Phillips - Questions & Answers: Many Decisions to Make at Cornerback

boozeman

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Questions & Answers: Many Decisions to Make at Cornerback


Tuesday, April 14, 2015 5:10 PM CDT


By Rob Phillips

IRVING, Texas – The position’s highest-paid player, Brandon Carr, may or may not be on the team by training camp.

The 2012 sixth overall draft pick, Mo Claiborne, is coming off two knee surgeries since October.

The solid nickel guy from last season, Sterling Moore, is no longer here.

As things stand in mid-April, just over two weeks from opening draft night, there’s no question about it: The Cowboys’ cornerback situation has far more questions than answers.

Let’s take a look at what we know and what we expect to learn by the time the club heads west for training camp in late July:

Orlando Scandrick

What We Know: Scandrick played his best football yet in 2014 and established himself as the most consistent corner on the roster. Once viewed as a potential mid-round draft steal in 2008, he’s now the longest-tenured player on defense following Anthony Spencer’s departure to the Saints last week. Scandrick has made himself into a Pro Bowl-caliber player with excellent technique, study habits and work ethic -- and he makes defensive coordinator Rod Marinelli’s job much easier because he can cover outside as well as the slot in sub-packages.



Still Need To Know: If Scandrick will be playing alongside his trusted veteran teammate, Brandon Carr, or working with a much younger crop of corners next season. Regardless, Scandrick will gain even more national attention if he can build on last year’s career-high tying two interceptions. Because he reads and reacts to routes so well, most of the time he’s in the right position for the deflection or the pick.

Brandon Carr

What We Know: Although he has two years left on the whopping five-year, $50.1 million free agent contract he signed in 2012, Carr’s future in Dallas appears to be in flux. This much is certain: As presently constructed, the Cowboys could use an experienced starter like Carr playing opposite fellow seven-year veteran Scandrick. On the other hand, Carr’s $12.7 million salary cap figure for 2015 is steep. Carr performed much better over the final month, going toe-to-toe with Calvin Johnson and Jordy Nelson in the playoffs, but the Cowboys need more throughout a full season. He has six interceptions in three years, including none in 2014.


Still Need To Know: What will the Cowboys do with Carr? His agent has reportedly said that his client won’t take a pay cut. If the Cowboys released Carr now, they wouldn’t save much while creating roughly $12 million in dead money on this year’s cap. If they designated him a post-June 1 cut, they’d save his $8 million base salary but create nearly $13 million in dead money over the next two years. The longer the offseason goes, the fewer opportunities Carr will have to find a deal better than any pay cut he might take from the Cowboys. We’ll see.

Morris Claiborne

What We Know: The Cowboys still have hopes for their embattled 2012 sixth overall pick, but roadblocks remain: Claiborne hasn’t played well consistently when he’s been healthy, and now he’s working his way back from surgery last fall to repair a season-ending torn patellar tendon in his left knee, as well as a scope to his right knee. He has appeared in only 29 of 50 possible games including the postseason, tallying 88 tackles and three interceptions.


Still Need To Know: Claiborne’s progress by the time camp gets underway this summer. Given his injury rehab and Carr’s contract uncertainty, the Cowboys could be looking at corner relatively early on draft weekend. The club also has until May 3 to officially decide whether or not to pick up the fifth-year option on Claiborne’s rookie deal; he’s currently under contract through 2015.

Corey White

What We Know: Unwilling to give Moore a significant salary bump in 2015, the Cowboys instead claimed White off waivers from the Saints in mid-March. White, a three-year veteran, started 19 games in New Orleans with four interceptions.

Still Need To Know: If White can fill Moore’s spot in sub-packages. His experience in the slot could add some versatility for Marinelli’s scheme, and he also has experience at safety.

Tyler Patmon

What We Know: From his preseason pick-six to his regular-season pick-six in a Nov. 2 win over Arizona, Patmon emerged from obscurity to become a surprise playmaker in the Cowboys’ secondary. Undrafted out of Oklahoma State, Patmon caught the coaches’ attention as an invite to rookie minicamp, made the 53-man roster and became a solid contributor in sub-packages after Claiborne went down.


Still Need To Know: If Patmon can win a camp battle and earn a spot in the rotation again. He’s a natural ballhawk who isn’t afraid to take chances, but polishing up his fundamentals will help him establish more consistency going forward.

Others to Watch

Robert Steeples: The Cowboys signed Steeples to the practice squad in November after he spent training camp with the Chiefs and appeared in two games for the Vikings the previous season. Steeples has good size for the position (6-1) but will likely have to contribute on multiple special teams to win a job this summer.
 

boozeman

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Five to Fit: Deep CB Class Offers Several Possible First-Round Options


Tuesday, April 14, 2015 2:52 PM CDT


By Nick Eatman


DallasCowboys.com Staff Writer



@nickeatman

(Editor’s Note: The staff of DallasCowboys.com is currently previewing the depth chart at each position on the Cowboys’ roster. The biggest remaining variable in determining that depth chart is the NFL Draft, which begins April 30. This series will identify five potential draft picks who could affect the depth chart at each position. Today, we continue with cornerbacks.)

IRVING, Texas – The Cowboys certainly have plenty of question marks at the cornerback position. In fact, some will say it’s the most pressing need heading into the draft at the end of the month.

While Orlando Scandrick has emerged as one of the top cover corners in the league, Brandon Carr’s contract situation remains up in the air. Morris Claiborne is a question mark on both the injury front and his ability to contribute as a reliable starter.

