippi State, Dak was driving a Pinto. Here, he is driving a (enter your favorite fast and exotic vehicle here). The main point to take from this is that Dak is still doing Dak…and what Dak does is take over games, put his foot on the opposing defenses throat, and he keep’s swinging until the final whistle, lopsided scoreboard be damned. He’s a gamer. And as such he lives for competition.

I had read of his character, charisma, maturity, and leadership. These were the bottom lines of every quote of every coach at Mississippi State. And, furthermore, these are the lines we fans read on just about every prospect coming out of college, so you will have to forgive me that my eyes glazed over as I read these same tired expected lines. But once again two games in all of those qualities jump right off the screen. You can feel his command of the huddle. You can feel his troops rallying around him as their leader. You can feel his character shining through as he walks straight to Linehan and Romo for more training following another score. You did not watch either of the first two games and not see that. Admittedly though, none of these intangibles speak to his ability to be Romo’s backup.

No, his play does all the talking you could possibly want in that regard. Regardless of rather or not he is taking a snap directly from center (something that was suggested may take a while for him to grow accustomed to) or taking the snap in the shotgun (his bread & butter) it did not matter; all that mattered is that by the end of his time in Miami, he had conditioned everyone who had watched those first two games to expect something good to happen after he takes the snap. Period. No matter the play, if Dak takes the snap he is going to make something amazing look easy. And that is all he has done since taking the starting job in Mississippi.

Granted, he has had an ill-advised throw that turned into an interception against Miami. However, that same interception was called back due to a late hit on him. Despite being disappointed by his first interception thrown and first poor decision, I was intrigued to see how he would respond. Would it rattle him? Not. At. All.

It was business as usual following that pick…and while officially it never happened…in the physical realm, it was also hard to believe it had happened because he turned right around and churned out another drive that culminated in 7 points.

Now I get it…it is just preseason. Vanilla defenses. The opposition is not playing to win. The coaches are not game planning against him. These games are just for evaluation. But, be honest – if it was your job to evaluate Dak, how would you grade him? Aside from the ill-advised would-be interception, what would you attempt to fix in your own words? What is it that he has done or not done thus far that would find its way on your scorecard for Dak? Is there anything bad that you can say beyond a shadow of a doubt about how Dak has played thus far?

Now, preseason aside, there are certain skills that should remain the same regardless of the conditions. The one thing that Dak does that should translate to the regular season is his ball placement. Perhaps he has just been getting lucky, but on just about every touchdown pass he has thrown he has done so into good coverage. The ball placement has been in a place where only his receiver can make a play on the ball. For a rookie QB to throw with touch and accuracy of that caliber is unheard of…particularly a rookie who was taken in the fourth round.

What we are seeing people is history in the making. I have never seen a rookie come in, take control of a huddle and march down the field and score at will. I have never seen anything like what Dak is doing right now. And it would be amazing if he was doing all of this with his arm alone, but he is also doing it with his feet…in the NFL against NFL caliber defenses…

So, in summation, we Cowboys fans absolutely do have something to be excited about. Rather or not this level of play continues, remains to be seen…but the fact remains what he is doing now has never been done before by a rookie quarterback in the history of preseason. Sure, there have been QB prospects that have showed signs that they can be developed…many QB prospects have proven they belong in the NFL from the outset. Dak, on the other hand, is making every player on the other side of the ball question if they belong…that is uncharted territory for a rookie.
 

xwalker

Well-Known Member
Messages
57,193
Reaction score
64,699
CowboysZone ULTIMATE Fan
So, here we are…two preseasons games deep. Everything I thought these Cowboys would be is what they have been thus far in two games but for reasons completely different than what I initially thought. Confused yet? You shouldn’t be confused at all…not if you have followed anything I’ve written since the draft. I thought Zeke was a homerun pick in the first round. I thought he would usher in an era similar to 2014 and yet despite all the encouraging signs we as Cowboys fans have seen in the first 2 preseason games, he has contributed to none of it. It’s not his fault. Understandably, the coaching staff is being careful with their fourth overall pick who reported tightness in his leg early in camp.

Despite his absence, we are seeing exactly what I expected to see as a result of him playing. But I wasn’t just hanging my hat on Zeke as the answer to a winning 2016 Cowboys. I also had high hopes for Collins and Tapper, the two rookie additions to the defensive line. I didn’t expect them to earn Pro Bowl honors in their first year; but I do expect them to contribute in a significant way in what is likely to be a rotation of up to 10 players in a given game (probably less, but a few will likely make the team in Lawrence and Gregory’s absence). Based on what I had read of Frazier and Brown, the Safety and Corner (respectively) the Cowboys drafted, I also thought they could help what many would describe as a substandard secondary. Factoring those defensive contributions with what Zeke is capable of doing on offense behind their top tier offensive line, I thought it should be easy for anyone to understand why this team as a whole is going to be really good.

