JJT: Dez Bryant in a perfect place

Cotton

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Dez Bryant in a perfect place

Receiver had a quiet offseason, which is exactly what the Cowboys hoped for
Updated: July 19, 2013, 12:14 PM ET
By Jean-Jacques Taylor | ESPNDallas.com

OXNARD, Calif. -- This was the offseason Dez Bryant needed after his phenomenal end to last season.

No embarrassing YouTube videos. No incidents with the police. No lawsuits. No baby mama drama.

Nothing. At all.

Perfect.

So give Bryant plenty of credit for recognizing he needed to change some aspects of his life, and give the Dallas Cowboys credit for putting him on such a strict behavioral program that Bryant was either going to change or find another employer.

All of this is good because it's allowing Bryant to maximize his potential as he heads into his fourth training camp -- his first as the Cowboys' best player.

Not the best offensive player. Or the best defensive player.

He is the Cowboys' best player.

Don't even try to argue.

Right now, Bryant is the Cowboys' most dynamic player, the dude most likely to change a game's momentum or deliver a game-changing play.

Listen to Bryant, and what he says these days makes sense.

The initial reaction, of course, is to hand out backslaps and talk about how much he's matured. That requires no insight.

What this offseason means is that the impulsive player we've seen the past three seasons seems to truly understand that consequences exist for every decision he makes.

It's either going to be good or bad, but there's going to be a consequence. For most of us, this is elementary.

But Bryant didn't grow up like most of us. He grew up in a world without many boundaries, about 185 miles southeast of Dallas in Lufkin, Texas. And the reality is Bryant's talent was so immense that even when he screwed up, boundaries rarely existed.

So, perhaps, we shouldn't be surprised that Bryant struggled to adjust to professional football.

Now, he's poised to become one of the game's best receivers and turn in the best season a Cowboys receiver has ever had.

He's studying to be great, which is different from knowing the playbook.

Bryant has spent this offseason studying Jerry Rice's slant-and-go, Michael Irvin's skinny post and Pittsburgh Steelers receiver Antonio Brown's dig route. Bryant's goal is to be a complete receiver who can handle every route on the route tree, making him close to unstoppable.

He's spent the offseason training his body with Sunday afternoon workouts at the middle school around the corner from his DeSoto home, and with late-night sessions on the step mill for an hour at a time, so he can run as fast in the fourth quarter as he does in the first quarter.

Bryant has made improving his rapport with Tony Romo a priority, so he can forge the same type of relationship with his quarterback that Irvin had with Troy Aikman.

"It's my job to get on the same page with Tony. It's not his job to get on the page with me," Bryant said. "We added a new screen in the offseason and after we ran it the first time in practice, I went over to Tony and asked him if he liked the route.

"He wasn't even practicing, but I wanted him to know that it's important that I run the routes the way he wants me to run them -- not the way I want to run them."

See, this guy is all about the details.

When he runs the slant-and-go, he turns his head on the slant -- what better way to sell it? -- before planting his foot and zooming past the defensive back. He's worked on how to deftly maneuver in front of defensive backs on deep balls by using his physical stature without pushing off.

And he's practiced making all of his routes look the same until it's time for him to make his first cut.

Bryant finished with 92 catches for 1,382 yards and 12 touchdowns last season. He caught eight touchdown passes of 20 yards or more.

No one else had more than five.

Improve the way most folks think he will, and Bryant's name will be in the same conversation with Detroit's Calvin Johnson, Houston's Andre Johnson and Arizona's Larry Fitzgerald at the end of the season.

That's why he turned down an opportunity to spend a weekend in Las Vegas with a friend, a local cardiologist -- because he didn't want to miss a date with the step mill to hang out on The Strip.

Understand, he's still a 25-year-old dude who likes to go clubbing and slay Internet foes in video games such as "Madden" and "NBA 2K."

Perfection doesn't exist for any of us. Bryant might have another embarrassing incident one day, but if his current behavior continues. we'll view it as an aberration.

Bryant has decided he wants to be a great player -- not just talk about it. You can tell from his actions.

