Training camp thread...

Lotuseater

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The point is there was no reason to think it was likely other than optimism.

It was much more than just optimism. I just knew he was going to be a great player. There is a difference between knowing and being hopeful that something will turn out the way you want it to.

He will be a great player.
 

Cotton

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Source: Bryant likely to sit afternoon (hip)
July, 27, 2013

By Tim MacMahon | ESPNDallas.com

OXNARD, Calif. – Receiver Dez Bryant will likely be held out of Saturday afternoon practice due to minor hip soreness, a source told ESPNDallas.com.

Bryant, whose practice intensity has drawn praise from coach Jason Garrett and several others, did not participate in the team portion of the morning walk-through. He had experienced cramps in the Friday afternoon practice.

Asked why he sat out, Bryant smiled and said, “I’m good. Ask coach.”

Garrett characterized it as typical camp fatigue, saying he wasn’t concerned about “anything in particular for Dez.”

Receiver Miles Austin and defensive tackle Jason Hatcher are expected to participate in Saturday's practice after being given a precautionary rest day Friday.

Defensive lineman Ben Bass, who sprained his left ankle Friday, said he hopes to be back early next week.
 

Cotton

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Garrett not pleased with walk-through
July, 27, 2013

By Calvin Watkins | ESPNDallas.com

OXNARD, Calif. -- Cowboys coach Jason Garrett said he wasn't happy with the effort of his team during Saturday morning's walk-through.

There were false starts, dropped passes, an interception because a player ran the wrong route and mental mistakes. Garrett made the offense run several plays again because of mistakes.

"It wasn’t as good as it needs to be," Garrett said afterward. "The standard for a walk-through is high. Just because you are walking through, and it’s not a full-speed practice, you have to be into it mentally. You have to be sharp. We understand as coaches we are putting a lot of stuff in every day. We anticipate mistakes; that's why we go through a walk-through. You clean things up. I just think overall the concentration was only OK. It’s got to be better."

This is the Cowboys' sixth walk-through practice, and it appeared several players were sluggish at the start. Garrett was overheard telling his players to pick up the pace during the practice. Garrett and the rest of the coaches want an up-tempo practice, even in the walk-through that's conducted without helmets.

"I don’t really care about what the explanation is or what the excuse is," Garrett said. "We've just got to do it better."

________________________________

I don't remember him saying stuff like this last year. I like it.
 

Jiggyfly

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Garrett not pleased with walk-through
July, 27, 2013

By Calvin Watkins | ESPNDallas.com

OXNARD, Calif. -- Cowboys coach Jason Garrett said he wasn't happy with the effort of his team during Saturday morning's walk-through.

There were false starts, dropped passes, an interception because a player ran the wrong route and mental mistakes. Garrett made the offense run several plays again because of mistakes.

"It wasn’t as good as it needs to be," Garrett said afterward. "The standard for a walk-through is high. Just because you are walking through, and it’s not a full-speed practice, you have to be into it mentally. You have to be sharp. We understand as coaches we are putting a lot of stuff in every day. We anticipate mistakes; that's why we go through a walk-through. You clean things up. I just think overall the concentration was only OK. It’s got to be better."

This is the Cowboys' sixth walk-through practice, and it appeared several players were sluggish at the start. Garrett was overheard telling his players to pick up the pace during the practice. Garrett and the rest of the coaches want an up-tempo practice, even in the walk-through that's conducted without helmets.

"I don’t really care about what the explanation is or what the excuse is," Garrett said. "We've just got to do it better."

________________________________

I don't remember him saying stuff like this last year. I like it.

http://dccforums.com/showthread.php?841-Training-camp-thread&p=24702&viewfull=1#post24702

:tippytoe
 

boozeman

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Scout's Notebook: More Red Zone Reps For Witten?

