The top 14 Cowboys draft blunders since 2000

Alexander

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Akwasi Owusu-Ansah (who?) over Kam Chancellor? The top 14 Cowboys draft blunders since 2000

By SportsDayDFW.com Contact SportsDayDFW.com on Twitter: @SportsDayDFW

Every NFL team can longingly look through its draft history and wonder what could've been. The Cowboys are no exception.

Since the turn of the century, Jerry Jones & Co. have made some decisions on draft day that are likely to leave Cowboys fans slapping their foreheads in hindsight.

With all due respect, we'll let the players from the 2014 and 2015 drafts develop a little more before rushing to any judgments.

Here's a look at the Cowboys' 14 biggest draft blunders since 2000.

2001: Tony Dixon over Adrian Wilson
This might go down as one of the worst drafts in Cowboys history. Most remember the infamous Quincy Carter pick at No. 53, but fewer remember that Alabama S Tony Dixon came to the Cowboys just three picks later. Dixon made 15 starts in five seasons with the Cowboys before being shown the door. The next safety came off the board just eight picks later when the Cardinals took Adrian Wilson, who was a cornerstone of the Arizona defense for 12 years. He had more than 700 career tackles and five Pro Bowl appearances.

2003: Terence Newman over Troy Polamalu

A bowl-game hamstring injury may have scared teams off Polamalu, who went to Pittsburgh in the first round with the 16th overall pick. The Cowboys passed early, taking cornerback Terence Newman with the fifth choice. It's hard to knock Newman's performance with the Cowboys, but Polamalu was an eight-time Pro Bowler, the Defensive Player of the Year in 2010 and a member of the NFL's 2000s All-Decade Team.

2004: Bruce Thornton over Jared Allen
After going offensive with their first three picks, the Cowboys finally addressed the defense by taking Thornton, a CB out of Georgia, in the fourth round. But he made just one appearance with the team and lasted only two years in the NFL. The Vikings snagged Allen five picks later, while the Cowboys, who were still playing in a 4-3 base defense at the time, stuck with a 29-year-old Greg Ellis and a 30-year-old Marcellus Wiley as their DEs. Allen finished his 12-year career with 136 career sacks and named to the Pro Bowl five times.

2006: Bobby Carpenter over Tamba Hali
Linebacker Bobby Carpenter, the 18th overall pick in 2006, might qualify as the worst of the Cowboys' first-round picks in this century. He was ill-equipped to play inside as planned and had only three starts in four years with the Cowboys. Hali went to Kansas City two picks later. His career? Well, he's been a starter for 10 seasons with the Chiefs, racking up 86 sacks since.

2006: Anthony Fasano over Devin Hester

Fasano, No. 53 overall, was a Bill Parcells pick all the way. He was supposed to fill a substantial role as an H-back, but Fasano made all of 28 catches in two years before the Cowboys shipped him to Miami. Hester, who went just four picks later to the Bears, is the most electric return man in NFL history and has had an underrated career as a receiver, too. To add insult to injury, the Cowboys tried to draft a kick returner two rounds later -- LSU's Skyler Green -- but he didn't even make the team.

2006: Skyler Green over Elvis Dumervil
The Cowboys took Green out of LSU 125th overall, hoping he could be a deep threat at receiver and a star as a kick returner. Dumervil, who was tremendously productive in college but was thought to be undersized, went to Denver with the very next pick. He's accrued 96 sacks since joining the league in 2006 while Green couldn't even make the Cowboys' roster in preseason.

2007: James Marten over Marshal Yanda
Looking to add depth to their offensive line, the Cowboys picked tackle James Marten from Boston College with the 67th overall pick in '07. He never appeared in a game with the Cowboys, and made all of one appearance in a three-year NFL career. Later in the third round, Baltimore took Iowa tackle Marshal Yanda No. 86 overall. The Ravens moved Yanda inside to guard, where he's become one of the NFL's best. Yanda is a stalwart on the Baltimore line and has earned trips to five straight Pro Bowls.

http://sportsday.***BANNED-URL***/d...2/12/top-14-cowboys-draft-blunders-since-2000
 

jazzcat22

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When in need of writing something, write an article about draft blunders. To get the many fans already against everything, even more riled up.....:laugh:....to get the clicks too....
When it's really all hindsight, for all teams.

And as there any thought into the article at all. Newman over Polamalu...ok, we needed a CB more than a S, and we had Woodson.
If we took Polamalu that high, we would have been blasted it was a reach [at that time in the draft].

Another stupid hindsight, no thought article.
 

jazzcat22

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If the team consistently sucks, you get these articles.

This team can win the SB and we would still get these articles. But it would be they won the SB in spite of previous drafts.
And others would still find other faults.
 

Plankton

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While there is validity in some cases with the wrong player being selected, the second guesses in some of these are completely ridiculous.

Polamalu over Newman? One year after they selected another safety with a Top 10 selection? Seriously? No one considered Polamalu a Top 10 pick, much less a Top 5 selection. Put Terrell Suggs' name in there, and then they may have a point.

Carpenter over Hali? In all of the pre-draft debates in 2006, it was Carpenter vs. Lawson or Carpenter vs. Wimbley. Hali was projected as a 4-3 DE, and the Cowboys had switched to the 3-4. Yes, Hali has thrived as a 3-4 OLB, but at the time, he wasn't viewed that way.

I mean, the hindsight in this piece is hilarious. I do agree on the Claiborne one, however, though I wanted Fletcher Cox instead.
 

Idgit

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This is an exercise in looking at some of our failed draft picks, and then looking at every other teams' picks the rest of that draft to find a player at a simililar position who went on to have success in different circumstances on a completely different team. As if some of our fans need anything more to loathe. Good stuff.

