Helman - Eberflus: Major Competition At Linebacker Spots

boozeman

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Eberflus: Major Competition At Linebacker Spots

Posted 46 minutes ago

David Helman

DallasCowboys.com Staff Writer

IRVING, Texas – A year ago at this time, the Cowboys’ linebacker corps seemed set in stone. With OTAs a week away and training camp on the horizon, that’s anything but the case in 2014.

A plethora of injuries, not to mention some shaky performances, decimated the position last season. Injuries to Sean Lee, Justin Durant and Ernie Sims forced the Cowboys to use their fourth option, DeVonte Holloman, at middle linebacker by the end of 2013, while converted defensive end Kyle Wilber spent a good chunk of the year in the strong side spot.

The problem was enough to prompt the Cowboys to draft two linebackers, including fourth-round pick Anthony Hitchens as a potential replacement for Lee, should the same circumstances befall them again.

“We lost our first one, second one, third one, had to play with our fourth one, which was Holloman, last year,” said linebackers coach Matt Eberflus during the team’s rookie minicamp. “So that was really the issue. Durant was always the backup, and Ernie after him and Holloman after him.”

Even if all the Cowboys’ linebackers can stay healthy, it’s doubtful the pecking order will remain as clear-cut this season. Lee’s neck injury in the second half of the season caused him to miss a large portion of the season for the second year in a row, while Bruce Carter failed to impress in what was expected to be a breakout year – a puzzling development.

It’s something you’d have to ask Bruce, and I know he’s working hard to put good days together and to build confidence and to build day-to-day and get better,” Eberflus said. “I know he’s grinding right now, and I know it’s important to him. So we’ll see if that translates to the games, but he’s just going to keep working his butt off.”

That leaves the Cowboys with about 10 players vying for playing time, and just one definitive starter in Lee – assuming he stays healthy. The rest is up for grabs. If the drafting of Hitchens and outside linebacker wasn’t hint enough, there has been plenty of conversation about the starting capability of Holloman, and Cowboys owner/general manager Jerry Jones has hinted at the possibility of trying Durant at the weak side, rather than strong.

“Those are internal matters – I’ll let Mr. Jones answer that. Like I said, we’re looking at the best three,” Eberflus said. “So the best three – one is one, two is two, and those two guys play all the time and three plays the other spot.”

Asked about the fact that a healthy Lee would undoubtedly be the top linebacker, Eberflus emphasized it for the other two spots: “So there’s a major competition there.”

That could mean anything, considering the availability of players at the position. Sims won’t return, but the rest of the 2013 linebackers are in place, along with the new additions in Hitchens and Smith.

“There’s a lot more pieces to be able to fit into the puzzle, there’s certainly that. No question,” Eberflus said.

Flexibility is bound to be a benefit in that situation, as well. The main talking point around Hitchens has been his ability to back up Lee, but he also played his entire Iowa career on the weak side. Eberflus added that Holloman has the ability to play all over the field.

“He’s a guy that I knew could play multiple positions if we needed him to. He understands space because he was an outside nickel and he used to play safety, so he’s good in that regard,” he said. “He’s got a lot of good things going for him, he’s just got to keep working and improving his game. Hopefully he makes the biggest jump, like most rookies do, from the first to second year.”

Regardless of whether it’s a rookie or a veteran, there are question marks aplenty at the position. Even the lone constant, Lee, comes with questions about his durability. Ahead of training camp, that has to be concerning, but if there’s a positive to be found, it’s going to foster quite the competition.

“There is a standard we need to play with, and everybody needs to be held up to that standard, and it’s our job as coaches to hold them to that standard,” Eberflus said. “I’m talking about effort, hustle, I’m talking about the physicalness we play with – those are the standards we play with, and everybody has to come up to the standard of that. If you don’t do that, then you won’t play.”
 

Cotton

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I like what I'm hearing. Love he talk about competition. Let's see if it carries any water.
 

UncleMilti

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Cowboys owner/general manager Jerry Jones has hinted at the possibility of trying Durant at the weak side, rather than strong.

“Those are internal matters – I’ll let Mr. Jones answer that.
:lol

Yeah, lets not ask the head coach, or see if the HEAD COACH wants to try Durant at Will LB.

Just more proof that Garrett is nothing more than a talking puppet for "Coach" Jones.
 

boozeman

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:lol

Yeah, lets not ask the head coach, or see if the HEAD COACH wants to try Durant at Will LB.

Just more proof that Garrett is nothing more than a talking puppet for "Coach" Jones.
That was a pretty telling statement.
 

Rev

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:lol

Yeah, lets not ask the head coach, or see if the HEAD COACH wants to try Durant at Will LB.

Just more proof that Garrett is nothing more than a talking puppet for "Coach" Jones.


And yet another reason why this idiot shouldn't be anything more than a scout team coach. Why anybody supports him in any fashion is beyond me. Its almost as if they support Jerry.
 