Posted 8 minutes ago

Bryan Broaddus Football Analyst/Scout







Some thoughts from the practice field Saturday here in Oxnard:
•The injury Ben Bass during practice on Friday was not that serious which is outstanding news for group that has received it's share of bad news. It was Bass' left ankle which was the one that he hurt last season and despite feeling pain in it, he didn't hear the pop which he knew was going to land him on the injured reverse. It is no surprise the type of camp that he has had up until this point playing both tackle and end. He is a smart player, that understands how to work against blocks. Look for him back much sooner than later to continue helping this rotation along the line.
•One of the biggest differences I have noticed with Bill Callahan calling the plays over Jason Garrett is how he has used the tight ends down the middle of the field and how he swings the backs wide in the red zone to create space. Since I started covering this team on the media side, I never could understand why Jason Witten wasn't used more in the red zone to attack defenses up the field. From what I am seen in OTA's, minicamps and now training camps, Witten is getting more opportunities inside and the quarterbacks are taking advantage of the situation. What I have always seen from Witten is his ability to use that big body plus his ability to know how to work himself open in tight quarters. During Friday's practice, Witten went up and nodding to the outside which froze Barry Church in place, then went up past him, Witten was smart enough to stay away from Will Allen on the other side, which gave Romo the perfect amount of space to fit the ball in for the touchdown. When the Red Zone offense struggles, it is never a bad idea to get Jason Witten more involved.
•Don't let the fact that you haven't heard much about the type of camp that Bruce Carter is having, lead you to believe that he is not doing his job. Every night that I go into the film room, Carter has shown up whether its Team Run, 7-on-7 or the Compete Period, he has been there. Now playing on the weak side, outside, instead of inside at linebacker in the 3-4 has not changed how he still gets to the ball. Where Carter appears to have picked up and developed his game from last season is in his pass coverage. Kiffin has used he and Lee inside on some blitzes in the nickel but Carter has been solid in reading when backs like Murray and Dunbar have swung wide and he has to pick them up. It has been rare to see him out of position, to pick them up in coverage. What Carter has been able to do is also finish the play when the ball is thrown to his side.


•I am starting to see more of linebacker Brandon Magee and I knew this would be the case when the pads have been put on. In Friday's practice during Team Run, Magee had several reps where he was able to beat the center, guard combo blocks to make the tackle on the back before he was able to take it up the field on the zone cut. Magee has done a nice job of picking up his responsibilities scheme wise. During the Saturday walk through, linebackers coach Ben Bloom was quizzing him on check calls and different alignments in which after each answer, Bloom said "Nice job". On Sunday, there will be a portion of the Blue-White Scrimmage where the young guys will be allowed to play what Jason Garrett calls "Tackle Football", my early prediction is that Brad Sham, Mickey Spagnola and I will be calling his name quite a bit when these players get the opportunity to cut it loose on film.
 

boozeman

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Selvie Wants To Play Fast, Adapt Quickly To Cowboys' Playbook

Posted 15 minutes ago

David Helman DallasCowboys.com Staff Writer








OXNARD, Calif. – George Selvie was a man without a team when this week started, waiting around for a phone call.

As the week draws to a close, the defensive end is running second-team for the Cowboys’ defense, thanks largely to a slew of injuries along the defensive front.

“It was great to get that phone call – to get another opportunity to come out here and play NFL football,” Selvie said. “It felt great, and I was ready to go when they called me.”

Oxnard marks the latest opportunity in what has been a dizzying NFL career for Selvie. He was the first two-time All-American in South Florida history just four years ago, as he racked up 69.5 career tackles for loss and 29 career sacks for the Bulls.

Selvie was a linemate of Jason Pierre-Paul’s in the fall of 2009. Pierre-Paul used propelled himself to the first round of the 2010 NFL Draft in just one season as a starter, while Selvie was a seventh-round selection by St. Louis.

In the following years, Selvie has made stops in Carolina, Jacksonville and Tampa Bay after a one-year stint with the Rams. But since the Buccaneers released him on May 6, he had remained unsigned, leaving him alone to work on offseason conditioning.

“It’s hard – it’s real hard, believe that. You’ve just got to go out there and run, work on the little things like your get offs and stuff like that – just try to get some work in,” Selvie said. “But it’s hard work when you don’t have nobody to tell you what to do or a legit schedule.”

There hasn’t been a whole lot of time to adapt for either Selvie or defensive tackle Landon Cohen, who the Cowboys also added this week. Thanks to a rule tweak by the NFL, both players were able to practice Wednesday, the same day they signed their contracts.

