CNNSi's Postscards from Camp-Don Banks on 'Boys

dbair1967

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Don Banks>INSIDE THE NFL


Postcard from camp: Cowboys


Where's SI.com?

In sunny and comfortable Oxnard, Calif., where the Cowboys have returned to train this year, staying here the entire camp for the first time since 2008, the year the team was featured in HBO's wildly popular Hard Knocks reality series.

Dallas has a deal to train here for the next three summers as well, and it's worth the long trek west just to get out of the Texas heat and be able to practice outdoors in what is usually a nice ocean breeze blowing in from the nearby Pacific. The Cowboys pretty much take over the Marriott Residence Inn River Ridge hotel during camp, and it's a compact and convenient set-up that everybody seems to enjoy. Put it this way, I didn't hear anyone in Cowboys colors go on about missing San Antonio and the dark confines of the Alamodome during my camp visit.

Three Observations

1. The Cowboys are talking tougher when it comes to Dez Bryant and his off-field issues, but I don't think he's anywhere near the point of having exhausted their patience. The fact is, the third-year receiver is having a great camp and again tantalizing with his ability to create downfield mismatches, even while he deals with being arrested and charged last month in an incident that involved him hitting his mother in the face with a baseball cap. Owner Jerry Jones has been vocal about Bryant no longer getting the benefit of the doubt given his track record, but Dallas isn't even close to giving up on him, especially when he flashes the kind of focus and dominance he has early on in camp.

I talked to head coach Jason Garrett about Bryant, who is not being made available to the media while his legal issues are pending, and he said progress has been made in regards to Bryant's maturity and decision-making despite the recent off-field setback. "He's a good kid. He just needs some help with the structure in his life,'' Garrett said. "The leaps and bounds he's made in the two years we've had him are really significant. It's been a challenge, but the strides he's made are outstanding. There's been tough love shown him, but often times it's hard to control someone's life 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days out of the year.''

Translation? The Cowboys still believe Bryant is worth the trouble. Now they need him to stay healthy, stop underachieving, and start paying them back for the faith shown him since he was taken in 2010's first round. There's still time for this story to take a turn for the (much) better.

2. DeMarco Murray looks like a man among (Cow)boys in this camp. Last year's breakthrough rushing star has gotten off to an eye-opening getaway in his second season, and he looks determined to prove he was no half-season flash in the pan in 2011, when he gained a team-best 897 yards and averaged 5.5 yards per carry despite starting just seven games. Murray's season ended early in Week 14, when he fractured his right ankle in a home loss to the Giants, and Dallas' playoff contention expired shortly thereafter.

Murray is running with speed, power and determination, and shows no ill effects of his December leg injury. I'm the last guy to give fantasy football advice, but if I played, I'd find room for him on my roster. He rushed for just two touchdowns last year, a total he calls unacceptable and one he vows to increase many times over. His teammates gush about his intensity and how he runs with a mean streak, and in one recent practice he set the tone by bowling over reserve cornerback Teddy Williams, sending him to the sidelines with a concussion.

3. The Cowboys say they're not worried about their rash of injuries this summer, but maybe they should be. I get that you can't be panicking in early August, with the season opener nearly four weeks away, but Dallas looked pretty banged up the day I watched practice. Cornerback Mike Jenkins is trying to return from offseason shoulder surgery and may wind up starting the season on the PUP list. First-round pick, cornerback Morris Claiborne, has battled a sprained knee and offseason wrist surgery, and has participated in just one padded practice so far. Starting receiver Miles Austin is having hamstring issues again (see 2011), and standout nose tackle Jay Ratliff isn't practicing due to a nagging case of plantar fascia. On the retooled offensive line, the unit has yet to generate any cohesiveness or continuity because new free-agent additions Nate Livings (hamstring) and Mackenzy Bernadeau (knee and hip) have barely been on the field together.

"It's not frustrating, [because] we're not to the season [yet],'' Stephen Jones said this week. "[Frustration sets in] when the season gets here and guys aren't playing.''