The crazy thing is they have been really good without the help from any of the aforementioned rookies. Did you notice that special italicized inflection I placed on the word “aforementioned?” You did? Good. There was a reason for it. Because one rookie has contributed…in a very big and surprising and shocking and confusing and an I-need-to-reassess-the-laws-of-nature-from-the-ground-up kind of way.

Dak Prescott was not the Cowboys first choice. Let that sink in. He was no one’s first choice. Had he been, he would have been drafted before the Cowboys had a chance and truth be told, had that happened, the draft could have gone a lot differently if one of the other highly-touted QB’s had fallen to Dallas at the fourth overall pick. After all, finding an adequate backup and a future successor to Romo was one of the many stated priorities for the offseason by the front office.

Despite that, to be honest, I did not do my homework on Dak prior to the draft. I looked at QB’s only long enough to see that anyone the Cowboys would take a serious look at would likely be gone by the time the Cowboys were on the clock and so I assumed they might grab some one in the latter rounds if not a UDFA, once again gambling on Romo’s health. I expected that because a good QB (even of backup caliber) is hard to find and the Cowboys had a lot of other starting areas that needed to be addressed. So it didn’t surprise me at all when the Cowboys took Dak with a compensatory fourth round pick.

I recalled him from a previous blog conversation before the draft suggesting that snake-oil-salesman-Jerry Jones might try to take this kid and sell him to the world as the next Cam Newton…this was obviously said in jest at the time. Following the draft, I sat down with the intent of learning all I could about every pick, save Zeke whom I already knew because he was my pet cat. I read articles. I read scouting reports. I watched tape. At the time, I made a few notes. The first thing that jumped out of me was his quick release. Like Romo, once he finds a target, his wind up and release executes in nano-seconds. See for yourself…for the exception of the pseudo-Hail Mary to Butler against Miami last Friday night, from the moment he locks in on his target to the moment of football release is faster than you can say one-one-thousand.

The second thing I noticed was his ability to make plays with his feet. At first, it occurred to me we may have another Tim Tebow. Another guy who is a great leader of men and who is definitely a gamer/competitor, but he may not be a skilled enough passer to get the job done at an NFL level. But as these thoughts poured through my head, simultaneously my head processed highlight after highlight after highlight with Dak being a one-player offense. None of his former offensive line was drafted…nor were his receivers or running backs. He was the only one from that dynamic offense (the little-engine-the-could scourge of the SEC) that was drafted to the NFL…the only one. And we are starting to see why.

The third thing I noticed after watching him for a while is that he was/is not a run-first quarterback. He only ran when it was the best option and given his surroundings it was the best option often. But make no mistake, he could/can still throw the football on a rope. After a while of watching Dak become a legend in Mississippi, I dismissed any premature excitement as I instantly felt the scouts must know something I don’t; surely none of what he was doing in college would translate to the NFL. Surely!!!???

But, once again, two games in you would be hard pressed to find any difference in Dak the legend at Mississippi State and Dak now, potential back up QB for the Dallas Cowboys. The only thing that has changed is the jersey and the vehicle Dak is driving. In response to another thread about Dak I made this analogy: In Mississippi State, Dak was driving a Pinto. Here, he is driving a (enter your favorite fast and exotic vehicle here). The main point to take from this is that Dak is still doing Dak…and what Dak does is take over games, put his foot on the opposing defenses throat, and he keep’s swinging until the final whistle, lopsided scoreboard be damned. He’s a gamer. And as such he lives for competition.

I had read of his character, charisma, maturity, and leadership. These were the bottom lines of every quote of every coach at Mississippi State. And, furthermore, these are the lines we fans read on just about every prospect coming out of college, so you will have to forgive me that my eyes glazed over as I read these same tired expected lines. But once again two games in all of those qualities jump right off the screen. You can feel his command of the huddle. You can feel his troops rallying around him as their leader. You can feel his character shining through as he walks straight to Linehan and Romo for more training following another score. You did not watch either of the first two games and not see that. Admittedly though, none of these intangibles speak to his ability to be Romo’s backup.

No, his play does all the talking you could possibly want in that regard. Regardless of rather or not he is taking a snap directly from center (something that was suggested may take a while for him to grow accustomed to) or taking the snap in the shotgun (his bread & butter) it did not matter; all that mattered is that by the end of his time in Miami, he had conditioned everyone who had watched those first two games to expect something good to happen after he takes the snap. Period. No matter the play, if Dak takes the snap he is going to make something amazing look easy. And that is all he has done since taking the starting job in Mississippi.

Granted, he has had an ill-advised throw that turned into an interception against Miami. However, that same interception was called back due to a late hit on him. Despite being disappointed by his first interception thrown and first poor decision, I was intrigued to see how he would respond. Would it rattle him? Not. At. All.