“You’ve just got to get in that playbook and go out there and play fast,” Selvie said.

In prior seasons, the Cowboys would have had to wait three days to use either player, something Cowboys coach Jason Garrett said put a strain on teams.



“It really wasn’t as well thought out as the league probably should have thought it through,” Garrett said. “This year it’s different. We signed them, gave them a physical, they were practicing that afternoon.”

Now, Selvie just has to take advantage of the opportunity. Starter Anthony Spencer should return to full health before the team breaks camp, and his backup, Ben Bass, hopes to return from his ankle sprain next week.

“You’re out here fighting for a job, and you know there’s other guys that want to do the same thing you’re doing, and there’s some people that might be sent home that want to do the same thing,” Selvie said. “They want to take your job, so you’ve got to come out here and earn one.”
 

1bigfan13

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One of the biggest differences I have noticed with Bill Callahan calling the plays over Jason Garrett is how he has used the tight ends down the middle of the field and how he swings the backs wide in the red zone to create space. Since I started covering this team on the media side, I never could understand why Jason Witten wasn't used more in the red zone to attack defenses up the field. From what I am seen in OTA's, minicamps and now training camps, Witten is getting more opportunities inside and the quarterbacks are taking advantage of the situation.
This has been a mystery for several years.

Sounds like they are finally making a concerted effort to get Witten more involved inside the red zone.
 

Lotuseater

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Have any of these writers *actually* seen Wilcox cover a receiver? Hopefully a receiver that has been good in the NFL already? That's what I want to hear about.........
 

Lotuseater

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Whoever would have guessed that our hall of fame TE, who has an almost magical ability to get open when the entire world knows he's getting the ball, would be an asset in the red zone?

I, for one, am shocked this wasn't stumbled upon earlier.
 

Smitty

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This has been a mystery for several years.

Sounds like they are finally making a concerted effort to get Witten more involved inside the red zone.
I don't understand that either, though it dates back to before Garrett.
 

Carp

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The thing about Witten is that he is not a leaper, which a guy like Gonzalez excels at in the end zone. Also, a lot of TD catches are catch and runs into the end zone...Witten just is not good with YAC. I do think the body positioning and leverage he uses 3rd downs can work in the end zone, but teams take him away there.
 

L.T. Fan

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The thing about Witten is that he is not a leaper, which a guy like Gonzalez excels at in the end zone. Also, a lot of TD catches are catch and runs into the end zone...Witten just is not good with YAC. I do think the body positioning and leverage he uses 3rd downs can work in the end zone, but teams take him away there.
A tight end doesn't have to leap if they can get a size mismatch with a D B. They just need to get position and use their body as a shield. Of course leaping helps if the te is being shielded.
 

Carp

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A tight end doesn't have to leap if they can get a size mismatch with a D B. They just need to get position and use their body as a shield. Of course leaping helps if the te is being shielded.
Gonzo does it and so does Graham.
 

Jiggyfly

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A tight end doesn't have to leap if they can get a size mismatch with a D B. They just need to get position and use their body as a shield. Of course leaping helps if the te is being shielded.
Its hard to get one on one with a DB in the red zone for a TE and like Carp said it does not help that he can't break a tackle to get in the endzone that way.
 

boozeman

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Bryan Broaddus ‏@BryanBroaddus 1h
“@Tony09s: @BryanBroaddus Who's been the best safety in camp so far?” Coverage wise Allen.

Scary shit.
 

Cotton

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Carlos A. Mendez ‏@calexmendez 10m
Lower back kept Ryan Cook out of practice today.
 

Clay_Allison

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The thing about Witten is that he is not a leaper, which a guy like Gonzalez excels at in the end zone. Also, a lot of TD catches are catch and runs into the end zone...Witten just is not good with YAC. I do think the body positioning and leverage he uses 3rd downs can work in the end zone, but teams take him away there.
Maybe they could use formations to help, force defenses to double either him or Dez, or else roll defenders to that side of the field and leave the back-side open
 

boozeman

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Sat. Practice Report: Mid-Pack WRs Have A Chance To Shine

Posted 11 hours ago

David Helman DallasCowboys.com Staff Writer


OXNARD, Calif. – The Cowboys continued their 2013 training camp Saturday evening with one final practice before Sunday’s Blue and White Scrummage. This year, Jason Garrett’s new schedule gives even more time between the lighter morning walk-through and the afternoon practice.

