Gosselin: Safety Jeff Heath may be Dallas Cowboys' next overlooked college gem

boozeman

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Gosselin: Safety Jeff Heath may be Dallas Cowboys' next overlooked college gem



Rick Gosselin

rgosselin@dallasnews.com

Published: 25 August 2013 11:12 PM

Updated: 25 August 2013 11:12 PM

The NFL drafts around 255 players every April.

They are the best players the college game has to offer.

But they are not the only players the college game has to offer.

For all the problems the Cowboys seem to have finding talent when they are on the clock during a draft, they have no such problems when the clock stops. No NFL franchise has a better history of signing the undrafted college free agents than the Cowboys.

Cornell Green, Cliff Harris, Drew Pearson, Everson Walls, Bill Bates, Nate Newton, Mark Tuinei, Miles Austin and Tony Romo were passed over in NFL drafts. All signed with the Cowboys and went to a combined 31 Pro Bowls. Harris and Pearson became NFL all-decade selections for the 1970s.

The Cowboys may have found their next overlooked college gem in safety Jeff Heath. If you pull for the underdog, you’re pulling for Heath to find a spot on the 53-man roster of the Cowboys this next week.

I was in Oxnard the opening weekend of training camp, and some of their brass tipped me off then — “Keep an eye on Jeff Heath. He’s a player.”

Heath made quite an impression on the team’s talent evaluators during the noncontact portion of the off-season in the spring. When the Cowboys finally put the pads on this summer, Heath enhanced those impressions of him. And that was by design.

“You have to make every practice a game,” Heath said, “because, as an undrafted player, you have to stand out more so than guys who have been on the team for a while and the guys who have been drafted.”

Heath has stood out. He stood out in Oxnard on the practice field. He stood out in Canton and Oakland covering kicks. Now he has stood out in Phoenix and Arlington playing defense. He made five tackles against the Cardinals and a thundering, fumble-forcing tackle Saturday night against Cincinnati’s Cobi Hamilton. The fumble was recovered by a teammate.

The Cowboys had to dig deep for Heath. He played his college ball at Saginaw Valley (Mich.) State, where he earned All-Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference honors after posting 77 tackles and seven takeaways.

The seven takeaways obviously caught the attention of the Cowboys coaches.

“They’ve been harping on creating turnovers,” Heath said. “As a rookie, especially an undrafted rookie, you have to make your presence felt. The way to do that is to take the ball away.”

Heath did that against Hamilton with a perfect form tackle — shoulder to the waist and arms wrapped around the ball carrier’s legs to stop the forward progress. In a league that has forgotten how to tackle, Heath is there to remind everyone how it’s done.

But what impressed Brandon Carr about Heath was his college breeding. Carr also earned All-GLIAC honors as a defensive back at Grand Valley State, where he rose from his own humble football beginnings to become a $50 million NFL cornerback for the Cowboys.

“I like him,” Carr said. “He brings the wood. And he’s a guy who has a chip on his shoulder.”

It’s likely the same-sized chip on the shoulder Harris brought from Ouachita Baptist. Or Austin brought from Monmouth. Or Romo from Eastern Illinois. There’s an old scouting bromide — if you can play, the NFL will find you.

“Coming out of high school I had one offer — from a D-II school,” Heath said. “Then going through the draft process, going undrafted … That’s basically every team telling you you’re not good enough. It hurts at first, but you can turn it into motivation.”

A motivated Heath agreed to sign with the Cowboys because they were the first team to contact him after the draft. The Cowboys also were among a small handful of teams that attended his pro day, timing him in a 4.48 40-yard dash.

Watching him play now, you wonder why a player with his size (6-1, 209), speed, production and quality of character wasn’t drafted.

Look long enough and you’ll see a little Cliff Harris in Heath’s game — that combination of speed and striking ability. If the Cowboys defensive coaches look even harder, they’ll see a little John Lynch in his game — patrolling the secondary like a cop with a radar gun.

