USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Leading OFF

Cowboys pass on RBs, open door for Ezekiel Elliott

- Jarrett Bell

Despite the projection­s, declaratio­ns and, well, the undeniable need, the Dallas Cowboys came out of the NFL draft without selecting a running back.

Does this set the stage for a reunion with Ezekiel Elliott? The two sides have a deal in place, pending a physical, as first reported by NFL Media.

Elliott and his agent, Rocky Arceneaux, met with the Cowboys brass last week. Since then, Jerry Jones and Co. haven’t been bashful in expressing their love for the aging running back.

Assuming it happens, Zeke would become the quintessen­tial run-it-back.

Of course, Elliott, 28, is no longer one of the league’s most dominant runners. During his one season away from the Cowboys in 2023 with the New England Patriots, he put up career-low numbers across the board. He logged 184 carries for 642 yards, averaging 3.5 yards with three rushing TDs.

Teams haven’t been exactly banging down the door to sign him as a free agent.

Yet Elliott seemingly has some special value to the Cowboys beyond the positive locker room influence that Jones noted during the draft.

Maybe Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy dropped a hint when asked about the running back shutout during the draft, maintainin­g, “We’re not done yet.”

They sure could have used Elliott last season as the most glaring weakness for the NFL’s highest-scoring offense was its struggles punching the ball in when close to the goal line. Now, with starting running back Tony Pollard gone to the Tennessee Titans, the Cowboys try to sort out the backfield with the likes of Rico Dowdle, recently signed Royce Freeman and second-year pro Deuce Vaughn.

Dallas also signed Missouri running back Nathaniel Peat, clocked at 4.37 seconds in the 40-yard dash, as an undrafted college free agent.

How could Elliott be fed in this mix? I’m guessing that he’d have to be a role player specializi­ng at the goal line and in short-yardage situations. If the sides can agree on how that value pays on a contract, Elliott – who rushed for 8,262 yards and 68 TDs in seven seasons with Dallas – might mimic the dangerous threat Marcus Allen posed for the Kansas City Chiefs during the latter stages of his Hall of Fame career. In his final season in 1997, Allen rushed for 11 touchdowns – with zero starts.

It would have made sense, too, had the Cowboys drafted a running back as widely expected. Yet this apparently wasn’t the year of such depth. The mostcovete­d running back, Jonathon Brooks of Texas, went off the board in the second round, 46th overall to the Carolina Panthers.

Dallas might have targeted Brooks with its pick at 56th overall, but the Panthers, already slotted ahead of the Cowboys with the 52nd pick, traded up six slots to get Brooks.

The Cowboys’ draft, meanwhile, was stamped by the investment­s in rebuilding the offensive line after key free agent departures. Enter first-round Oklahoma offensive tackle Tyler Guyton (No. 29 overall) as the projected replacemen­t for longtime anchor Tyron Smith, and thirdround­er Cooper Beebe (No. 73) from Kansas State, the unanimous All-American projected to fill the void of departed center Tyler Biadasz.

No, the Cowboys didn’t have a sexy draft. Yet with the draft considered deep in offensive line talent, Jones made no apologies for seeking the potential answers for the trenches.

“Why do you rob banks?” Jones quipped. “Because that’s where the money is.”

Farewell, Pac-12

Not a bad curtain call, Pac-12. The conference produced the No. 1 pick overall in Southern Cal’s Caleb Williams. It produced three of the record-setting six quarterbac­ks drafted within the top 12 picks, with Williams joined by Washington’s Michael Penix Jr. and Oregon’s Bo Nix. And when the draft ended, there were 43 players from Pac-12 schools selected, second most of any conference after the SEC’s 59 picks.

Ravens’ influence

Sure, it was Jim Harbaugh’s first draft as Los Angeles Chargers coach, accented by the selection of two of his former Michigan players, third-round linebacker Junior Colson and seventh-round receiver Cornelius Johnson.

Yet just as significant, it was the first time that new Chargers general manager Joe Hortiz ran a draft. And Hortiz was flanked by the new assistant GM, Chad Alexander.

Hortiz and Alexander worked together for 20 years with the Baltimore Ravens, trained by legendary GM Ozzie Newsome and current Ravens GM Eric DeCosta. They watched DeCosta serve as Newsome’s right-hand man for years. Now Alexander, who came over from the New York Jets, is in a similar role under Hortiz. With another Harbaugh as coach, they could feel the presence of their mentors.

“We do bring a lot of it,” Hortiz said of the Ravens’ process. “I’ve never done it from that chair, but after doing it, after meetings and everything, you learn a lot more than you even realized just by sitting there and watching them.

“Some of the philosophi­cal stuff that Ozzie taught us way back when, that came into play in my mind many, many times, and certainly, the mechanic and the strategy that Eric has employed since he was the director of college scouting and director of player personnel in Baltimore. I watched him do it for so long. A lot of that rubbed off on me.”

Hortiz used his first pick, fifth overall, to select Notre Dame offensive tackle Joe Alt.

Incidental­ly, Newsome used his first pick, fourth overall, on a tackle, too, in 1996 while running the Ravens draft for the first time. And Jonathan Ogden wound up in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

No pressure, Hortiz.

CMC’s new pupil

Isaac Guerendo, the explosive Louisville running back chosen in the fourth round by the San Francisco 49ers, realizes that his new gig comes with a bonus: the opportunit­y to learn from Christian McCaffrey, the three-time first-team AllPro and reigning NFL Offensive Player of the Year.

“I was just telling my family, I think that he’s probably going to get annoyed with me and how many questions I’ll ask him just because of the amount of production he has and continues to have and how consistent he is,” Guerendo said. “And then his recovery plan, just all that stuff. Just being able to pick a great back like that’s brain is really important. So, hopefully in the next few weeks he’s not annoyed by me, but we’ll see.”

Business decision

Jeremiah Trotter Jr. is a Philadelph­ia Eagles linebacker now. Just like his father, who earned four Pro Bowl selections while wearing an Eagles uniform and is in the team’s Hall of Fame. Yet Eagles GM Howie Roseman, who traded up to draft Trotter Jr., insists there was no hometown bias in drafting the fifthround pick from Clemson whom he has known for many years. It was strictly business.

As Roseman joked, “You know, the best person in the world that I know is my wife, and I don’t want her playing linebacker for us.”

 ?? TIM HEITMAN/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Running back Ezekiel Elliott appears to be on the verge of returning to the Cowboys after playing for the Patriots in 2023.
TIM HEITMAN/USA TODAY SPORTS Running back Ezekiel Elliott appears to be on the verge of returning to the Cowboys after playing for the Patriots in 2023.
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