So the Cowboys will likely address the position once or maybe twice in the draft.:doh

Here’s a look at five players in the early, middle and late rounds:

Kevin Johnson, Wake Forest – He’s considered by many as the second-best cornerback in the draft behind Michigan State’s Trae Waynes, who should go in the Top 15 picks. Johnson is a smooth, lanky cornerback with great coverage skills but also has the awareness that will lead to big plays and interceptions. Being there at No. 27 is iffy as the Cowboys might have to move up a little to land him.

Marcus Peters, Washington – After Waynes, Peters might be the most talented of this year’s cornerback class and even that might be debatable. Peters had some character concerns after being kicked off Washington’s team last year. But ability-wise, he’s more than worthy of a first-round pick. The Cowboys have done their homework on Peters, who had at least three interceptions in all three seasons for the Huskies, totaling 11 picks. If he’s around at No. 27, Peters would offer great value for the pick.

Byron Jones, UConn – If he’s drafted to the Cowboys, Jones immediately becomes one of the team’s best pure athletes, if not the best. The NFL Combine phenom is a great example how amazing workouts alone can skyrocket a player’s value. Jones set a combine record with a 12’3 broad jump and out-jumped all other defenders with a 44-inch vertical leap. His 4.4 time in the 40 at his Pro Day didn’t hurt his stock at all, and neither does his ability to play both safety and corner. Jones is not only versatile but extremely athletic and could sneak his way into the first round.

Alex Carter, Stanford – A solid starter for the Cardinal, Carter could be a candidate for the Cowboys at No. 60 in the second round if they don’t grab one in the first. He might even slide into the third as well. Carter is a physical corner who likes to jam receivers at the line and also shows great awareness skills to play different schemes. His speed isn’t elite, which is one reason he’s not considered a first-day pick but good enough to have his name called on Day 2.

Damian Swann, Georgia – Even if the Cowboys draft a corner in the first or second round, don’t be surprise if they land a couple of corners. A late-round option would be Swann, who is much more physical than his 180-pound frame suggests. He started three years for Georgia who isn’t afraid to mix it up. Should be a good special teams player right away.
 

ravidubey

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Hoping for one of the better pass rushers to fall. It's the only position this team acknowledges above CB.

They won't take Gurley, not with the RB position depth available.
 

boozeman

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Hoping for one of the better pass rushers to fall. It's the only position this team acknowledges above CB.
I think they are pretty much wired into taking a CB in the first round as sickening as that is.

They can always justify passing on DE because of Hardy.

I am especially disturbed that we do not appear to be taking the DT position and the interior pass rush seriously.
 

VA Cowboy

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Kevin Johnson and Marcus Peters are the only viable first rounders at 27. Johnson seems rather blah and Peters has off field issues. So yeah, we'll probably take Byron Jones.
 

boozeman

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Kevin Johnson and Marcus Peters are the only viable first rounders at 27. Johnson seems rather blah and Peters has off field issues. So yeah, we'll probably take Byron Jones.
Jones is a workout freak that scares me a bit. Haven't watched him but apparently his tape shows he can play.

My thing is, at UConn, who the eff could have matched up with him athletically?
 

VA Cowboy

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Jones is a workout freak that scares me a bit. Haven't watched him but apparently his tape shows he can play.

My thing is, at UConn, who the eff could have matched up with him athletically?
He's probably a mid 2nd rounder but it wouldn't surprise me if we took the underwear olympic champion in the first.
 

Simpleton

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I'd be happy with Carter or Shaw in the 3rd and/or Swann or a guy like Diggs late, much happier than I would be with the workout warrior, coach choker or the guy who only started 10 games in college in the 1st.
 

hstour

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I think they are pretty much wired into taking a CB in the first round as sickening as that is.

They can always justify passing on DE because of Hardy.

I am especially disturbed that we do not appear to be taking the DT position and the interior pass rush seriously.
Curious as to why that is sickening.

You don't know how Mo will come back from the patella injury and Carr hasn't shown his worth.

Drafting a CB high puts pressure on Carr to take a pay cut and sends Mo a signal that he better get on the field and step up.

I know that DLine can help a defensive backfield. But right now you have Hardy (minus 2 games which I think that will be the end result), Brent, Crawford and Lawrence. With Mincey, Boatright, Gardner in DE rotation and Hayden, McClain, Bishop and Whaley in the DT rotation.

I KNOW that's not optimal, but you have more there than you have at CB with Patmon, Spillman, Steeples and White as backups/rotational players. Especially since you won't know until training camp if Mo can even go.
 

ravidubey

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They need a CB, and the end of the first is as good as anywhere to draft one.

Just get a good one for a change.
 

Cowboysrock55

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I think they are pretty much wired into taking a CB in the first round as sickening as that is.

They can always justify passing on DE because of Hardy.
Our one hope is that in order for us to bite the bullet and take a corner in the first Jerry basically has to admit that Claiborne sucks. Seems like our organization has been clinging to the idea that he could still be a real player. If we draft one in the first that is a clear sign we have moved on.
 

boozeman

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Our one hope is that in order for us to bite the bullet and take a corner in the first Jerry basically has to admit that Claiborne sucks. Seems like our organization has been clinging to the idea that he could still be a real player. If we draft one in the first that is a clear sign we have moved on.
Yeah, but he has the injury issues that are also forcing the circumstance. Jones came out and admitted he thought he had "earned" the fifth year option, so he is not admitting failure. This just hasn't worked out because of injury, gosh darn it, dagnabbit.
 

ravidubey

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Our one hope is that in order for us to bite the bullet and take a corner in the first Jerry basically has to admit that Claiborne sucks. Seems like our organization has been clinging to the idea that he could still be a real player. If we draft one in the first that is a clear sign we have moved on.
You can never have too many :)

As for Claiborne, Jerral still isn't ready to let go of that bone. Drafting a CB allows them to release Carr.
 
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