Eatman: From Romo To Wilber, Garrett Weighs In On Several Players

boozeman

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From Romo To Wilber, Garrett Weighs In On Several Players

Posted 4 hours ago



Nick Eatman

DallasCowboys.com Staff Writer

ORLANDO – Talking to reporters and national media for nearly an hour this week at the owners meetings in Orlando, Jason Garrett addressed many different topics regarding the Cowboys’ recent offseason moves and upcoming season.

While the head coach had positive things to say about former players DeMarcus Ware and Jason Hatcher, the focal point remains on his current team.

Here’s what Garrett had to see about different players on the roster:

On Morris Claiborne:

“We feel like he is a guy who is very talented and still needs to grow and develop. He has certainly shown flashes of the player that we drafted with the sixth pick of the draft a couple of years ago. He has very good feel for covering guys and just plays that position at a high level. We have a lot of confidence in Mo.”

On Tyrone Crawford

“He has really good versatility. We are going to look at the landscape of our defensive line and see where he fits in. We really think he can play all four spots. We will use him in a couple of different spots certainly. We want to get him into a role, into a position where he is most comfortable and get his body right. We will make that determination here relatively soon. He has been doing everything he needs to do coming out of his rehab and we’re excited to get him back on April 21.”

On Kyle Wilber

“We drafted him to be a 3-4 outside linebacker. We put him back playing a 4-3 linebacker where he was playing off the line of scrimmage a little bit more, and he really responded well to it. He is a very productive special teams player for us. And he showed a lot of that same production when we put him out there on defense, playing off the ball. He had a number of tackles, number of tackles for loss. He was around the ball a lot, so he really responded well and will be part of the discussion as we go forward and talk about one of those spots.”

On Tony Romo

“We feel like he’s right on schedule and hopefully will be ready to go once we get out on the field in the spring. He’s moving around. He hasn’t been out on the field or anything like that yet. By all accounts he’s doing well. I enjoy our basketball outings. We plan to go to the Grammys soon, you know, like Michael Jackson and Emmanuel Lewis used to.”

On Brandon Carr

“Brandon is a good football player. We’re excited to have him. If you look at our football team, you say we feel good about the corners that we have: Brandon and Mo and Orlando (Scandrick). That’s part of the strength of our defense. We have a lot of confidence in him. He plays very well. He’s had a couple of games he certainly would have liked to have played better in, but again, we evaluate what we did as a defensive staff in some of those games and how we could have put him in a better situation. He’ll learn and grow from all of those experiences. He’s the right kind of guy. He cares a great deal about getting better.”


On Henry Melton

“When you see him move around, you see a lot of those traits that allowed him to play running back early in his career. He’s got great quickness and explosiveness and great change of direction. He can really run. When you think about the traits you want for that under-tackle position, that 3 technique, he’s got a lot of them. Obviously he’s coming off of an injury, he only played in three games last year, so that’s a factor, but we feel like he’s made a lot of progress. He’s at a place where we can very confidently think he’s going to be a big part of what we’re doing this year. He played really well in an environment up there in Chicago when Rod (Marinelli) was the defensive line coach. We feel like that marriage can be a really good one for him, and hopefully we can get him to play his best and he can have an impact on our defensive front.”

On Terrell McClain

“McClain has been a guy that's just been a good football player. He's been down there in Houston. We feel like he's an interior player who can have an impact on our team. We’re excited about just really seeing him. Is he truly a nose? Is he a potential under tackle, three-technique? He’s a been productive, good college football player. We liked him coming out of the draft and are excited to add him.”

On Jeremy Mincey

“Mincey is just a really solid football player and we see him as a defensive end candidate. Just watch him play. He plays hard, he plays the right way and has done that a number of years.”

On Dez Bryant’s leadership

“Yeah, when you talk about leadership, really what you’re talking about is influence on other people. Dez has been able to positively influence so many guys on your team, really for the last few years. As he’s gotten himself settled into the role he’s been in, he’s an outstanding football player. He loves the game. He has an infectious way about him. People really like Dez, and they care about Dez. If you come to one of our football practices, you see that. He’s a very competitive guy who wants to be great. And there is an infectious way about him. It’s been really positive. You see it in practice and see it in the game. I think he certainly understands his role with the team.”

On Kyle Orton

“Kyle is under contract and we feel very good about him as our backup quarterback. I think he showed a lot of people how well he could play in Week 17 in the game against Philadelphia. Certainly not a perfect game, but he did a lot of really good things and gave us a great opportunity to win that game. He’s been a starting quarterback in this league and has played a lot of football. The guy has a great deal of belief in himself and confidence in himself. He plays the game very well. If we had to put him in a ballgame as a backup guy at some point, if something were to happen with Tony, we have a lot of confidence in him.”

On Jason Witten

“We talk a lot about being your best regardless of circumstance. I can’t think of a guy who epitomizes that more than Wit. Each and every day, in every situation we ask him to be in. He’s an easy guy to game plan with. The challenge with him is he gets a lot of attention. We love him. He’s a leader and one of the best players in the National Football League.”
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~flush~
 

BipolarFuk

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We plan to go to the Grammys soon, you know, like Michael Jackson and Emmanuel Lewis used to.”
Would it be wrong to ask the Cowboys to hire Jackson's last doctor also?
 