OK, but if practice time in training camp didn't matter, coaches wouldn't schedule it. Dallas may be getting its injury problems out of the way early this year, but that's only the glass-half-full approach to this wave of ill health.


Step On Up


Brandon Carr, cornerback. The Cowboys targeted Carr as their No. 1 prospect in free agency, and then paid dearly to wrap up the ex-Chief, to the tune of $50.1 million over five years. But they're thrilled so far, because Carr has handled most every assignment with precision and poise, and is setting a furious pace among all defensive playmakers -- in the secondary or otherwise. Carr specializes in press coverage and his one-on-one duels in practice with No. 1 receiver Bryant are worth the price of admission (if there were any charged, that is).

Upgrading at cornerback was priority No. 1 in Dallas this offseason, and Carr is playing at a shutdown level through the first 10 days of camp, with defensive coordinator Rob Ryan calling him the "best player in free agency by far,'' and Garrett praising him as being better than even advertised. Carr looks like he'll be up to the task of shadowing an opponent's top receiver this season, and that means throwing the ball against the Cowboys just got quite a bit tougher.

New Face, New Place

Bill Callahan, offensive coordinator/offensive line coach. Garrett can't seem to say enough about how fortunate he is to have the well-respected Callahan around this year, going on at length about how the ex-Jets assistant head coach/offensive line coach "takes a lot off my plate.'' Garrett will still call plays on game days, but Callahan is here to make sure Dallas doesn't forget about its running game, which it certainly did at times last season, in costly fashion. The Cowboys scored just five rushing touchdowns in 2011 -- second-fewest in the league -- and ran the ball just 40.1 percent of the time, ranking 23rd in that department.

All those blown fourth-quarter leads were the story of the season last year in Dallas, and a dependable running game could have helped salt several of those games away and made the 8-8 Cowboys a playoff team.

Making a rushing game work is Callahan's specialty. He helped the Jets finish in the top five in rushing twice in his four years on the job, and his experience as a head coach and offensive coordinator in both the NFL and college ranks should help shore up Garrett's shaky 2011 performance in terms of game management. Garrett said he'll "lean on'' Callahan's vast experience, and I'd be shocked if the Cowboys' running game doesn't produce a much more committed and well-coordinated effort this season.

Looking At The Schedule

The Cowboys got no breaks from the NFL in drawing the visiting team assignment in the regular season's kickoff game, Wed., Sept. 5 at the defending Super Bowl champion Giants. The opener has turned into a huge advantage for the home team, with the Super Bowl champs going 8-0 in that celebratory setting. Dallas follows that up by traveling all the way to Seattle in Week 2, before finally opening at home against Tampa Bay in Week 3.

The Cowboys schedule is plenty quirky. Dallas plays at home just three times in the first 10 weeks of the season, but then has five of its final seven at home, all from mid-November on. Three of those home games fall in a 15-day span, with Cleveland, Washington and Philadelphia coming to town, with the centerpiece game being the Thanksgiving Day showdown with the NFC East rival Redskins.


Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/20...aining-camp-postcard/index.html#ixzz23NussdUI
 

Hoofbite

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Excited about Murray.

Excited about Carr.

I'm not all that worried about the injuries so far aside from Jenkins. Nagy is gone but most of the guys who are being held out, it seems like the team is trying to be extra cautious. I just can't imagine that these guys would sit out a game with the way most of the injuries are being reported.

Austin's is a little concerning giving the lingering history of his hammy's but I think the majority of the guys who are out right now will be okay when the season starts.
 
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As a guy that hated the Murray pick, I'm happy to eat crow and be proven wrong.

Sounds like he and Lee are emerging as young leaders on the team, and I hope they both can stay healthy and have great seasons.
 

cmd34

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Damn, am I the only one who is hitting on my scouting?

Yep.

