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Showing posts with label Jones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jones. Show all posts

Monday, October 24, 2011

Adam Jones can boost Bengals

Adam Jones has been cleared to practice, and the veteran cornerback can help an already strong Cincinnati defense.

He will bolster the depth of the NFL's fourth-ranked pass defense and should press Kelly Jennings as the nickelback. In five games last season, he had one interception, three pass defenses, one forced fumble and two fumble recoveries, one of which he returned for a touchdown.

Jones can also provide a boost as a punt returner. The Bengals' Brandon Tate ranks 13th in the league with a 10.6-yard average. Jones had the team's longest punt return last year (a 22-yarder).

Of course, this assumes Jones returns to the same level he played last year. He's been on the physically unable to perform list because of a 2010 neck injury that prevented him from being cleared at the beginning of training camp.

The Bengals have a three-week window to evaluate him at practice without having to make a roster move and can add him at any point. Jones indicated that he expects to play Sunday at Seattle.


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Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Cowboys given good news on Felix Jones

Jason La CanforaPublished: September 19th, 2011 | Tags: Felix Jones, Dallas Cowboys

The prognosis looks good for Cowboys RB Felix Jones, according to a league source.

Jones suffered a separated shoulder during Sunday’s overtime victory over the 49ers but was able to come back in the game, finishing with nine rushes for 25 yards and one reception for 5 yards. He has since been re-evaluated, and the test results came back with good news.

The team believes Jones will be fine, though he’s obviously in serious discomfort and will have to manage the pain throughout the week as the Cowboys prepare to play the Redskins.

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Jones: ‘Fragile’ Cowboys needed a lift

NFL.com StaffPublished: September 19th, 2011 | Tags: Jerry Jones, Dallas Cowboys, Dan Bailey

Who knew the Cowboys were such gentle souls?

That was the feeling of owner Jerry Jones, who worried about his team’s mental state after rookie kicker Dan Bailey missed a chip-shot field-goal attempt early in Sunday’s 27-24 overtime victory over the 49ers.

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“At that juncture, we’re too fragile, and we’re still fragile,” Jones told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram on Monday. “I underline the word fragile. We’re still a fragile psyche with our team. Up and down all the way through me.”

This is the Dallas Cowboys, people. “America’s Team!” A living metaphor for our country’s swaggering and indomitable spirit. Fragile? We’re underlining fragile? Say it ain’t so, Jerry!

“This is all with a backdrop with what happened to us last year and with the slow starts,” Jones said. “I heard the commentators talking that this team really needs a win bad. The Dallas Cowboys need a win, and we need it early. We didn’t need to get back in some of that we experienced last year. Because it’s almost like slipping on a rut. We’ve seen the rut.”

Kidding aside, Jones has a point. The Cowboys started 0-2 last year and was 2-7 before you could say “Jerry World.” After a brutal Week 1 loss to the Jets, the Cowboys needed a confidence lift. They got just that, and head into Week 3's Monday night showdown with the 2-0 Redskins in a much healthier place.

– Dan Hanzus

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Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Butch Jones staying the course

Cincinnati coach Butch Jones will be returning to familiar territory when he takes his team into Morgantown this weekend. Jones was an assistant coach for West Virginia from 2005-06.

"It will be different," Jones said. "From the bus ride in, to the fans cheering against us to running out of the opposite tunnel."

That won't be the only thing that feels a bit off about the Bearcats' trip. Cincinnati has beaten West Virginia two years in a row on its way to consecutive Big East championships. But in Jones' first season as head coach, the team is just 3-5, already exceeding the number of losses it had the past two years combined. While few rational people expected Jones to match Brian Kelly's 12-0 regular season record of 2009, the Bearcats' 2010 definitely qualifies as a surprise setback.

[+] EnlargeButch Jones Andy Lyons/Getty ImagesThe Bearcats are just 3-5 in Butch Jones' first season as head coach.Despite the poor record and increasing fan criticism, Jones isn't pushing any panic buttons.

"Nobody has wavered," he said. "Are we disappointed? Yes. But we still have a lot to play for. This program is very prideful. Nobody is going to blink."

After Cincinnati lost 31-7 at home to Syracuse last time out, Jones said there were things going on within the program that "Joe Public has no idea" about. He has also alluded to building a foundation. Those sentiments may seem odd to people who only see the two straight Big East trophies.

Jones hasn't delved into a lot of specifics publicly, and he's in a no-win situation in that regard. If he talks about problems in the program, most fans will simply consider it excuse-making. His only option is to win more games.

Many expected this team to compete for another league title because of the return of Zach Collaros, Isaiah Pead, Armon Binns and D.J. Woods. But the Bearcats also lost several key pieces off last year's Sugar Bowl squad, including electric playmaker Mardy Gilyard; all-Big East offensive linemen Jeff Linkenbach and Chris Jurek; and cornerstone defensive players in linemen Ricardo Matthews and Alex Daniels, linebackers Curtis Young and Andre Revels and defensive backs Brad Jones and Aaron Websters. In most cases, the Bearcats haven't been able to replace their production.

Add in some recruiting misses -- the 2009 signing class has accounted for only a handful of contributors, and many of those original signees are gone -- and you get a team starting seven sophomore on defense, with precious little experience behind them. Jones was very concerned about depth this summer, and injuries and other issues have further thinned the ranks.

"We lost Kembrell Thompkins, Vidal Hazelton and Travis Kelce, who are three bona fide potential NFL prospects," he said. "And then [cornerback] Dominique Battle, who's played a lot of football for us and has been a model of consistency and stability.

"It has been an issue, but you can never allow that to be a crutch. Usually, teams playing for championships in November stay healthy and have great competition at spots. We knew [depth] was going to be an issue going in. The only thing you can do is develop your younger players."

Despite all the challenges, Jones said he likes the way the young players have responded and how leaders have emerged. That gives him hope for the future.

"Every great program suffers adversity at some stage or another," he said. "When that happens, you really find out about the character of the people in your program and around our program. If anything, what this proves is that we have very high standards here. We expect to compete on a national stage and in the Big East conference year in and year out."

These Bearcats have to win three of their final four games just to have a shot at making a bowl. The buzz around Cincinnati may have dimmed considerably since last year's run at a BCS title berth, but Jones believes he's still got the program on the right path.

"I know the system we have in place here, I know the younger players we have in place here and I know the standards and expectations we're working toward here," he said. "We're upgrading our facilities, we have great expectations and great support around our football program. We won't lose momentum. I'll make sure we do not lose any momentum."

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