Imperial Valley Press

Cowboys’ Bryant opens up on struggles, nixes idea of pay cut

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FRISCO, Texas (AP) — Dez Bryant didn’t seem sure how to respond when asked if he would be willing to take a pay cut after perhaps the most difficult season of the Dallas receiver’s career. Once the 2014 All-Pro came to his senses, he was emphatic.

“Hell no, man,” Bryant said Wednesday, three days after the Cowboys were eliminated from playoff contention with a loss to Seattle. “I believe in me.”

Bryant opened up in his first lengthy session with reporters in weeks, taking responsibi­lity for a subpar season by saying he let frustratio­ns affect him during games. But he also said some of those frustratio­ns were rooted in the offensive scheme, which he said he would probably address with owner Jerry Jones and coaches in the offseason.

The eighth-year pro also blamed some of his struggles on knee tendinitis, something that hadn’t been revealed. Bryant was listed on the injury report for three weeks earlier in the season, including one week when he missed two practices when an ankle injury also was listed.

But Bryant didn’t miss any games, and is on the verge of going all 16 without a 100-yard outing for the first time in his career unless he sits for a meaningles­s finale Sunday at Philadelph­ia. In his second season in 2011, Bryant didn’t reach 100 yards in 15 games, missing one for injury. “I consider myself a warrior,” Bryant said. “If I can walk, I can move, I’m going to go out there and try to play. That’s probably dumb, but hey, that’s just who I am. I love this game, and I try to push it, but for the most part, yeah, I have been pretty banged up.”

Injuries are part of the reason Bryant hasn’t lived up to the $70 million, fiveyear contract he signed after his All-Pro season. He had career lows across the board in 2015 because of foot and ankle issues that kept him out of seven games.

A knee injury knocked him out of three games last year, but he was productive otherwise and capped the season with 132 yards and two touchdowns in the top-seeded Cowboys’ playoff loss to Green Bay.

Overall, though, the numbers are sobering for a player due to make $12.5 million with a salary cap hit of $16.5 million in 2018.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ERIC RISBERG ?? In this Dec. 17 file photo, Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Dez Bryant runs against the Oakland Raiders during the second half of an NFL football game in Oakland.
AP PHOTO/ERIC RISBERG In this Dec. 17 file photo, Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Dez Bryant runs against the Oakland Raiders during the second half of an NFL football game in Oakland.

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