Report: Steelers Name David DeCastro Starting Right Guard

Saturday, August 11th, 2012 at 5:48 pm by Dave Bryan

Sooner or later it was going to happen, but in the case of Pittsburgh Steelers first round draft pick David DeCastro, sooner is certainly better as Jim Wexell reported today via Twitter that offensive line coach Sean Kugler announced that DeCastro was now the starting right guard. Kugler had said just last week that the rookie was coming on in practice.

The Stanford product, who according to many in the media, did not set training camp practices on fire over the first few weeks, had a good first showing Thursday night in the Steelers 24-23 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles, in what was their first preseason game of the year. DeCastro looked extremely good on the move and out in space, just as he did in college. DeCastro started the game Thursday because Ramon Foster was forced to start at left guard due to Willie Colon being forced to sit out the game with a minor ankle injury.

Thanks to the poor play and knee sprain suffered by rookie left tackle Mike Adams Thursday night, Foster took snaps with first team at right tackle on Saturday, while Marcus Gilbert flipped over to take first team reps at the left tackle spot with Adams sidelined. Unless something changes, the starting offensive line left to right for the Steelers second preseason game next weekend against the Indianapolis Colts figures to be Gilbert, Colon, Maurkice Pouncey, DeCastro and Foster.

Tackle Max Starks, who was resigned by the Steelers just prior to them reporting to training camp, remains on the camp PUP list as he continues to rehab his surgically repaired kn
 

superpunk

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5. The Steelers, despite using their first two picks on a needy offensive line, still have major problems there. Steady, fairly invisible night for first-round Stanford guard David DeCastro, playing on the right side. Not so for second-rounder Mike Adams. Philadelphia didn't play either of its top defensive ends -- Trent Cole or Jason Babin -- Thursday night. But the left tackle Adams, from Ohio State, played 17 snaps over 13 minutes, and allowed either 1.5 sacks or 2.5, depending on if you'd dock him for a sack when Ben Roethlisberger stepped up into trouble in the pocket. So he was involved in three sacks, two of which ended in strip-sacks of the quarterback.

Now, Philadelphia might have the best defensive line depth in the NFL, but still, perpetrators Phillip Hunt and Darryl Tapp are not starting players. This was not the start the Steelers needed to see for the line. I have three words for Roethlisberger, who thought -- incorrectly, apparently -- that with the draft concentration on the line he wouldn't have many more nights under siege: Duck, Ben, duck.

Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/writers/peter_king/08/12/mmqb/index.html#ixzz23T2dNd1f
 

superpunk

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I assume Decastro's pathetic ass was getting run over as well only it wasn't as noticeable because he's a guard.
 

Bob Sacamano

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Yep.

Report: Steelers Name David DeCastro Starting Right Guard

Saturday, August 11th, 2012 at 5:48 pm by Dave Bryan

Sooner or later it was going to happen, but in the case of Pittsburgh Steelers first round draft pick David DeCastro, sooner is certainly better as Jim Wexell reported today via Twitter that offensive line coach Sean Kugler announced that DeCastro was now the starting right guard. Kugler had said just last week that the rookie was coming on in practice.

The Stanford product, who according to many in the media, did not set training camp practices on fire over the first few weeks, had a good first showing Thursday night in the Steelers 24-23 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles, in what was their first preseason game of the year. DeCastro looked extremely good on the move and out in space, just as he did in college. DeCastro started the game Thursday because Ramon Foster was forced to start at left guard due to Willie Colon being forced to sit out the game with a minor ankle injury.

Thanks to the poor play and knee sprain suffered by rookie left tackle Mike Adams Thursday night, Foster took snaps with first team at right tackle on Saturday, while Marcus Gilbert flipped over to take first team reps at the left tackle spot with Adams sidelined. Unless something changes, the starting offensive line left to right for the Steelers second preseason game next weekend against the Indianapolis Colts figures to be Gilbert, Colon, Maurkice Pouncey, DeCastro and Foster.

Tackle Max Starks, who was resigned by the Steelers just prior to them reporting to training camp, remains on the camp PUP list as he continues to rehab his surgically repaired kn

Kyle Kosier part II.
 
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