NFL future rankings: Only 4 teams projected to be worse than Dallas Cowboys over next 3 seasons
By Jon Machota
jmachota@dallasnews.com
4:08 pm on July 10, 2014
Dallas head coach Jason Garrett is pictured during Dallas Cowboys minicamp held at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas on Thursday, June 19, 2014. (Louis DeLuca/Dallas Morning News)
The future of the Dallas Cowboys will rely heavily on the back of Tony Romo, the continued maturation of Dez Bryant, the growth of a potentially dominant offensive line, continuity on the coaching staff and the ability to find talent to improve a depleted defensive unit.
A group of ESPN experts don’t envision that combination leading Dallas to a very good product on the field over the next three seasons.
The panel of John Clayton, Mel Kiper, Louis Riddick and Mike Sando recently ranked how each NFL team will fare over the 2014, 2015 and 2016 seasons. (It’s an Insider article, so you have to be a member to read it.)
They had the Cowboys at 28. Yes, only four teams were worse – Cleveland, Buffalo, Miami and Oakland.
To break it down, they rated every team in five categories — roster (excluding quarterback), quarterback, draft, front office and coaching. The Cowboys and Raiders were the only two teams to rank among the NFL’s five worst in four of the five categories.
Quarterback received their best grade, which was 13th. That’s not saying Romo is 13th among QBs, it’s stating over the next three years, that’s where they project the franchise at the position. That’s hard to argue considering Romo’s back issues and his age (34). To have them ranked higher would mean putting a lot of confidence in Brandon Weeden.
Twenty-six teams were graded as having a better overall roster than the Cowboys and 30 were thought to have better coaching.
In regards to Jerry Jones and the front office, Dallas finished 30th, ahead of only Miami and Oakland.
By Jon Machota
jmachota@dallasnews.com
4:08 pm on July 10, 2014
Dallas head coach Jason Garrett is pictured during Dallas Cowboys minicamp held at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas on Thursday, June 19, 2014. (Louis DeLuca/Dallas Morning News)
The future of the Dallas Cowboys will rely heavily on the back of Tony Romo, the continued maturation of Dez Bryant, the growth of a potentially dominant offensive line, continuity on the coaching staff and the ability to find talent to improve a depleted defensive unit.
A group of ESPN experts don’t envision that combination leading Dallas to a very good product on the field over the next three seasons.
The panel of John Clayton, Mel Kiper, Louis Riddick and Mike Sando recently ranked how each NFL team will fare over the 2014, 2015 and 2016 seasons. (It’s an Insider article, so you have to be a member to read it.)
They had the Cowboys at 28. Yes, only four teams were worse – Cleveland, Buffalo, Miami and Oakland.
To break it down, they rated every team in five categories — roster (excluding quarterback), quarterback, draft, front office and coaching. The Cowboys and Raiders were the only two teams to rank among the NFL’s five worst in four of the five categories.
Quarterback received their best grade, which was 13th. That’s not saying Romo is 13th among QBs, it’s stating over the next three years, that’s where they project the franchise at the position. That’s hard to argue considering Romo’s back issues and his age (34). To have them ranked higher would mean putting a lot of confidence in Brandon Weeden.
Twenty-six teams were graded as having a better overall roster than the Cowboys and 30 were thought to have better coaching.
In regards to Jerry Jones and the front office, Dallas finished 30th, ahead of only Miami and Oakland.