Albuquerque Journal

‘Crazy luck’ creates a chance for Prescott

Dallas looked at a wide-range of possibilit­ies in search of Romo’s backup

- BY CHAREAN WILLIAMS FORT WORTH STAR-TELEGRAM

FRISCO, Texas — Dak Prescott doesn’t believe in luck. The Dallas Cowboys quarterbac­k, having gotten his chance at all three levels because of injury, calls it opportunit­y.

No matter, the fact is it took many things not happening for Dak Prescott to happen.

“It was a perfect storm,” Cowboys quarterbac­ks coach Wade Wilson said.

After the Cowboys went 1-11 with three backup quarterbac­ks starting last season, owner Jerry Jones declared the team would “try all the ways — all ways — to come up with a way to get Tony (Romo) a backup, while at the same time looking toward the future.”

The Cowboys cast a wide net in their search for Romo’s backup: They tried signing a young quarterbac­k in free agency. They tried trading for a young quarterbac­k. They tried drafting a top-rated prospect early in the draft.

They finally settled for Prescott in the fourth round with plans to groom him behind Romo and Kellen Moore.

Who knew the consolatio­n prize would play this season and prove better than any of the other options the Cowboys explored?

“There were questions about him,” Wilson said of Prescott. “If he didn’t have those, he probably would have been drafted before the fourth round.

“But not drafting Paxton Lynch, not drafting whoever in front of him, and having Tony back, that was just water off his back. That has been very impressive. It just does not matter to him.”

The Cowboys liked Prescott, but they liked others better.

They talked to the agents for Colt McCoy and Chase Daniel, but both signed elsewhere for more money. They had Dolphins backup Matt Moore in for a free agent visit, but he, too, wanted more money than the Cowboys were willing to spend.

They inquired about trading with the Rams for Nick Foles but decided the price — in money and compensati­on — was too much.

So the Cowboys’ best option became the draft.

Owning the fourth overall pick, the Cowboys flew Paxton Lynch, Connor Cook, Christian Hackenberg, Jacoby Brissett, Jared Goff, Carson Wentz and Prescott to town for pre-draft visits.

On draft day, the Cowboys explored two firstround trades in an attempt to get Lynch after Goff and Wentz went 1-2. But the Broncos drafted Lynch with the 26th overall pick after a trade with the Seahawks.

Jones admitted the Cowboys offered the No. 34 overall choice and the 67th choice to Seattle to move up for Lynch, with the owner saying Lynch had “the highest upside in the draft.”

In the fourth round, the Raiders traded ahead of the Cowboys to take Cook. The Cowboys drafted Oklahoma defensive end Charles Tapper with the next choice, No. 101 overall, and finally landed a quarterbac­k — Prescott — with a compensato­ry pick at No. 135.

“We’re very fortunate,” Cowboys executive vice president Stephen Jones said. “We don’t know how Paxton is going to turn out. But obviously with where we sit today, and the job that Dak’s doing, I don’t know that we would trade him for anybody, including all the quarterbac­ks picked at the top of the draft. ”

“I don’t really like to use the word ‘luck’,” Prescott said. “It’s very unfortunat­e under the circumstan­ces that I’ve become the starter. But it’s an opportunit­y, and I’m just trying to make the most of it.

“It’s odd. I’ll say that. But very unfortunat­e. It’s an opportunit­y, like I’ve said. I’ve never asked why.” Why ask why? With Prescott’s gleaming 13-3 record and rookiereco­rd 104.9 passer rating, the Cowboys are not about to look a gift quarterbac­k in the mouth.

“It was good fortune that we didn’t get a chance to draft guys ahead of Dak, but it was bad luck, too, for Kellen and for Tony,” Wilson said. “Dak has taken advantage of opportunit­y, but he’s taken advantage of his opportunit­y at every level. He got his start in high school due to circumstan­ce. He got his start in college due to circumstan­ce. Then, he got a start in the pros due to circumstan­ce.

“It’s really crazy luck. There are a lot of the things that could have happened that didn’t happen, to our betterment.”

 ?? BRANDON WADE/AP FILE ?? Dallas Cowboys rookie quarterbac­k Dak Prescott was not the top choice to be Tony Romo’s backup last offseason. But he has become much more for the franchise.
BRANDON WADE/AP FILE Dallas Cowboys rookie quarterbac­k Dak Prescott was not the top choice to be Tony Romo’s backup last offseason. But he has become much more for the franchise.

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