DMN: The top 14 Cowboys draft blunders since 2000

Cotton

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Akwasi Owusu-Ansah (who?) over Kam Chancellor? The top 14 Cowboys draft blunders since 2000

By SportsDayDFW.com
Every NFL team can longingly look through its draft history and wonder what could've been. The Cowboys are no exception.

Since the turn of the century, Jerry Jones & Co. have made some decisions on draft day that are likely to leave Cowboys fans slapping their foreheads in hindsight.

With all due respect, we'll let the players from the 2014 and 2015 drafts develop a little more before rushing to any judgments.

Here's a look at the Cowboys' 14 biggest draft blunders since 2000.

2001: Tony Dixon over Adrian Wilson

This might go down as one of the worst drafts in Cowboys history. Most remember the infamous Quincy Carter pick at No. 53, but fewer remember that Alabama S Tony Dixon came to the Cowboys just three picks later. Dixon made 15 starts in five seasons with the Cowboys before being shown the door. The next safety came off the board just eight picks later when the Cardinals took Adrian Wilson, who was a cornerstone of the Arizona defense for 12 years. He had more than 700 career tackles and five Pro Bowl appearances.

2003: Terence Newman over Troy Polamalu


A bowl-game hamstring injury may have scared teams off Polamalu, who went to Pittsburgh in the first round with the 16th overall pick. The Cowboys passed early, taking cornerback Terence Newman with the fifth choice. It's hard to knock Newman's performance with the Cowboys, but Polamalu was an eight-time Pro Bowler, the Defensive Player of the Year in 2010 and a member of the NFL's 2000s All-Decade Team.

2004: Bruce Thornton over Jared Allen

After going offensive with their first three picks, the Cowboys finally addressed the defense by taking Thornton, a CB out of Georgia, in the fourth round. But he made just one appearance with the team and lasted only two years in the NFL. The Vikings snagged Allen five picks later, while the Cowboys, who were still playing in a 4-3 base defense at the time, stuck with a 29-year-old Greg Ellis and a 30-year-old Marcellus Wiley as their DEs. Allen finished his 12-year career with 136 career sacks and named to the Pro Bowl five times.

2006: Bobby Carpenter over Tamba Hali

Linebacker Bobby Carpenter, the 18th overall pick in 2006, might qualify as the worst of the Cowboys' first-round picks in this century. He was ill-equipped to play inside as planned and had only three starts in four years with the Cowboys. Hali went to Kansas City two picks later. His career? Well, he's been a starter for 10 seasons with the Chiefs, racking up 86 sacks since.

2006: Anthony Fasano over Devin Hester

Fasano, No. 53 overall, was a Bill Parcells pick all the way. He was supposed to fill a substantial role as an H-back, but Fasano made all of 28 catches in two years before the Cowboys shipped him to Miami. Hester, who went just four picks later to the Bears, is the most electric return man in NFL history and has had an underrated career as a receiver, too. To add insult to injury, the Cowboys tried to draft a kick returner two rounds later -- LSU's Skyler Green -- but he didn't even make the team.

2006: Skyler Green over Elvis Dumervil

The Cowboys took Green out of LSU 125th overall, hoping he could be a deep threat at receiver and a star as a kick returner. Dumervil, who was tremendously productive in college but was thought to be undersized, went to Denver with the very next pick. He's accrued 96 sacks since joining the league in 2006 while Green couldn't even make the Cowboys' roster in preseason.

2007: James Marten over Marshal Yanda

Looking to add depth to their offensive line, the Cowboys picked tackle James Marten from Boston College with the 67th overall pick in '07. He never appeared in a game with the Cowboys, and made all of one appearance in a three-year NFL career. Later in the third round, Baltimore took Iowa tackle Marshal Yanda No. 86 overall. The Ravens moved Yanda inside to guard, where he's become one of the NFL's best. Yanda is a stalwart on the Baltimore line and has earned trips to five straight Pro Bowls.

2008: Felix Jones over Chris Johnson

In '08, the Cowboys wanted a running back to complement Marion Barber's bruising style, so they used the 22nd overall pick on Arkansas' Felix Jones. But Johnson, who flew up draft boards after a blistering performance at the NFL Combine, went two picks later to Tennessee. In eight years, Johnson has 9,442 career rushing yards and an NFL rushing title. Jones had just 2,728 career yards in five years with the Cowboys, and never broke the 1,000 yard barrier.

