USA TODAY International Edition

BACK TO DAK: TEAMS REFLECT ON 2016 MISS

Prescott’s success sparks reflection

- Lindsay H. Jones

In the days before the 2016 NFL draft, almost no one was talking about Dak Prescott.

Instead, the quarterbac­k buzz was all about the top two picks in the class, Jared Goff and Carson Wentz, as well as Paxton Lynch, who also wound up as a firstround­er, and Connor Cook, who fell to pick No. 100.

That Prescott, picked at No. 135 overall by the Dallas Cowboys in the fourth round, had by far the best season of any of the 15 passers drafted last year hangs over the 2017 draft as prospects and team officials wonder who — if anyone — in this class could be the next version of the NFL’s reigning offensive rookie of the year.

Seven quarterbac­ks were picked ahead of Prescott, so even though the Cowboys ultimately landed him ( after a failed attempt to trade up to draft Lynch in the first round), each team passed on him at least once. Now they are left to reflect on what they missed and the criteria involved in their decisions.

Teams put themselves through a similar process with Russell Wilson after he fell to the Seattle Seahawks in the third round in the 2012 draft.

“When someone like that has success, go back and see where did we have that player? Were we right on him and just didn’t take him because we didn’t have a need? We were wrong on him? Did he prove us wrong?” Los Angeles Rams general manager Les Snead, who traded up to take Goff with the top pick in 2016, told USA TODAY Sports. “And if he did prove us wrong, then you start to look at all the data that comes in on that player, and looking at that data and figuring out of that data, ( asking) what might have been that trigger to go, ‘ Hey, next time when we have this situation, let’s focus on that variable,’ ” Snead said. “That’s what you’ve got to do with those two players and many others who kind of prove you wrong.”

The knocks on Prescott a year ago were multifacet­ed, and he dropped for on- and off- the- field reasons, including an arrest on a DUI charge about six weeks before the draft. He played in a spread offense at Mississipp­i State and completed only 62.8% of his passes in his four years in Starkville, Miss. The fact that Tim Tebow was the comparison he most frequently drew in college didn’t help, either.

While NFL teams might have focused too much on Prescott’s completion rate, they might have been better off focusing on his decision- making. He threw five intercepti­ons as a senior, and that carried over to the NFL. He threw four ( and lost four fumbles) in his rookie year.

“When you look at Dak Prescott, he was a smart kid. His ( college) offense did some intermedia­te and deep throws. It wasn’t just all tunnels and whatever. And he didn’t turn the foot- ball over, which was really key to me, even though his front was overwhelme­d a bunch,” NFL Network draft analyst Mike Mayock said. “Eight total turnovers for a rookie quarterbac­k is crazy ( good).”

But with Prescott ( and also with Wilson) the thing that teams misjudged the most was intangible — that their poise and leadership would immediatel­y translate into a locker room full of NFL veterans and onto the field.

“The reality is, the guys in my mind who are innate leaders and have a great understand­ing of the game, that can’t be overstated,” Atlanta Falcons GM Thomas Dimitroff said. “When I was younger in the business, I thought it all had to do with a big arm. Now I know it comes in different packages.”

This year’s prospects have taken notice of Prescott’s example.

“Being able to watch him, his success and where he’s coming from, and just how he’s been able to translate to the profession­al league and be so calm and poised and lead a great franchise like the Cowboys and be a playoff- contending team and just have all the success,” said former Clemson quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson, a likely first- round pick. “So just being able to watch him do what ( he’s done) is very humbling and builds confidence for all the younger guys.”

Still, multiple GMs — from John Elway of the Denver Broncos ( who traded up to pick Lynch last year) to Rick Smith of the Houston Texans ( who’s expected to draft a quarterbac­k this year) — said recently that the lesson to take from Prescott’s success is not in what might have been missed in the scouting process but rather in the situation Prescott found himself in with the Cowboys, who had one of the best offensive lines in the NFL, the league’s leading rusher in rookie running back Ezekiel Elliott and a star wide receiver in Dez Bryant.

“You’ve got people around him that are going to make him a better player. I don’t believe you can find guys late in the draft that are going to help a team in the top 10,” Elway said Monday.

 ?? MATTHEW EMMONS, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Pick No. 135 in 2016, Dak Prescott shined as offensive rookie of the year with the Cowboys.
MATTHEW EMMONS, USA TODAY SPORTS Pick No. 135 in 2016, Dak Prescott shined as offensive rookie of the year with the Cowboys.

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