Cowboys release Ezekiel Elliott: It was right move as strong free agency continues
By
Jon Machota
3h ago
Last August, Jerry Jones was a guest on ESPN’s First Take. The morning sports debate show had a stage set up in front of The Star in Frisco, Texas.
With
Cowboys fans gathered in the background, the team’s owner and general manager raved about three-time Pro Bowl running back
Ezekiel Elliott.
“He’s in the best shape he’s ever been in,” Jones said. “Now, it is still a fact, we go as Zeke goes.”
It was almost as if Jones was trying to speak it into existence. He wanted to believe that the 27-year-old Elliott was the same player who helped carry the team from 2016 through 2019, winning two rushing titles along the way. As the 2022 season unfolded, it was clear that the Cowboys’ rushing success was more about
Tony Pollard, who made his first Pro Bowl, than Elliott. For the first time in his seven seasons, Elliott didn’t finish as the team’s leading rusher.
Standing outside of the Cowboys’ AT&T Stadium locker room after an impressive 49-29 win over the
Chicago Bears on Oct. 30, Jones talked to reporters about how the team was still going as Zeke goes. Elliott sat the game out with a knee injury. Pollard had a career day, carrying 14 times for 131 yards and three touchdowns.
And then there was the
NFL Scouting Combine earlier this month. Jones spoke with reporters for 90 minutes about a variety of Cowboys-related topics. When the conversation turned to Elliott, Jones spoke about him being a difference-maker last season and how they could make it work financially to keep Pollard and Elliott.
The following week
Pollard received the franchise tag, locking him in for the 2023 season. On Wednesday, Jones made the difficult decision to
finally move on from Elliott.
“We have mutually agreed with Zeke that the best decision for everyone is that he will be able to experience free agency,”
Jones said in a statement, “and we can increase our flexibility and options as well. This is one of the toughest parts of operating a team. Moments like this come, and extremely difficult decisions and choices are made. For the franchise. For me personally. For players, too. We will always have a special place and love for Zeke and what he means to our Cowboys family, both as a person and a player. That will never change.”
This was the right move.
Elliott was scheduled to count $16.7 million against the 2023 salary cap. Designating him as a post-June 1 release will save the Cowboys about $11 million against the cap. He will count about $6 million in dead money next year.
https://theathletic.com/4311388/2023/03/15/cowboys-free-agency-nfl-draft-strategy/
If he was still producing like one of the league’s best backs, the Cowboys would’ve found a way to keep him on the roster. But for a team that needs more juice on offense, they could no longer afford to pay elite running back money to a player whose rushing average has been declining and injuries have been increasing.
“Zeke’s impact and influence is seared into the Cowboys franchise in a very special and indelible way,” Jones also said in the statement. “He has been a consummate professional and leader that set a tone in our locker room, on the practice field and in the huddle. Zeke defined what a great teammate should be, and anyone that has ever played a team sport would be lucky to have a teammate like Zeke and be much better for it.
“His commitment and passion for winning is selfless, and the accountability he brings everyday earned the respect of our coaches, his teammates and our entire organization. He wore the Cowboys Star with pride and purpose every single time he put it on, and we’re a better franchise because of the example he set for veterans and rookies alike. That carried over into our community as well, with Zeke’s generosity and spirit about giving and caring for others.”
Ezekiel Elliott's rushing stats
YEAR | G | ATT | YDS | YPC | YPG | TD |
---|
2016 | 15 | 322 | 1,631 | 5.1 | 108.7 | 15 |
2017 | 10 | 242 | 983 | 4.1 | 98.3 | 7 |
2018 | 15 | 304 | 1,434 | 4.7 | 95.6 | 6 |
2019 | 16 | 301 | 1,357 | 4.5 | 84.8 | 12 |
2020 | 15 | 244 | 979 | 4.0 | 65.3 | 6 |
2021 | 17 | 237 | 1,002 | 4.2 | 58.9 | 10 |
2022 | 15 | 231 | 876 | 3.8 | 58.4 | 12 |
TOTAL | 103 | 1,881 | 8,262 | 4.4 | 80.2 | 68 |
Elliott leaves the franchise in third place on the all-time rushing leaders list at 8,262 yards. Emmitt Smith is first at 17,162. Tony Dorsett is second at 12,036. Elliott is also third on the franchise’s total touchdowns list with 80. Smith is first at 164, followed by Dorsett at 86.
The next step will likely be to find another starting-caliber running back in next month’s draft. The Cowboys have until July 17 to work out a contract extension with Pollard, who turns 26 in April. If not, he will play under the tag, meaning about $10 million guaranteed for the season.
Running back is a young man’s game. The Cowboys have received outstanding production from running backs on their rookie contracts. Elliott was a top-five pick. Pollard was drafted in the fourth round. DeMarco Murray was selected in the third. Those three have been Dallas’ leading rushers in 12 of the past 13 seasons.
The
top running backs in this year’s draft are Texas’ Bijan Robinson and Alabama’s Jahmyr Gibbs. Those are likely the only two the Cowboys would consider if still on the board at Pick 26.
But there are a bunch of other options in Rounds 2 and 3. The rest of this group of running backs were all ranked among
Dane Brugler’s Top 100 players in this draft class: Texas A&M’s Devon Achane, UCLA’s Zach Charbonnet, Auburn’s Tank Bigsby, Texas’ Roschon Johnson, Tulane’s Tyjae Spears, Ole Miss’s Zach Evans, Oklahoma’s Eric Gray and TCU’s Kendre Miller.
Releasing Elliott and getting younger and cheaper at the position makes so much sense for the Cowboys. And judging by how the first few days of free agency have gone, Dallas deserves its share of praise. The Cowboys have
traded for an accomplished Pro Bowl veteran starting cornerback in
Stephon Gilmore. They have re-signed defensive starters
Donovan Wilson and
Leighton Vander Esch. They have also retained OT
Tyron Smith on a more affordable contract.
What should be next?
Find a way to acquire a starting wide receiver to complement
CeeDee Lamb and
Michael Gallup, add some depth to the defensive line and interior of the offensive line.
Do that and even the harshest of critics would have to give Jones some credit.