Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cowboys’ QB playing without long-term deal

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Dak Prescott stuck with his virtual hiatus trying to get a long-term contract that never came during the offseason.

Now that the star quarterbac­k of the Dallas Cowboys is in the building preparing to play on the $31.4 million franchise tag, Prescott doesn’t see an immediate need for questions about his future with the Cowboys.

“I’m not a guy that looks at my future to be honest,” Prescott said Wednesday, two days before the first practice of training camp for the Cowboys.

“With things that have happened to me personally, with the place this world is in, with the crisis we’re in with covid, with social injustice, I don’t look too far ahead.”

To be clear, Prescott found several ways to say negotiatio­ns that went on for more than a year without a deal didn’t change his desire to stay.

He was an almost instant star with the Cowboys, winning 2016 NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year as a fourth-round pick who replaced injured 10-year starter Tony Romo during his first preseason. Prescott led a franchise-record 11game winning streak that carried Dallas to the No. 1 seed in the NFC.

After three years of enjoying one of the best bargains in the NFL — but capped by a season that started with high expectatio­ns and ended without a trip to the playoffs — owner Jerry Jones is similarly unconcerne­d about whether a longterm deal can get done. Prescott can’t sign for more than one year until after the 2020 season.

“We think he’s the quarterbac­k of the future,” Jones said in his annual pre-camp news conference, held virtually from offices at team headquarte­rs rather than sunny, cool Oxnard, Calif., site of the previous eight camps before the pandemic led the NFL to order all teams to stay home for preseason training. “We just couldn’t get together at this particular point.”

Jones said the uncertaint­y of the pandemic played a role in an agreement not being reached, noting that only two of 14 players with franchise tags signed long-term contracts.

Executive vice president of personnel Stephen Jones talked to Prescott the day of the deadline in a last-ditch effort to get a long-term deal done, but it was too late for an agreement. Still, Stephen Jones said there aren’t hard feelings.

“He’s so fired up about this team, about this season and about our future,” Stephen Jones said. “We ultimately know that we’re going to have to figure out how to get this done. I’m more convinced than ever that we will get it done.”

It was an important offseason for Prescott because of Coach Mike McCarthy replacing Jason Garrett.

The pandemic prevented faceto-face meetings of the coach who won a Super Bowl with Aaron Rodgers and his new quarterbac­k, and the contract situation kept them from having virtual meetings. Now they’re making up for lost time.

“With us being around each other for the first time, I’ve really enjoyed his personalit­y,” McCarthy said. “He’s very upbeat, very driven. So I’d say he’s kind of picked up where he left off based on what I’ve been told about him as far as how he operates.”

Prescott had a football field put in the backyard of his Dallas-area home during the offseason, allowing plenty of time to work with receivers Amari Cooper, Michael Gallup and CeeDee Lamb, the rookie first-round pick.

And now Prescott has moved into the hotel that’s part of team headquarte­rs, right next to the indoor practice field and a few extra paces from the outdoor fields where most of the camp practices will be held starting Friday morning.

Pandemic-related NFL guidelines prohibited teams from sequesteri­ng players at camp without their consent. The Cowboys made the hotel available to their players, and Prescott estimated 90% of them had essentiall­y agreed to create their own bubble.

“For me it’s about trying to stay as safe as I can, as healthy as I can without knowing the true future of where this season’s going to go,” Prescott said. “Because as this season gets to playing out, I think part of it is: The healthiest team wins.”

 ?? (AP file photo) ?? Dallas Cowboys quarterbac­k Dak Prescott will play this season with a $31.4 million franchise tag, and he didn’t see an immediate need to discuss his future with the team.
(AP file photo) Dallas Cowboys quarterbac­k Dak Prescott will play this season with a $31.4 million franchise tag, and he didn’t see an immediate need to discuss his future with the team.

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