2008: Martellus Bennett over Jamaal Charles

In 2008, the Cowboys wanted more weapons to plug into then-OC Jason Garrett's game plan. With the 61st pick, the Cowboys opted for Bennett, who never had more than 283 receiving yards in a season and didn't account for a TD in his final three years in Dallas. Twelve picks later, the Chiefs landed Charles, a four-time Pro Bowl running back who's averaging 5.5 yards per carry for his career. And while we could point out that the Cowboys had already picked a RB in this draft (Felix Jones in the 1st), Dallas used its very next pick on another back -- Tashard Choice -- anyway, so Charles doesn't seem like a ridiculous choice.

2009: Robert Brewster over Louis Vasquez

The 2009 draft is a dark spot on the Cowboys' resume. The choice of OT Robert Brewster (75th overall) typifies this draft. Brewster made one appearance in two years before being cut. San Diego used the 78th pick on guard Louis Vasquez, of Corsicana. He started all 54 games he was healthy for in a four-year career with the Chargers before signing with Broncos and helping them to the Super Bowl.

2010: Akwasi Owusu-Ansah over Kam Chancellor

The Cowboys drafted Owusu-Ansah, a cornerback out of Division II Indiana Univertiy of Pennyslvania, in the fourth round as they hoped to bolster their secondary depth. Owusu-Ansah played in just 10 games as a return man with the Cowboys before he was cut. Seven picks later the Seahawks took Chancellor, a safety out of the more established Virginia Tech. Chancellor has been a starter for the Seahawks for the past five seasons and has been named to the Pro Bowl in four out of those five seasons.

2011: Josh Thomas over Richard Sherman

The Cowboys selected Thomas in the fifth-round. He never played a game for Dallas. In that same round Seattle chose Sherman, who was a mainstay on Seattle's Legion of Boom defense that helped the Seahawks win a Super Bowl and appear in another. Sherman has played in every single one of the Seahawks' games since he entered the league, and he's been named to the Pro Bowl three years straight.

2012: Morris Claiborne over Luke Kuechly

Dallas traded up from No. 14 to select Claiborne at No. 6 overall.. While Claiborne has had a tumultuous career, Kuechly, whom the Panthers took three spots later, has been a Pro Bowler and a first-team All Pro in each of the last three years. Kuechly came back to haunt the Cowboys this Thanksgiving, intercepting Tony Romo twice. He also helped lead Carolina to the Super Bowl this past season.

2013: Gavin Escobar over Le'Veon Bell

The Cowboys were searching for another offensive weapon in 2013 when they took Escobar in the hopes he'd eventually be Jason Witten's replacement. That hasn't worked out too well, as he's managed just 303 receiving yards and seven touchdowns in his first three seasons. Bell went with the next pick and would've been a nice replacement to (or backfield mate with) DeMarco Murray as he finished third to Murray and LeSean McCoy for the rushing title in 2014 with 1,361 yards. Injuries hampered him in 2015, but who knows if he would've held up better behind the Cowboys' stellar offensive line?
 

boozeman

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What is very apparent from that list is that we can't evaluate defensive backs worth a shit.
 

data

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1. Quincy Carter
2. Bobby Carpenter
3. Morris Claiborne
4. Gavin Escobar

Top 4 worst. Terence Newman at least was consistent starter. TRRW trade is up there, but doesn't get Top 4 as at least TRRW made some logical sense despite high price. My Top 4 were doomed from the get go.
 

Simpleton

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The Ezekiel Elliott pick reminds me a lot of Kuechly in an odd way, conventional logic would say you don't take a non pass-rushing LB in the top 10 or so but you go where the talent takes you, and in this case Kuechly seems like a certain future HOFer.
 

boozeman

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The two that blew me away were Tony Dixon and Robert Brewster.

Both were such out of the blue incredible reaches it was like getting kicked right in the nuts after the pick was made.
 

GForce78NJ

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What is very apparent from that list is that we can't evaluate defensive backs worth a shit.
You noticed Defensive backs, my first impression was our TE's. If Witten didn't fall into our laps in 2003 I could only imagine how many more draft picks would have been spent on TEs
 

lostxn

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You noticed Defensive backs, my first impression was our TE's. If Witten didn't fall into our laps in 2003 I could only imagine how many more draft picks would have been spent on TEs
Fasano was a decent player and Tellus is a very good, albeit moronic, player. The problem was doubling down on a position of strength when there were other needs.
 