It was business as usual following that pick…and while officially it never happened…in the physical realm, it was also hard to believe it had happened because he turned right around and churned out another drive that culminated in 7 points.

Now I get it…it is just preseason. Vanilla defenses. The opposition is not playing to win. The coaches are not game planning against him. These games are just for evaluation. But, be honest – if it was your job to evaluate Dak, how would you grade him? Aside from the ill-advised would-be interception, what would you attempt to fix in your own words? What is it that he has done or not done thus far that would find its way on your scorecard for Dak? Is there anything bad that you can say beyond a shadow of a doubt about how Dak has played thus far?

Now, preseason aside, there are certain skills that should remain the same regardless of the conditions. The one thing that Dak does that should translate to the regular season is his ball placement. Perhaps he has just been getting lucky, but on just about every touchdown pass he has thrown he has done so into good coverage. The ball placement has been in a place where only his receiver can make a play on the ball. For a rookie QB to throw with touch and accuracy of that caliber is unheard of…particularly a rookie who was taken in the fourth round.

What we are seeing people is history in the making. I have never seen a rookie come in, take control of a huddle and march down the field and score at will. I have never seen anything like what Dak is doing right now. And it would be amazing if he was doing all of this with his arm alone, but he is also doing it with his feet…in the NFL against NFL caliber defenses…

So, in summation, we Cowboys fans absolutely do have something to be excited about. Rather or not this level of play continues, remains to be seen…but the fact remains what he is doing now has never been done before by a rookie quarterback in the history of preseason. Sure, there have been QB prospects that have showed signs that they can be developed…many QB prospects have proven they belong in the NFL from the outset. Dak, on the other hand, is making every player on the other side of the ball question if they belong…that is uncharted territory for a rookie.
In Dallas that phrase is re-Dirk-u-less.


maxresdefault.jpg
 

Cowboy4ever

Well-Known Member
Messages
5,189
Reaction score
4,494
I haven't had a chance to watch all the film on Dak so this comment may be off base. But it seems he struggles when rolling to his left. He needs to fix that or the D coordinators will do nothing but flush him to his left all day. But overall, he has exceeded my expectations at this point and by a good margin. I hope he keeps growing and getting better.
 

speedkilz88

Well-Known Member
Messages
36,949
Reaction score
23,097
I haven't had a chance to watch all the film on Dak so this comment may be off base. But it seems he struggles when rolling to his left. He needs to fix that or the D coordinators will do nothing but flush him to his left all day. But overall, he has exceeded my expectations at this point and by a good margin. I hope he keeps growing and getting better.
I believe rolling left and throwing was a strength in college. But he does have issues with setting his feet consistently.
 

jday

Well-Known Member
Messages
9,321
Reaction score
13,284
I haven't had a chance to watch all the film on Dak so this comment may be off base. But it seems he struggles when rolling to his left. He needs to fix that or the D coordinators will do nothing but flush him to his left all day. But overall, he has exceeded my expectations at this point and by a good margin. I hope he keeps growing and getting better.

That's a good catch in regards to his roll out, but fortunately that's not what this offense is really predicated on. I think it was Michael Vick who struggled rolling in one direction if I'm not mistaken and that was a problem because rolling out to open up his run option is what he was doing the majority of his time as a QB. Here in Dallas, the rollout is typically done in Play Action only so I don't see that hindering him too much should he have to play significant minutes...but I could be wrong.
 

cowboyblue22

Well-Known Member
Messages
10,031
Reaction score
8,707
I think when he plays against seattle will be a big test neither one of this first two teams are very good. there defense will be a good test for him.
 

aikemirv

Well-Known Member
Messages
16,405
Reaction score
9,999
Ree-dik-u-liss

I am using this thread to respond to a thread that needs to go away but people keep posting on it and keep it near the top. Do you not realize that posting to the thread gives it more life -

Stop being so REE dik-u-liss!!!!
 

xwalker

Well-Known Member
Messages
57,193
Reaction score
64,699
CowboysZone ULTIMATE Fan
Ree-dik-u-liss

I am using this thread to respond to a thread that needs to go away but people keep posting on it and keep it near the top. Do you not realize that posting to the thread gives it more life -

Stop being so REE dik-u-liss!!!!
You just bumped it back to the top.
 

Tabascocat

Dexternjack
Messages
27,779
Reaction score
38,822
CowboysZone DIEHARD Fan
Supposedly, Dak will have problems when defenses hide coverage and use a lot of stunts and blitzes. He hasn't really seen that yet and hopefully Seattle can test him a bit Thursday night. Best way to improve is to face it!
 