Lynch provided Monte Kiffin a prototype for the safety position in this Tampa Two defensive scheme. He was always around the football. The scheme brought out the best in John Lynch. And it can bring out the best in Jeff Heath.
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He made a nice play the other night and I really hope we cut Johnson's sorry ass to keep him.
 

boozeman

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I could see this happening that's a nice cap savings and the new special teams guy has no ties to him.
But Jerry does with that stupid MFing contract he signed him to. Costa is the same way.

They are the new Sam Hurd and Cory Procter...complete turds who get Jerry Jones scholarships because we are lazy and signed them to contracts more than they are worth.
 

boozeman

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I'll be pissed if Heath is cut. He has something.
Not sure about that, but I know he's done more in a game than fucking Matt Johnson has done after over 14 months of invested time.

That's enough for me for now.
 

NoDak

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I'll admit, I was intrigued with Matt Johnson, thinking he might have something. Probably because we've been safety starved for so long. But he's proving time and again he can't stay healthy. Time to move on. If that means we get to hang on to this guy, cool. I have no idea if he has anything. But he can stay on the field, and that's at least a start.
 

Cotton

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I would like to see more of Heath, but we can't crown him a gem just yet.
 

bbgun

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They'll cut him and keep the other, less productive honky. Book it.
 

E_D_Guapo

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But Jerry does with that stupid MFing contract he signed him to. Costa is the same way.

They are the new Sam Hurd and Cory Procter...complete turds who get Jerry Jones scholarships because we are lazy and signed them to contracts more than they are worth.
Exactly. Fat chance of McCray going anywhere. Jerry definitely loves him some Costa too so he's probably safe but I think there might be a very slight chance of him getting the axe.
 

boozeman

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Exactly. Fat chance of McCray going anywhere. Jerry definitely loves him some Costa too so he's probably safe but I think there might be a very slight chance of him getting the axe.
That is probably the most frustrating thing about him as a GM.

It is not just the blown draft picks. Everyone has those.

It is how economics drives the pecking order on this team. Even bottom of the barrel talent can carve themselves well paid niche roles if they play their cards correctly.

How many good teams in this league have reserve centers that they can't even trust to play guard and safeties who only play special teams?

Both guys should have been next men up with the issues we have had at both positions, yet, they could not step up and are allowed to keep their roles. It's amazing.
 

Cowboysrock55

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Exactly. Fat chance of McCray going anywhere. Jerry definitely loves him some Costa too so he's probably safe but I think there might be a very slight chance of him getting the axe.
McCray might be my most hated Cowboy. He was a terrible college player for gods sake. How the hell do you try to turn a total failure of a college safety into a legit NFL player in any way. Highly overrated for his special teams abilities too. He isn't anything special as a coverage ace.
 

boozeman

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McCray might be my most hated Cowboy. He was a terrible college player for gods sake. How the hell do you try to turn a total failure of a college safety into a legit NFL player in any way. Highly overrated for his special teams abilities too. He isn't anything special as a coverage ace.
The guy never started at LSU and was an afterthought that showed enough to make a team on ST.

He's Jeff Heath this year.

Thing is, you can find that guy, every single year. And they are disposable.

It is like Jerry is stuck in his concept that you need Kenny Gants, Joe Fishbacks, Jim Schwantzes and Elvis Pattersons to win.

It is almost like he identifies guys by prototypes. And this guy, got a very inflated reputation for being a ST guy.

Remember the strong tackles McCray has made? How about the one forced fumble that wins a game? Blocked punt? No?
 

Genghis Khan

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The guy never started at LSU and was an afterthought that showed enough to make a team on ST.

He's Jeff Heath this year.

Thing is, you can find that guy, every single year. And they are disposable.

It is like Jerry is stuck in his concept that you need Kenny Gants, Joe Fishbacks, Jim Schwantzes and Elvis Pattersons to win.

It is almost like he identifies guys by prototypes. And this guy, got a very inflated reputation for being a ST guy.

Remember the strong tackles McCray has made? How about the one forced fumble that wins a game? Blocked punt? No?

Africkingmen.
 

UncleMilti

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He has a nose for the ball, and speed. Something we haven't had back there for a long time.
 
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