GForce78NJ

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Fasano was a decent player and Tellus is a very good, albeit moronic, player. The problem was doubling down on a position of strength when there were other needs.
Fasano was a serviceable backup his entire career pushed into starting roles. Marty B is a good Tight End but we drafted him when we knew Witten had about 5-7 years left. Stupid all around
 

Simpleton

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Garrett is the primary person I blame for this idiotic TE fetish, his idiocy was just amplified by Jerry's inherited TE fetish from Parcells, although it seems that Jerry has told Garrett to go fuck himself in that regard since the Escobar pick.

We all know the deal with Fasano, big Italian TE, similar name to Bavaro, you can't expect Parcells to contain himself on that one.

But considering the fact that Garrett pouted like a little baby bitch when we didn't take Eifert in 2013 (and thank good Christ we didn't), and then Jerry had to appease him with following up with Escobar in the 2nd, I'm blaming him for Bennett and obviously Escobar.

The ironic thing is I wouldn't mind us taking a TE as high as the 2nd considering Witten's age, or perhaps even the late 1st if a guy like OJ Howard stamps himself as that level of prospect, it's just a shame that we've spent so many prime resources on the position over the past decade.
 

Cowboysrock55

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Garrett is the primary person I blame for this idiotic TE fetish, his idiocy was just amplified by Jerry's inherited TE fetish from Parcells, although it seems that Jerry has told Garrett to go fuck himself in that regard since the Escobar pick.
Seems like Escobar was sort of the last straw. Jerry really didn't want to make that pick and since Escobar has basically been an after thought in the offense Jerry is probably pissed.
 

1bigfan13

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The two that really bothered/frustrated me were the Sklyer Green and Gavin Escobar picks.

IIRC, during that 2006 draft the Cowboys used their first pick at the top of the 4th round to target a ST specialist in Green. What made it worse to me was back then rounds 1-3 were conducted on Saturday.....teams then took a break for the night to regroup and hammer out rounds 4-7 the following day. So our brain trust had all night to think long and hard about finding a solid player at the top of the 4th round yet they still came to the conclusion that a guy who was a marginal WR at LSU was the right guys to go with.

The Escobar deal bothered me because we were once again wasting a 2nd round pick that would rarely be utilized. The pick could have been used on a number of other positions to get better value and production for the team. And here we are 3 years later and to know one's surprise, Escobar is nothing more than a bit role player.
 
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Rev

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Skyler Green won me a jersey so I love that pick.
 

1bigfan13

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Garrett is the primary person I blame for this idiotic TE fetish, his idiocy was just amplified by Jerry's inherited TE fetish from Parcells, although it seems that Jerry has told Garrett to go fuck himself in that regard since the Escobar pick.

We all know the deal with Fasano, big Italian TE, similar name to Bavaro, you can't expect Parcells to contain himself on that one.

But considering the fact that Garrett pouted like a little baby bitch when we didn't take Eifert in 2013 (and thank good Christ we didn't), and then Jerry had to appease him with following up with Escobar in the 2nd, I'm blaming him for Bennett and obviously Escobar.

The ironic thing is I wouldn't mind us taking a TE as high as the 2nd considering Witten's age, or perhaps even the late 1st if a guy like OJ Howard stamps himself as that level of prospect, it's just a shame that we've spent so many prime resources on the position over the past decade.
You know, I never thought of it that way but I think you're right. Garrett's arrival to the Cowboys correlates with the emerging/ongoing TE fetish.
 

Rev

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How'd he win you a jersey? Fantasy football?
It was on here during that draft. Contest to guess who the cowboys drafted. I won with 2 correct choices. Green and Carpenter. I should have picked Fasano with Parcells being the coach but had a brain fart.
 

bbgun

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Mario Edwards over Tom Brady seems to qualify as a miss.
 

GForce78NJ

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DeVonte Holloman over Theo Riddick. Granted Holloman's career was cut short but still
 

Jiggyfly

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The two that really bothered/frustrated me were the Sklyer Green and Gavin Escobar picks.

IIRC, during that 2006 draft the Cowboys used their first pick at the top of the 4th round to target a ST specialist in Green. What made it worse to me was back then rounds 1-3 were conducted on Saturday.....teams then took a break for the night to regroup and hammer out rounds 4-7 the following day. So our brain trust had all night to think long and hard about finding a solid player at the top of the 4th round yet they still came to the conclusion that a guy who was a marginal WR at LSU was the right guys to go with.

The Escobar deal bothered me because we were once again wasting a 2nd round pick that would rarely be utilized. The pick could have been used on a number of other positions to get better value and production for the team. And here we are 3 years later and to know one's surprise, Escobar is nothing more than a bit role player.
Parcells would try and be cute alot about drafting certain players as well as forcing picks because the player fit certain criteria.
 
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