Well, guess what: Bryant signed Thursday, becoming the first first-round pick in the entire NFL to strike a deal. The contract is for $11.8 million over five years, with at least $8.3 million guaranteed.
The key is that the deal is done in time for Bryant to be in San Antonio for the start of training camp Friday and, of course, the first practice Saturday. By the end of training camp, he might even be pushing Roy Williams for the starting job opposite Miles Austin .
“This was very important to me to be able to get this done in time for the first practice,” Bryant said in a statement released by the team. “I want to help this team. I want to compete. I can’t wait to start playing football again.”
Bryant played only three games for Oklahoma State last season, then was dogged by all sorts of questions about his integrity, starting with an NCAA suspension for lying to investigators about a meeting with former Cowboys star Deion Sanders.
There was talk of him skipping meetings and classes, and being late to games. There were concerns about his mother’s private life, enough that Miami Dolphins general manager Jeff Ireland asked if she ever was a prostitute. After he skipped the NFL combine and held his own pro day, there were whispers that he forgot to bring the right cleats.
But the Cowboys did their homework and wanted Bryant so badly that when they saw him slipping in the draft, they moved up to No. 24 and nabbed him. Team owner Jerry Jones also laid the foundation for Thursday’s announcement before ever making the pick.
Speaking with agent Eugene Parker while the Cowboys were on the clock, Jones said: “We want a commitment here that we’re going to work to get this done. We don’t want a repeat of what happened last year.”
That conversation was relayed by Stephen Jones, the team’s vice president, while he repeatedly praised Parker and Bryant for getting this done on the eve of training camp.
“It’s always been a good relationship with (Parker),” Jones said, noting that he represented two other recent first-rounders, but leaving out the fact both were a few days late to camp. “It’s a two-way street. He’s benefited, we’ve benefited. Nobody is trying to get the upper hand. You just want things to be good. He wants things to be good for Dez, and so do we.”
Parker agreed that his long, solid relationship with the Joneses helped this deal come together.
“The trust factor,” he said. “That enabled us to cut through some of the typical posturing and positioning and get right to the issues.”
Among those issues was the lack of a collective bargaining agreement starting in 2011. That uncertainty is among the reasons none of the other first-rounders have signed.
“That’s a big issue,” Parker said. “Both sides had to be committed to compromise and be willing to see the other person’s challenges and concerns and work through them.”
Jerry Jones already has given Parker No. 88, a cherished jersey in Cowboys history because it was worn by Michael Irvin and Drew Pearson.
Irvin was Troy Aikman’s favorite target, and Pearson was Roger Staubach’s favorite target. With this deal done, it won’t be long before Tony Romo starts his relationship with Bryant, perhaps adding them to that list.
“It was really important that we get him working and in the groove with Tony and our offense, and I think he understood that,” Stephen Jones said.
Romo liked what he saw from Bryant over the summer — and from what the kid did in college.
In 27 games at Oklahoma State, Bryant had 147 catches for 2,425 yards (16.5 yards per catch) and 29 touchdowns. He also returned 22 punts for a 19.6-yard average and three TDs.
Bryant already is being counted on to return punts.
Stephen Jones added that second-round pick Sean Lee was close to signing his deal. Jones expects the linebacker from Penn State to be in San Antonio for the start of camp.
Broncos, Dumervil reach agreement on extension
In Englewood, Colorado, Denver Broncos fans can relax. Not so opposing quarterbacks: NFL sacks leader Elvis Dumervil has at long last agreed to a long-term extension.
Dumervil thrived last season in the Broncos’ new defensive alignment that turned him from a classic 4-3 defensive end into a 3-4 linebacker. He responded with an NFL-leading and team-record 17 sacks, a starting spot in the Pro Bowl and All-Pro honors.
Only two players have more sacks than Dumervil’s 43 since entering the league as a fourth-round draft pick in 2006 out of Louisville — Dallas’ DeMarcus Ware (56 1/2) and Minnesota’s Jared Allen (52).
Both of them have cashed in with big contracts that contain large guarantees, $40 million for Ware and $31 million for Allen.
ESPN reported that Dumervil’s deal was worth $61 million over six seasons with between $41 million and $43 million guaranteed.
Dez Bryant agrees on terms of deal with Cowboys
Publication Date:
Fri, 2010-07-23 20:11
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