The Cowboys benefit.
 

ravidubey

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Hard to argue against Bryant being considered Dallas' best player. Who scares you when you think of the Cowboys? No one on the defense, not after Ware started falling apart. It comes down to Bryant, Romo, and Witten on the offense. And while Witten is a serious mismatch and the lubrication for the Cowboy offense in the middle of the field, you're not worried about his breakaway speed or redzone scoring-- the real threat.

So it's really Romo and Bryant that threaten the other team. We've seen each dominate games both with and without each other on the field. Dallas is fortunate to have its two best players at the two most important positions on the field in the modern NFL.
 

Carp

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Umm...Witten is the lubrication for the offense? You've out wordsmithed yourself.
 

mcnuttz

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So if Witten comes off the field, WE'RE GOIN IN DRY!?!?!?
 

Texas Ace

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Bryant is probably the only thing I'm excited about going into this season.

He's going to have a monstrous year.
 

Smitty

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Bryant is probably the only thing I'm excited about going into this season.

He's going to have a monstrous year.
One of the few things to have hope for this year, is that it's possible the guy has a Randy Moss type of year. One of those years where he is so good, your team wins the division and gets to the Championship game because no one can stop him. To the tune of 18 touchdowns and 1600 yards or some nonsense.

Could happen. Not predicting it, but if it did happen, wouldn't be surprised. Always said he has the talent to be one of the best 2-3 WRs in football. This could be the year he cashes in and joins Calvin Johnson at the top. And, as bad as the Cowboys are, we have a much better team than the Lions to put around him.
 

skidadl

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"It's my job to get on the same page with Tony. It's not his job to get on the page with me," Bryant said. "We added a new screen in the offseason and after we ran it the first time in practice, I went over to Tony and asked him if he liked the route.

"He wasn't even practicing, but I wanted him to know that it's important that I run the routes the way he wants me to run them -- not the way I want to run them."
 

Cotton

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Garrett on Bryant: 'He's only scratched the surface'

July, 20, 2013

By Tim MacMahon | ESPNDallas.com


OXNARD, Calif. – His bosses beam with pride about Dez Bryant’s maturation over the last year, firmly believing that the best is yet to come for the Cowboys’ immensely talented fourth-year receiver.

“He’s only scratched the surface,” coach Jason Garrett said after gushing about Bryant’s growth on and off the field.

A year ago, Jerry Jones was so irate about Bryant’s misdemeanor arrest stemming from an altercation with his mother that the owner/general manager had refused to speak to the receiver before the Cowboys reported to training camp. At the time, Jones compared himself to a parent who was so angry that he was afraid he’d go too far if he talked to his child.

Now, as the Cowboys prepare to begin camp, Jones sounds like a proud papa when he discusses Bryant, who followed up his breakout year with a controversy-free offseason.

“I think that you have to recognize how much he’s focusing in on and working to do the right things, not only on the field but off the field,” Jones said. “I can tell you that he is, he has. Those are tangible things. They’re not just commitment or some kind of conversation. He’s really doing it and he is exciting.

“It’s exciting to see progress with someone who can help a lot of people, plus as a ballplayer, it’s exciting to see him make that progress there. I’m hesitant to use the word ‘uncomfortable’ or ‘comfortable.’ I’m just impressed at this stage with how he’s handled himself.

“Those that are the closest to him, those that have a dog in the fight, so to speak … it’s a consensus that he’s making great strides.”

Garrett describes Bryant, whose rough upbringing has been well chronicled, as a “guy that’s grown so much.” That was evident in the second half of last season, when Bryant exploded for 879 receiving yards and 10 touchdowns, finishing the year with 1,382 yards and 12 touchdowns.

As Garrett said, Bryant has always had great passion for the game. But Bryant had to learn how to be a professional and find peace in his personal life, which he accomplished with a lot of help from inside and outside the franchise.

“I think as much as anything else, he’s been better from a habit standpoint in his life and in his work as a football player,” Garrett said. “What’s great and gratifying for us as coaches is you preach that, you preach that and you preach that, and then you see the results that come from it.”

It was gratifying for the Cowboys to see the results for Bryant last season. They’re giddy about what’s to come.
 
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