The Oklahoman

How Cowboys’ Diggs became NFL’s intercepti­on king

- Jori Epstein

FRISCO, Texas — The whole group message celebrated over FaceTime.

Dallas Cowboys cornerback Trevon Diggs and Buffalo Bills receiver Stefon Diggs logged on the night the NFL announced each had earned a 2021 Pro Bowl berth. Their brother Darez joined the video call, too, as did roughly a dozen more family members and longtime friends. Five-year-old Aaiden Diggs, Trevon’s son, celebrated excitedly nearby. And Stephanie Diggs, the mother now of two Pro Bowl selections, asked Siri: Have brothers ever been selected to the Pro Bowl the same year? Then she asked herself: “How cool is that?”

“Probably one of my favorite moments of this year, for real,” Trevon Diggs said of the Dec. 22 FaceTime call. “Because that’s my brother and I love him to death. Just being able to go up there with him, that’s fire.”

This was also their late father’s dream, a vision he articulate­d on a Halloween imprinted vividly in Stephanie’s memory. Young Stefon dressed in a Power Rangers costume that night. The brothers searched door to door for the biggest candy bar. Stephanie and Aron, whom congestive heart failure claimed in 2008, waited in the car. Aron told her: “One of my sons is going to make the league.”

“Yeah, right,” Stephanie told USA TODAY Sports she retorted. “That’s what all fathers say. Everyone thinks their son is going to make it to the league.”

She redefined the goal as her boys reached middle school and high school. An Amtrak attendant, Stephanie was often on the road several days in a row and hoped chiefly that her sons could earn scholarshi­ps and receive a college education.

But now, Aron’s dream has become reality for not one son but two. Stefon, after an NFL-best 1,535 receiving yards last season, has caught 94 balls for 1,144 yards and nine touchdowns in his 2021 campaign. Trevon leads the league with 11 intercepti­ons, two of which he has returned for touchdowns. His 21 pass deflections rank second only to New England’s J.C. Jackson. The resume was sufficient for the Diggs brothers to join elite company as one of three Pro Bowl sibling duos this year, alongside pass rushers Joey and Nick Bosa (Chargers, 49ers), as well as Eagles center Jason Kelce and Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce.

That ball-hawking has helped the Cowboys defense rebound from 28th in points allowed (29.6 per game) last season to seventh (20.8).

Diggs celebrates most how his playmaking improves team performanc­e, his jubilation evident on Dec. 26 when the Cowboys claimed the NFC East title and celebrated after a 56-14 trouncing of Washington.

He intercepte­d Washington quarterbac­k Taylor Heinicke on Dallas’ first defensive snap that night, setting up his offense for their first touchdown of the game. In the postgame locker room, streaming on Instagram Live, Diggs relished a “COWBOYS RUN THE EAST” Tshirt and hat emblazoned with an “NFC EAST CHAMPIONS” patch.

“Came a long way,” he told viewers watching the stream. “Came a long way. We were some [expletive] last year!”

He laughed and shut off the stream.

Risk, reward of rare traits

Trevon organized his 2021 offseason intentiona­lly. He lined up opposite Stefon, pleading for “one more time” if he lost in drills that Trevon credits with “accelerati­ng” his transition to the NFL. Trevon studied film, too, including of his rookie-year pass deflections. He lamented that he broke up 14 passes but secured only three intercepti­ons (21.4%). The growth that followed has allowed him to snag 11 of 21 deflections this season, a drastic increase to 52.3%.

Diggs credits Cowboys coaches with guiding technique developmen­t still raw after Alabama coach Nick Saban shifted him from receiver to full-time corner in 2017. He says Cowboys defensive coordinato­r Dan Quinn gives him freedom to play with aggression, and cornerback­s coach Al Harris hones technique that ensures his movements are sharp. Quinn laughs at the suggestion that Diggs’ ability to intercept more passes than any NFL player in 39 years stems from coaching.

“That would be a lot of (expletive),” Quinn said. “In the NFL, if you (utilize) rare traits, there’s a chance that you got some big production. And he’s delivered on those.

“This is a rare competitor who works really hard at his game.”

Quinn marvels at those traits, including the second-year defender’s ability to track the “flash” of a ball and transition mid-play from defender to de facto receiver.

“So damn impressive,” Quinn said. Diggs’ craft is complex. Cowboys coaches laud his hand-eye coordinati­on, ball skills, speed and quickness. His film study is influenced heavily by his roots as a receiver. After coaches announce game assignment­s, Diggs asks himself: What routes are most likely to arise in each formation? What tendencies does his assigned receiver show at the top of a release or at the point of catch? He narrates one-on-one drills between receivers and defensive backs in Cowboys practices, calling out routes before the snap with accuracy receiver Amari Cooper measures as correct nine times out of 10. Diggs figures: The more informatio­n he commits to memory before kickoff, the more fluidly he will act in real time.

“Some players have great anticipati­on and awareness and judgment on that, and some players just aren’t quite the same level,” Patriots coach Bill Belichick said. “When (cornerback­s) know the ball has got to come out in a certain amount of time based on the pass rush or they can see depending on what the coverage is that the offense is keeping more guys in to protect, and that changes the depth routes and type of patterns and so forth? Guys that are really good out there, they see all that (and) process in millisecon­ds.

“(Diggs) is obviously playing very well and doing those things very well. And a lot of that’s confidence.”

Sure, Diggs has preyed on NFC East backup quarterbac­ks in Heinicke and the Giants’ Mike Glennon. But he has also swiped balls this season from Tom Brady in Tampa Bay, Justin Herbert in Los Angeles and Mac Jones in New England. Against the Patriots, Diggs said he recognized from film study a double slant to the front side that guided an intercepti­on returned 42 yards for a goahead touchdown with 2:27 to play in regulation of what would ultimately prove a 35-29 Cowboys overtime win.

The risk of that aggressive mindset flared the immediate next play when Patriots receiver Kendrick Bourne beat Diggs on a double move and escaped for a 75-yard touchdown. Diggs continues to judge when to bite on a route. Cardinals receiver A.J. Green shook him on a double move last Sunday that resulted in a 42-yard pass to the 3-yard line on Arizona’s first drive. Cowboys Pro Bowl rookie linebacker Micah Parsons defends Diggs as a “gambler” who the team knows will “fix his mistakes” while embracing the edgy style that brings such volume of big plays.

“Every corner has gotten beat,” Belichick said. “Every corner has had a pass caught on them. But all the good ones I’ve been around have that confidence that they forget about the play, learn from it and (move) onto the next play.

“Whatever it is, try to improve on that. But continue to play with a high level of aggressive­ness and awareness.”

What’s next

As the Cowboys travel to Philadelph­ia for their regular-season finale Saturday night, Diggs’ 11 picks tie Cowboys Hall of Fame cornerback Everson Walls’ franchise record, set in 1981. No NFL player has hit the mark since . If Diggs plays – he was ruled questionab­le Thursday with illness but not placed in COVID-19 protocol – he can chase sole possession of the mark. He can also aim to extend a streak of intercepti­ng at least one pass in each career game against the Eagles.

 ?? BRIAN FLUHARTY/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Cowboys cornerback Trevon Diggs leads the league with 11 intercepti­ons.
BRIAN FLUHARTY/USA TODAY SPORTS Cowboys cornerback Trevon Diggs leads the league with 11 intercepti­ons.

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