Clay_Allison

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Because our LBs are unproven. I was not impressed last year but cutting him leaves us exposed at the moment.
Considering his million dollar salary, I would have cut him back in march. He already lost his starting job to Wilber during the season and we have Holloman, Carter, and the rookies for depth.
 

ravidubey

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I wish they would make Sean Lee earn his goddamned damned job too.

With this flotsam as competition, he'll have no trouble, but he should be made uncomfortable for letting the team down every damned year.
 

Clay_Allison

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I wish they would make Sean Lee earn his goddamned damned job too.

With this flotsam as competition, he'll have no trouble, but he should be made uncomfortable for letting the team down every damned year.
That doesn't make any sense. Creating a competition between him and a bunch of players who are far inferior is going to do what exactly?

Let's create a competition between Witten and Escobust while we're doing silly things that are transparent and wouldn't be taken seriously on any team.
 

Rev

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Its not his fault he is brittle. If he was making Carter type mistakes then I would agree. This would serve no purpose.
 

ravidubey

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Its not his fault he is brittle.
This is not true. He can improve his strength and conditioning and focus on maintaining proper technique and being aware of dangers on the field. Mike Irvin had to do the same thing before finally staying healthy his fourth season.

Lee gets injured because his tackling technique and awareness slips when he flies into contact. His wrist jams directly into Mike Vick's helmet, someone lands on his foot while his foot is extended with his toe jammed into the turf, and his neck jams into a player-- all while tackling. He needs to be stronger, faster, more durable and to play with some fricking awareness of the dangers to his body.

These aren't fluke injuries. In each case Lee exposed himself to injury. Lee keeps doing the same shit and needs to be held accountable.
 

Clay_Allison

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This is not true. He can improve his strength and conditioning and focus on maintaining proper technique and being aware of dangers on the field. Mike Irvin had to do the same thing before finally staying healthy his fourth season.

Lee gets injured because his tackling technique and awareness slips when he flies into contact. His wrist jams directly into Mike Vick's helmet, someone lands on his foot while his foot is extended with his toe jammed into the turf, and his neck jams into a player-- all while tackling. He needs to be stronger, faster, more durable and to play with some fricking awareness of the dangers to his body.

These aren't fluke injuries. In each case Lee exposed himself to injury. Lee keeps doing the same shit and needs to be held accountable.
That's going to be on the coaches to get him to use better technique then. He's always seemed to have the right attitude, Eberflus needs to get him working on having better mechanics when tackling. There's no sense in playing silly games when you need something done that's clearly straightforward.
 

ravidubey

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That's going to be on the coaches to get him to use better technique then. He's always seemed to have the right attitude, Eberflus needs to get him working on having better mechanics when tackling. There's no sense in playing silly games when you need something done that's clearly straightforward.
I almost wrote "could" instead of "would" and I let my anger get the better of me. Dallas can't challenge Lee since they have no one anywhere close to his caliber capable of challenging him since they decided to draft his backup with a draft pick that could have been a starter.
 

Clay_Allison

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I almost wrote "could" instead of "would" and I let my anger get the better of me. Dallas can't challenge Lee since they have no one anywhere close to his caliber capable of challenging him since they decided to draft his backup with a draft pick that could have been a starter.
If Carter had played up to his athleticism in 2013 instead of looking lost and confused they could threaten to swap them or make Lee compete with him for the starting spot at MLB (essentially threatening to move Lee to a reduced coverage role if he couldn't play smarter football with his body). But the idea of Carter or any of the other C quality LBs competing for the Mike position is pretty laughable.
 

boozeman

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If Carter had played up to his athleticism in 2013 instead of looking lost and confused they could threaten to swap them or make Lee compete with him for the starting spot at MLB (essentially threatening to move Lee to a reduced coverage role if he couldn't play smarter football with his body). But the idea of Carter or any of the other C quality LBs competing for the Mike position is pretty laughable.
How could he "play up to his athleticism"?

It is pretty clear the mental responsibilities of playing WOLB in this system was too much for him.

I honestly think he's in his last year here if we continue with this variant of the 4-3 going forward.
 

Clay_Allison

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How could he "play up to his athleticism"?

It is pretty clear the mental responsibilities of playing WOLB in this system was too much for him.

I honestly think he's in his last year here if we continue with this variant of the 4-3 going forward.
I'm still holding on a tiny bit to the flashes he showed in 2012 in the 3-4. Maybe he can't transition at all, but there's a small possibility he might get it in his second year in the 4-3.
 

boozeman

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I'm still holding on a tiny bit to the flashes he showed in 2012 in the 3-4. Maybe he can't transition at all, but there's a small possibility he might get it in his second year in the 4-3.
I think playing WILB in a 3-4 is less mentally taxing and a lower level of responsibility than the ROLB in the Tampa system.
 

ravidubey

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I think playing WILB in a 3-4 is less mentally taxing and a lower level of responsibility than the ROLB in the Tampa system.
I totally agree. The ILB's in a 3-4 are probably the least athletic defensive players overall with the smallest range of responsibilities. If you can't succeed at either of those spots, then the NFL ain't for you.
 
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