The Oklahoman

How can Cowboys fix flaws that doomed 2020 season?

- By Jori Epstein

Entering the 2020 NFL season, Cowboys owner and general manager Jerry Jones believed his roster boasted the most talent of any in the 31 years since he bought the team.

Mike McCarthy, joining Dallas after coaching 13 seasons in Green Bay, similarly felt this roster was “arguably” among the best he'd had.

Fast forward to January, and the Cowboys' 6-10 season concludes without a postseason berth even from the wretched NFC East.

“We fell far short of what I thought our team would accomplish,” Jones said Tuesday morning on Dallas radio station 105.3 The Fan. “The fact that we're not getting it done, the fact that we aren't in the playoffs right now, the fact that we don't have a chance to get in that Super Bowl, all of that just makes me sick because this is the heyday of our game. This is the heyday of the NFL. “It makes me sick." Injuries, miscalcula­tions i n scheme philosophy, game-management gaffes and a hi s t ori cal l y bad defense contribute­d to McCarthy's underwhelm­ing Cowboys debut. Here are three key issues that unraveled Dallas' season — and what the team must do to reverse course in 2021:

1) Quarterbac­k instabilit­y

The window is open. The Cowboys and Dak Prescott's moratorium on negotiatin­g a long-term contract while Prescott played out his $31.4 million franchise tag has expired. Prescott is expected to recover from his Week 5 ankle fracture and dislocatio­n by spring. A second franchise tag would cost the Cowboys $37.7 million against a dip ping 2021 salary cap. Perhaps this confluence explains Stephen and Jerry Jones' intensifie­d public support this week for Prescott.

“This is Dak's football team,” Stephen Jones, the Cowboys chief operating officer, executive vice president and director of player personnel, told 105.3 The Fan on Monday.

“I don' t know how you could have any more leverage ,” Jerry Jones said Tuesday. “[Prescott] evolving into an NFL quarterbac­k has been nothing short of a perfect picture."

In the 4½ games Prescott did play this season, he completed 68% of his passes, averaged 371.2 passing yards a game and accounted for 13 total touchdowns. Ball security was an issue (four intercepti­ons, three lost fumbles), but Prescott was on pace for a career season in production. Given his prior durability — 72 consecutiv­e starts from 2016-20 — and the positive health reports he's receiving, the Cowboys have reason to lock up their unquestion­ed locker room leader who has demonstrat­ed improvemen­t on the field each year.

Still, two offseasons of failed negotiatio­ns are ominous. The Cowboys previously sought a fiveplus-year deal, while Prescott and agent Todd France were amenable to a deal no longer than four seasons. France will point to the Cowboys' woes in Prescott's absence as highlighti­ng his client's value. The Cowboys cite their historical­ly bad defense as reason they must save cap space if Prescott wants to contend on a competitiv­e roster.

2) Historical­ly bad defense

How bad was this defense? The 473 points and 57 touchdowns the Cowboys allowed are each the most since the franchise was establishe­d in

1960. The Cowboys narrowly missed their claim to the league's worst run defense, but they won't hang their hats on the 158.8 yards a game they allowed, second-worst in the NFL this season and second-worst in franchise history. Opponents averaged 4.98 yards a carry against Dallas. The defense allowed a play of at least 20 yards 69 times. Opponents scored touchdowns on 20 of those.

Players and coaches each shoulder blame. Jerry Jones blames himself, too, for signing off on coordinato­r Mike Nolan's scheme shift during a COVIDhampe­red offseason.

An announceme­nt is expected soon on the fate of Nolan, who ultimately abandoned his initial scheme plan once missed assignment­s and poor on-field communicat­ion made it apparent the players were not implementi­ng the system effectivel­y. Regardless who coordinate­s the group in 2021 and whether the Cowboys commit to a 4-3 defense that may better cater to their talent, they need more consistenc­y. The Cowboys will also need to lean defense in the draft, adding secondary pieces to aid cornerback Trevon Diggs and safety Donovan Wilson. Defensive tackle is also a glaring roster weakness.

3) Offensive line

The Cowboys have invested heavily in their offensive line the last decade. When McCarthy

arrived in Dallas, he expected to start homegrown, first-round selections in left tackle Tyron Smith, right guard Zack Martin and center Travis Frederick, as well as a second-round selection in left guard Connor Williams. Right tackle La'el Collins, whose stock had fallen due to off-field issues, had started at least 15 games each of the last three seasons.

Frederick, a five-time Pro Bowler, retired in March. Smith and Martin missed 14 and six games due to injury. Collins underwent hip surgery that eliminated his entire season.

In total, eight offensive linemen spent time on injured reserve as the team cycled through more than a dozen lineup combinatio­ns.

The bright note is the Cowboy snow have a stable of young linemen who gained extensive experience and improved through the season.

But the Cowboys will need Martin, Collins and Smith to return to feel confident they can consistent­ly thrive against improving defensive lines in Washington and New York. Martin said he's optimistic the group will return. The st out line would complement a cast including Prescott, Elliott, Amari Cooper, Michael Gallup, CeeDee Lamb, Dalton Schultz and Blake Jarwin. Two seasons removed from their last postseason appearance, Martin feels they have much to prove.

 ?? JENKINS] ?? Mike McCarthy, joining Dallas after coaching 13 seasons in Green Bay, felt this roster was “arguably” among the best he'd had. The Cowboys finished 6-10. [AP PHOTO/RON
JENKINS] Mike McCarthy, joining Dallas after coaching 13 seasons in Green Bay, felt this roster was “arguably” among the best he'd had. The Cowboys finished 6-10. [AP PHOTO/RON

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