The thing about these draft second guessing articles that always gets me: they overlook the role of coaching and player development in putting teams together. How many times have we seen players come to a team in FA and disappoint? How many times do we see players come into a new situation and blossom? A lot. It's not all comparing apples to apples between positions, teams, and systems in this league.
 

jday

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Akwasi Owusu-Ansah (who?) over Kam Chancellor? The top 14 Cowboys draft blunders since 2000

By SportsDayDFW.com Contact SportsDayDFW.com on Twitter: @SportsDayDFW

Every NFL team can longingly look through its draft history and wonder what could've been. The Cowboys are no exception.

Since the turn of the century, Jerry Jones & Co. have made some decisions on draft day that are likely to leave Cowboys fans slapping their foreheads in hindsight.

With all due respect, we'll let the players from the 2014 and 2015 drafts develop a little more before rushing to any judgments.

Here's a look at the Cowboys' 14 biggest draft blunders since 2000.

2001: Tony Dixon over Adrian Wilson
This might go down as one of the worst drafts in Cowboys history. Most remember the infamous Quincy Carter pick at No. 53, but fewer remember that Alabama S Tony Dixon came to the Cowboys just three picks later. Dixon made 15 starts in five seasons with the Cowboys before being shown the door. The next safety came off the board just eight picks later when the Cardinals took Adrian Wilson, who was a cornerstone of the Arizona defense for 12 years. He had more than 700 career tackles and five Pro Bowl appearances.

2003: Terence Newman over Troy Polamalu

A bowl-game hamstring injury may have scared teams off Polamalu, who went to Pittsburgh in the first round with the 16th overall pick. The Cowboys passed early, taking cornerback Terence Newman with the fifth choice. It's hard to knock Newman's performance with the Cowboys, but Polamalu was an eight-time Pro Bowler, the Defensive Player of the Year in 2010 and a member of the NFL's 2000s All-Decade Team.

2004: Bruce Thornton over Jared Allen
After going offensive with their first three picks, the Cowboys finally addressed the defense by taking Thornton, a CB out of Georgia, in the fourth round. But he made just one appearance with the team and lasted only two years in the NFL. The Vikings snagged Allen five picks later, while the Cowboys, who were still playing in a 4-3 base defense at the time, stuck with a 29-year-old Greg Ellis and a 30-year-old Marcellus Wiley as their DEs. Allen finished his 12-year career with 136 career sacks and named to the Pro Bowl five times.

2006: Bobby Carpenter over Tamba Hali
Linebacker Bobby Carpenter, the 18th overall pick in 2006, might qualify as the worst of the Cowboys' first-round picks in this century. He was ill-equipped to play inside as planned and had only three starts in four years with the Cowboys. Hali went to Kansas City two picks later. His career? Well, he's been a starter for 10 seasons with the Chiefs, racking up 86 sacks since.

2006: Anthony Fasano over Devin Hester

Fasano, No. 53 overall, was a Bill Parcells pick all the way. He was supposed to fill a substantial role as an H-back, but Fasano made all of 28 catches in two years before the Cowboys shipped him to Miami. Hester, who went just four picks later to the Bears, is the most electric return man in NFL history and has had an underrated career as a receiver, too. To add insult to injury, the Cowboys tried to draft a kick returner two rounds later -- LSU's Skyler Green -- but he didn't even make the team.

2006: Skyler Green over Elvis Dumervil
The Cowboys took Green out of LSU 125th overall, hoping he could be a deep threat at receiver and a star as a kick returner. Dumervil, who was tremendously productive in college but was thought to be undersized, went to Denver with the very next pick. He's accrued 96 sacks since joining the league in 2006 while Green couldn't even make the Cowboys' roster in preseason.

2007: James Marten over Marshal Yanda
Looking to add depth to their offensive line, the Cowboys picked tackle James Marten from Boston College with the 67th overall pick in '07. He never appeared in a game with the Cowboys, and made all of one appearance in a three-year NFL career. Later in the third round, Baltimore took Iowa tackle Marshal Yanda No. 86 overall. The Ravens moved Yanda inside to guard, where he's become one of the NFL's best. Yanda is a stalwart on the Baltimore line and has earned trips to five straight Pro Bowls.

http://sportsday.***BANNED-URL***/d...2/12/top-14-cowboys-draft-blunders-since-2000

The one thing that gives me pause about regretting these draft blunders is the question: Would the above players had the same career as a Cowboy?
 

endersdragon

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I always felt like Newman never got enough respect around the league. He was a shutdown corner before there were shutdown corners. Yea he never got a lot of INTs but weren't there also whole years where he never allowed a touchdown. He was basically a poor man's Revis Island before Revis played. But I digress.
 

Stash

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The worst one for me is the team passing in Richard Sherman. They've been bad in their assessments and scouting of cornerbacks, but that one is the most galling to me.

There's a lot of ugly in this list, but that one hurts the most to me.

:facepalm:
 

Idgit

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I always felt like Newman never got enough respect around the league. He was a shutdown corner before there were shutdown corners. Yea he never got a lot of INTs but weren't there also whole years where he never allowed a touchdown. He was basically a poor man's Revis Island before Revis played. But I digress.

Newman was a good player and good value for a high pick. Our fans were ridiculous about him for years.
 

Aven8

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I always felt like Newman never got enough respect around the league. He was a shutdown corner before there were shutdown corners. Yea he never got a lot of INTs but weren't there also whole years where he never allowed a touchdown. He was basically a poor man's Revis Island before Revis played. But I digress.

Hell Newman is still going so I don't know how anyone can complain about him. I think it had more to do with Campo/Zimmer and his hands IMO. The playing off the ball 10 yards etc.
 
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