Each night, DallasCowboys.com will feature the second practice of the day with the big news, the highs and lows and notable standouts.

Main Event:

Nothing frees up your wide receiver corps to show off like a little downtime for the starters. Miles Austin took the evening off on Friday after a week of camp, and Dez Bryant followed suit Saturday with a rest day to recuperate some nicks and scratches.





With the team’s top wide receivers alternating days off, several others have had a chance to show off. The top three of those have undoubtedly been Dwayne Harris, Terrance Williams and Anthony Armstrong.

Harris and Williams’ presence in the first team are near-givens, as the former is the team’s returning No. 3 wideout and the latter is a third-round draft pick. Armstrong, however, has used the opportunity to rise out of the pack of as many as eight receivers who don’t have secure jobs heading into the season.

“Whenever someone goes down, whether it’s injury or the coaches just decide to take him out, you have to be ready,” Armstrong said. “I hold myself to a high standard – I’ve done it before in this league – and I’m just trying to have a successful camp.”

Armstrong ran with the first team throughout full-team drills on Friday, and he received the nod, along with Harris and Austin, on Saturday during pass skeleton. It’s safe to say Armstrong made the most of the opportunity, as he hauled in several impressive catches and proved a reliable possession receiver.

“I just want to be consistent – stack good days on top of good days,” Armstrong said. “You can’t really go up and down. The more you press onward and upward, the better off you’re going to be.”

Austin, Williams and Harris formed the starting trio when the Cowboys concluded their late practice with a two-minute drill. Armstrong ran second-team along with Anthony Amos and Tim Benford while Coale Beasley, sidelined with a wrapped knee, sat out.

Armstrong said it becomes easier to get reps with a less congested receiver corps, though the competition is bound to ramp up as camp continues and more is expected from everyone.

“It’s so early in camp, you have so many numbers that it’s so spread out,” he said. “Once you get further into camp, when somebody goes down, it’s going to be very noticeable. When you’re down to seven or eight guys versus 10 or 12, it’s very noticeable.”

If this week is any indication, Armstrong has shown he knows how to take advantage of more playing time.

Quick Hits:

Austin wasn’t the only Cowboy who returned to practice after taking Friday off. Defensive tackle Jason Hatcher also returned to full pads after taking it easy the day before. Hatcher was disruptive and vocal among the first-team defenders.

Conversely, several veterans took days off to rest up ahead of the Blue and White Scrimmage and the coming week. Bryant and Beasley attended practice but did not participate. The same goes for defensive end DeMarcus Ware, who took a vet day.

Dan Bailey was at practice, but he did not take any kicks during the team’s customary two minute drill. Spencer Benton, who is battling for the punter job, handled those duties. It didn’t go so well, as Benton missed on several kicks, though he did hit one game-winner.

Being a weekend, the crowd for Saturday’s practice was one of the largest of camp, an attendance of 5,411.

Jason Garrett noted during his Saturday press conference that rookie running back Joseph Randle was slightly behind as a result of not being available for OTA’s and minicamp. Both Randle and Kendial Lawrence got extensive work during Saturday’s Blue Period practice of rookies, and Randle had several carries during full-team drills.

Armstrong, Harris, Williams, B.W. Webb and Randle were among those who stayed behind 15 minutes after practice ended to field punts.

Nick Stephens worked primarily as the third-team quarterback during drills Saturday, one day after Alex Tanney got a chance at that job.

Notable Standouts:

DeMarco Murray: Murray is one physical runner, not that anyone needed to be reminded. The Cowboys’ first-teamer had a number of incredibly physical runs during full-team drills and two minute drill. Perhaps the best was when Murray broke off tackle and stiff-armed newcomer defensive end George Selvie, knocking the 270-pounder to the ground. Murray also jawed plenty with middle linebacker Sean Lee, as the two made hard contact several times on the day.