E_D_Guapo

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“We feel like he’s right on schedule and hopefully will be ready to go once we get out on the field in the spring. He’s moving around. He hasn’t been out on the field or anything like that yet. By all accounts he’s doing well. I enjoy our basketball outings. We plan to go to the Grammys soon, you know, like Michael Jackson and Emmanuel Lewis used to.
:lol
 

Simpleton

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I saw that too although I was only about 75% sure it was an edit and not something he actually said.
 

boozeman

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I saw that too although I was only about 75% sure it was an edit and not something he actually said.
I swear I did not edit any of his other comments.

I wish I did, some of them were either completely robotic or just flat out retarded.

The ones about McClain?

Are you fricking kidding me?
 

mcnuttz

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I swear I did not edit any of his other comments.

I wish I did, some of them were either completely robotic or just flat out retarded.

The ones about McClain?

Are you fricking kidding me?
He learned all he knows about being a head coach from Wade.
 

boozeman

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C'mon. I knew it was BS too.

I just tried to add to the funny and failed.
Damn you failed even more by admitting the FAIL. You could have just blamed my clever edit.
 

Cotton

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I swear I did not edit any of his other comments.

I wish I did, some of them were either completely robotic or just flat out retarded.

The ones about McClain?

Are you fricking kidding me?
At least he knows he came from Houston. What more can you ask. He's still in training, after all.
 

boozeman

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At least he knows he came from Houston. What more can you ask. He's still in training, after all.

Gosselin: Ex-coach of Cowboys' Terrell McClain says 'phenomenal' athlete will fit Rod Marinelli's scheme

Rick Gosselin


rgosselin@dallasnews.com

Published: 02 April 2014 08:57 PM

Updated: 02 April 2014 09:31 PM


DENTON — Kevin Patrick knows Rod Marinelli. He also knows Terrell McClain.

“He fits what Marinelli does,” said Patrick, the new defensive line coach at North Texas. “I’d be shocked if the Cowboys aren’t happy with McClain.”

When the salary cap was gutting the defensive line of the Cowboys last month with the departures of DeMarcus Ware and Jason Hatcher, McClain was an under-the-radar signing to replenish the roster.

There was no reason to throw a parade. The Cowboys are McClain’s fourth team as he enters his fourth NFL season. He hasn’t started a game since his rookie year in 2011, when he was a third-round pick of the Carolina Panthers and has only one career sack.

McClain also came cheaply, signing on for three years at a very cap-friendly $3 million. But don’t assume inexpensive translates into a lack of talent, says Patrick.

A little background now on Patrick. He was in Jimmy Johnson’s final recruiting class at the University of Miami and was the Big East defensive player of the year in 1993 as an end for the Hurricanes.

Patrick went into coaching in 1996, hiring on with the University of South Florida to handle the defensive line. He spent the next 18 football seasons coaching there in Tampa.

Patrick spent countless summer days visiting the Bucs training camp in the 1990s watching Marinelli mold his Tampa Bay defensive line into a dominating unit, a championship unit — the best front four in the NFL. So Patrick knows the type of player Marinelli likes.

Patrick also spent three seasons coaching McClain at South Florida, developing him into a premium NFL draft pick. Patrick coached George Selvie of the Cowboys and Jason Pierre-Paul of the New York Giants as well.

“Look at Marinelli’s track record and the body types he’s coached,” Patrick said. “I can see why Marinelli likes Terrell and had a say in his signing. Terrell fits athletically. He’s a big dude now.”

But McClain has underachieved for his draft standing. He was the 65th overall pick of his draft. Selvie has overachieved. He was a seventh-round selection by the Rams in 2010 who has managed to hang on for four NFL seasons.

The Cowboys are Selvie’s fourth team but the first for which he has started a game. In fact, he started all 16 games last season and finished with a team runner-up seven sacks. He was a late bloomer under Marinelli, and Patrick believes McClain can be a late bloomer as well.

“Go through the history of the league and see how these players evolve,” Patrick said. “All of a sudden — boom — everything comes together. The natural size of some guys allows them to adapt to the NFL a little quicker. But some guys it takes a little longer.

“George has already put his best foot forward for the Cowboys, and I’d be surprised if McClain doesn’t as well. They’ve got two damn good players. I’m excited to have them both close by me again.”

Both players achieved under Patrick. Selvie was a four-year starter, the school’s all-time leading sacker and the Big East’s defensive player of the year in 2007. McClain was a three-year starter who earned All-Big East acclaim in 2010. He turned down Alabama and Auburn to play at South Florida.

“We used to call him Dancing Bear,” Patrick said. “He’s a pretty phenomenal athlete for a guy his size (6-2, 293). He’s going to give you effort, no doubt about that. But the first thing that stands out is his unbelievable power and athletic ability.”

Selvie is just the opposite.

“When you define George, you’re not going to define him by his measurables as much as you would his effort,” Patrick said. “Some people may have considered him a step slow or a little tight in the hips coming out. But he makes plays.

“His effort is phenomenal and he’s such a smart player. Every day of the week I’d find a way to get that joker on my team because I know him so well. They got two good ones in McClain and Selvie. If they don’t start, they’ll be at least glue guys.”

The Cowboys, at this point, need more than glue. They need starters — quality starters. Patrick may have given the Cowboys two of them.
 
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