Cowboy4ever

Well-Known Member
Messages
5,189
Reaction score
4,494
That's a good catch in regards to his roll out, but fortunately that's not what this offense is really predicated on. I think it was Michael Vick who struggled rolling in one direction if I'm not mistaken and that was a problem because rolling out to open up his run option is what he was doing the majority of his time as a QB. Here in Dallas, the rollout is typically done in Play Action only so I don't see that hindering him too much should he have to play significant minutes...but I could be wrong.

Very true.. but not really worried to much about the planned rollouts. It's the forced roll out that I worry about. These D coordinators are pretty crafty and if they see a weakness, they will do what they can to exploit it until he proves it's not a weakness any longer. Just seems he gets his legs turned the wrong way when he is trying to set them moving to his left which makes his throws limited. Anyway, with any luck he has a least 2 years to get it right and learn from the Master :)
 

Bullflop

Cowboys Diehard
Messages
25,712
Reaction score
30,905
CowboysZone LOYAL Fan
Good stuff, Jday . . . you've done a great job here of detailing the rare, if not uncanny nature of Prescott's introduction to his rise to prominence.

Granted, there's improvement yet to come for sure but for a rookie to come in making the kind of splash he made is nothing short of astounding.
 
Last edited:

aikemirv

Well-Known Member
Messages
16,405
Reaction score
9,999
You just bumped it back to the top.

I was not talking about this thread, so no I did not. I have no clue what the first post in this thread is about but the word Ridiculous fit my angle!
 

jday

Well-Known Member
Messages
9,321
Reaction score
13,284
Supposedly, Dak will have problems when defenses hide coverage and use a lot of stunts and blitzes. He hasn't really seen that yet and hopefully Seattle can test him a bit Thursday night. Best way to improve is to face it!

Agreed. And I understand he won't be able maintain a perfect level of play...but for what he has done, I'm feeling a heck of a lot better about life after Romo.
 

jday

Well-Known Member
Messages
9,321
Reaction score
13,284
I was not talking about this thread, so no I did not. I have no clue what the first post in this thread is about but the word Ridiculous fit my angle!

Well then...welcome to the conversation...
 

Tabascocat

Dexternjack
Messages
27,779
Reaction score
38,822
CowboysZone DIEHARD Fan
Agreed. And I understand he won't be able maintain a perfect level of play...but for what he has done, I'm feeling a heck of a lot better about life after Romo.

Me too, just want to see him get tested more to so he knows what it is really like and what to improve on. I already think that he can fill in better than Weedone now :)
 

CCBoy

Well-Known Member
Messages
47,005
Reaction score
22,603
That's a good catch in regards to his roll out, but fortunately that's not what this offense is really predicated on. I think it was Michael Vick who struggled rolling in one direction if I'm not mistaken and that was a problem because rolling out to open up his run option is what he was doing the majority of his time as a QB. Here in Dallas, the rollout is typically done in Play Action only so I don't see that hindering him too much should he have to play significant minutes...but I could be wrong.

This offense is based upon a vertical passing game and a mobile quarterback. Dak is more mobile than is Tony Romo, but function is similar, with some added running potential for the 'rook.'
 

plymkr

Well-Known Member
Messages
10,385
Reaction score
15,496
Preseason success has almost no correlation to regular season wins.

I'm happy to see the team performing well but it means very little.

I'm just hoping for good health leading up to week 1. In that department we have some work to do yet.
I agree with you in theory. As a team preseason success or failure does not correlate into the regular season wins or losses. But just speaking of Dak himself, in this preseason he has been the best rookie QB. Now that's not guaranteeing that he will be the best QB from this draft and it's not guaranteeing that he will play well in the regular season. Hopefully he won't play in the regular season. But there's something about this kid that looks special. Maybe it's the body language, maybe it's the accurate throws. The OP hit it on the head when he talked about the Miami game and the horrible decision that got resulted in an interception. I wanted to see how the rook would bounce back after such a play. It seemed like that play didn't phase him. He got back on the horse and rode it to the end zone. Confidence. He exudes confidence and on a team confidence is contagious.

After the draft and FA I was pretty down on this team and discouraged about the season. The FO did not address the absolute biggest need the team had. the back up QB position. We all witnessed what happens when Romo goes down. Now I am encouraged that we got a guy, for relatively cheap, that can come in and play if Romo misses a game or two. So the biggest need of the team looks like it has been adequately addressed and the future successor of Romo is on the roster. That's what I believe every poster on this board wanted to see happen this offseason and we got it.

We just got it in a way that we didn't think we would which makes it that much sweeter.

So in theory I agree that just because he is tearing it up in preseason that doesn't mean that Dak will do anything in the future. But this is very encouraging. I just think how discouraging it would have been if we pulled an Eagles trade and our guy was sucking in the pre-season.

Everyone knows deep down that when other teams are watching Dak play the last two games they're regretting passing on him. Think how the Rams must have felt at that game. Dak stole the show.
 
Top