A lot of the talk circling the Dallas Cowboys and the NFL Draft is the need for the Cowboys to draft a linebacker as insurance to Sean Lee and Jaylon Smith’s injury issues.
One of the questions, Sean Lee, will always be a question. When he’s on the field, he’s as good a linebacker as there is in the NFL. In 2016, he finally got in a near full season and rewarded the Dallas Cowboys with an All-Pro season that led the team to the playoffs. Talent has never been the issue with Lee. Keeping him on the field has been.
Jaylon Smith’s question isn’t his health as much as it is his recovery. The surgery to repair his ACL and MCL that he suffered at the end of his final season at Notre Dame was considered a success. There was a caveat, however, that there was no telling how much functionality would return because of the massive nerve injury that occurred.
Last year, Jaylon Smith actually played football games. No small step. In some games he made some plays and in other games, it was clear that he was still struggling with changing directions and running with receivers and running backs in coverage.
Time is Jaylon’s biggest ally and another offseason removed from his injury should only help him get stronger and more confident in his recovering knee.
Lost in all of the Dez Bryant hoopla was a beautiful little nugget that Jaylon Smith teased Cowboys Nation with last week.
Jaylon provided a great look at his training regimen on the first day of team workouts and if you look closely, you’ll see with a Clear Eye View that Jaylon Smith isn’t wearing a brace, tape, or any other kind of support. On his knee or foot.
Focused vision, Determined belief, Earned dreams. #ClearEyeView pic.twitter.com/A2bp9ZbZuK
— Jaylon Smith (@thejaylonsmith) April 19, 2018
Remember that even after Jaylon was playing and practicing without a knee brace, he was still requiring an AFO brace to help with his foot drop.
Oh, how much one offseason can change things.
Mike Fisher, now of 247Sports.com, quoted Smith as saying, “I have more power and more flexibility now. And the dropfoot (issue) is fading. Absolutely!” over on Scout.com, and there was this:
“As our colleague Bryan Broaddus has previously noted, it does seem that some of the testing is behind him, that the nerve is regenerating, that the repaired knee is stronger than ever and that more improvement is ahead of him. Smith’s 6-2, 245-pound body is about as sculpted as is imaginable. His mind is sculpted, too, the result of his faith and his intellect and his personality and more. He suggests now that more improvement is inevitable, and that includes the medical improvement that is now, to him, simply “a matter of timing.”’
Mike Fisher – 105.3 The Fan and 247Sports.com
There is still a lot of hope around The Star and Cowboys Nation that Jaylon Smith can return to the All-American form that was projecting him as a top-five talent in the 2016 NFL Draft. If he’s healthy and moving with better lateral movement and agility than he was in 2017, that’s a huge step forward for Jaylon Smith and the Dallas Cowboys.
The progression of his knee and his confidence in said knee is going to be a huge determining factor in Dallas’ plans to draft a linebacker. If they feel confident that he will be a more functional linebacker in 2018 than he was in 2017, then perhaps they could wait until day two or three to address the linebacker position.
We can’t fully know their intentions as we get closer to draft day. How they address the linebacker position in the 2018 NFL Draft could give us an excellent indication of how they feel about Jaylon Smith’s progression.
What we do know is that Jaylon Smith will never give up working toward being an elite middle linebacker. Let’s hope he can realize his dreams. Everyone will be better for it.