Advertisement

sportsCowboys

Proven, but slighted: Everson Griffen joins a Cowboys’ defensive line eager to prove itself

Griffen's presence pushes the defensive line to five players with at least one career Pro Bowl appearance.

The Cowboys built a buffet line on defense.

Since March, they’ve overhauled their front, the latest addition coming Wednesday when edge rusher Everson Griffen agreed to terms. His presence pushes the defensive line to five players with at least one career Pro Bowl appearance.

Everson is the only one to achieve the feat in 2019, and he waited five months to land somewhere in free agency via a one-year contract. Be it due to age, suspension, surgery or perceived disrespect, this cast of 260 to 340-plus pounders is simultaneously proven and slighted.

Advertisement

Each lineman now gets a plate. They shouldn’t lack for hunger.

Cowboys

Be the smartest Cowboys fan. Get the latest news.

Or with:

On Friday morning, the Cowboys finally will do what they were supposed to do in April and hold their first practice under new coach Mike McCarthy. The defensive line is probably the roster’s most intriguing group as the next phase of training camp begins.

DeMarcus Lawrence is the top returner.

Advertisement

Last year, coming off a new five-year, $105 million contract, the defensive end missed the spring and most of training camp following shoulder surgery. His sack total then dropped from 101/2 to five. Never mind that he faced persistent double teams and was still highly disruptive against the pass and run.

A string of two straight Pro Bowls dropped. He went from No. 45 on the NFL Network’s top 100 player poll to absent. Such honors are not synonymous with performance. But Lawrence noticed the reception to his 2019 campaign.

“Justice Will Be Served,” he wrote on Twitter last month. “To all the haters and doubters the wait is almost over.”

Advertisement

Lawrence gets a buffet plate.

Of the other top returners, defensive lineman Tyrone Crawford missed 12 games to hip surgery last year. Despite logical speculation, the Cowboys did not reduce his $8 million salary for 2020, which is the final season of his contract. Still on the physically unable to perform list, he may not practice Friday.

Meanwhile, nose tackle Antwaun Woods heard months of chatter about the team’s need for an upgrade at his position.

Both get a plate.

Sack leader Robert Quinn, defensive tackle Maliek Collins, Michael Bennett and Kerry Hyder were the primary offseason departures for the Cowboys’ defensive line. The team made splashes in the spring when signing defensive tackle Gerald McCoy, nose tackle Dontari Poe and then-suspended edge rusher Aldon Smith.

McCoy, 32, made the Pro Bowl from 2012 to 2017 but not since. The Cowboys are his third team in as many years. Poe, who turns 30 next week, made the Pro Bowl in 2013 and 2014 but not since. Dallas is his fourth team in five years.

Smith’s only Pro Bowl appearance came in 2012 when recording 191/2 sacks for the San Francisco 49ers. Because of off-the-field issues, Friday will mark his first NFL practice since 2015. There are legitimate questions about what exactly the Cowboys are getting in Smith, given the long layoff for the 30-year-old.

They get a plate.

Advertisement

Defensive tackle Neville Gallimore, a third-round pick, and defensive end Bradlee Anae, a fifth-round choice, were drafted later than expected in April.

Both can get in the line, too.

Few, if any, conclusions can be drawn about the Cowboys’ defensive line during Friday’s practice in Frisco. No pads will be worn. Players have been instructed to protect each other and work at less than full speed.

Griffen, whose contract is worth up to $6 million, won’t be present until next week at the earliest. He still has to sign and then clear COVID-19 testing protocol. Smith figures to be eased back. Like Crawford, Poe (quad) is on the physically unable to perform list.

Advertisement

The franchise has assembled a collection of name-brand talent on its defensive line, a cluster of individuals who have proven — some more recently than others — they can produce at a high level. What will largely define the position group is to what degree performance levels from the past can be recaptured.

These linemen should be hungry in 2020.

The Cowboys hope they eat.

Advertisement

Find more Cowboys stories from The Dallas Morning News here.