Jason Hatcher: The big man announced his presence immediately upon returning from a rest day Friday. In individual drills, Hatcher tore right through several different guard and center combinations in a drill designed to have the interior linemen working together. In full-team drills he collapsed the pocket several times. Hatcher took charge of the defensive line in light of Ware’s absence, admonishing his linemen loudly for every good gain on the ground.

Travis Frederick: It’s hard to point to any single play that a center makes in the course of a practice. Frederick has looked good in picking up the majority of his assignments without too many mistakes, but the thing that stands out is the comfort and command with which the rookie makes calls and runs the huddle. Maybe it’s the beard, but Frederick does not look like a player going through his first week of training camp when he rallies the offense, or when he talks about his work with Tony Romo after practice.

Play of the Day:

With Bryant sitting out of practice for the time being, Austin took it upon himself to make the most noticeable catch of the afternoon. In full-team drills, Romo drove the offense into the red zone before a run play and a swing pass were stopped for short gains. In a three wide receiver set, Romo sent Austin down the seam from the slot on his right-hand side. Romo dropped a pretty ball over Austin’s back shoulder, threading the needle between Lee and safety Will Allen. Austin jumped and made the catch, stamping both feet down along the back of the end zone before falling out of bounds. For at least 30 seconds after the crowd’s applause had died down, Allen insisted to the referees that Austin had juggled the ball and that the score shouldn’t stand. It didn’t do him any good.

Photos of Saturday's evening practice >>

Injury Report:

Returned to Practice:
DT Jason Hatcher (rest)
WR Miles Austin (rest)

Missed Practice:
DE/DT Ben Bass (ankle)
WR Cole Beasley (knee)
C/G Ryan Cook (back)
WR Dez Bryant (rest)
OT Jermey Parnell (hamstring)
DE Anthony Spencer (knee)
WR Danny Coale (knee swelling)
DT Ikponmwosa Igbinosun (ankle)
TE James Hanna (hamstring)
DE Tyrone Crawford (Achilles)
DT Jay Ratliff (hamstring)
G Mackenzy Bernadeau (hamstring)
LS L.P. Ladouceur (calf)
OT Demetress Bell (conditioning)



Transactions:

July 21:
Signed T Demetress Bell, QB Alex Tanney and Lavasier Tuinei. Placed G Mackenzy Bernadeau and DT Jay Ratliff on the active/physically unable to perform list and placed the following players on the active/non-football injury list: T Demetress Bell, C/G Ryan Cook, LS Louis-Philippe Ladouceur, G Ronald Leary, G Nate Livings and WR Lavasier Tuinei.

July 23:
C/G Ryan Cook passed his physical and returned to practice.

July 24:
Released WR Lavasier Tuinei. Signed DT Landon Cohen and DE George Selvie.

July 26 – G Nate Livings passed his physical and returned to practice.

Upcoming Schedule:

Sunday, July 28
12:00 p.m. (PDT) Coach Garrett press conference
2:30 p.m. (PDT) Blue-White Scrimmage

Monday, July 29
10:30 a.m. (PDT) Walk-Thru
12:00 p.m. (PDT) Coach Garrett press conference
4:00 p.m. (PDT) Practice
 

boozeman

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Blue-White scrimmage will give Matt Johnson a chance to hit: 'Been a long time since I played real football'



It’s been a long time since Matt Johnson delivered a real hit on a football field. Or did anything on a football field.

Sunday, he should get a chance in the Blue-White scrimmage. It’s only a scrimmage. But it’s tackle football, and it’ll be Johnson’s best chance since last preseason to show what he can do in something close to live action.

“It’s been a long time since I played real football,” the second-year safety said. “I played 15 snaps in a preseason game. But other than that, it’s been since Game 3 of my college senior season.”

Injuries have sidelined Johnson most of the last two years. It was a shoulder in college at Eastern Washington and hamstrings with the Cowboys. The Cowboys showed their faith by sticking with him last year. They like his measurables and the fact that he made 17 interceptions in college. But they need to see him play.

“I’ve said all along I have a long ways to go to prove myself,” he said. “I have to make more plays on the ball, be around the ball more and keep getting better every day.”

-- Carlos Mendez
---------------

The scrimmage will be broadcast on the official site if anyone is interested.
 
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