Cowboys Land 9 Players On AP All-Pro List

Cowboys Land 9 Players On AP All-Pro List

The 2023 All-Pro first and second team lists have been revealed by the Associated Press, just in time to stir up some debate ahead of the NFL playoffs. This list’s 2023 iteration has nine Dallas Cowboys,

Nine Dallas Cowboys are included in this list for 2023; four make the first team and five land on the second.

All-Pro 1st Team:

  • WR CeeDee Lamb
  • RG Zack Martin
  • CB DaRon Bland
  • K Brandon Aubrey

All-Pro 2nd Team:

  • QB Dak Prescott
  • LT Tyron Smith
  • LG Tyler Smith
  • EDGE Micah Parsons
  • P Bryan Anger

Who Was Properly Placed?

All of the players voted in are worthy of a spot, but I want to focus on the top three who I believe are most deserving of the praise.

WR CeeDee Lamb

CeeDee Lamb is listed as the second wide receiver out of three that are voted in behind Miami’s Tyreek Hill and ahead of Detroit’s Amon-Ra St. Brown.

Lamb is definitely deserving of his first All-Pro nod, having finished the season as the NFL leader in the following categories:

  • Targets (179)
  • Receptions (135)
  • Total touchdowns for a wide receiver (14)

There are many more categories where Lamb is 2nd or 3rd, and most of them are just behind Hill or St. Brown.

Questions arose this offseason about Lamb being able to step into a top role in the offense.

The season started slow for him, but he finished it with a bang and those questions have been answered with a resounding YES.

CB DaRon Bland

At the beginning of the season, DaRon Bland was predicted to be the third option behind Trevon Diggs and Stephan Gilmore.

That prediction came true for the first two games.

Bland was moved to slot duties, where he led the club with five interceptions in his debut season.

Sadly, Diggs was forced to miss the entire season due to an ACL tear sustained during practice before a Week 3 game in Arizona, forcing Bland to take over as the main wide receiver.

In response, he turned in one of the best seasons ever by an NFL cornerback, logging nine interceptions and returning five of them for touchdowns—a record for the league.

K Brandon Aubrey

Special Teams Coach Jon Fassel made a decision early in training camp to cut veteran Tristan Vizcaino in favor of rookie and former MLS 1st round pick Brandon Aubrey.

That might have been the best coaching decision of the year for the Dallas Cowboys as Aubrey earned 1st team All-Pro in his first opportunity.

Aubrey broke NFL and franchise records on his way to a near-perfect season, falling just short of perfect in Week 18 at Washington.

A blocked kick ruined the party, but Aubrey would then miss later in the game from 36 yards, only to cap off his season with a successful attempt from 50 yards away.

Aubrey’s best game and likely the game that pushed voters to take him over 2nd team All-Pro K Jake Elliott from Philadelphia was the game versus the Eagles.

He hit field goals from 60, 59, and 52 yards to show his range and accuracy.

Who Got Snubbed?

While I agree the Cowboys are well-represented on this list, I do think there are a couple of players who made it that deserved 1st team recognition, and one player who I can’t believe didn’t make it at all.

Dak Prescott

This is Dak Prescott’s first All-Pro nod in his eight-year career, but it still feels just short of right.

Lamar Jackson of Baltimore was awarded 1st team All-Pro by an absurd margin of 45 votes to Dak’s two (Brock Purdy also received two votes), and that doesn’t sit well with me.

Prescott was the better  in nearly every stat and metric that matters.

Take a look at these areas where Prescott bested Jackson this season (stats taken from PFF.com

  • Completion percentage, 69.5% to 67.0%
  • Passing yards, 4,519 to 3,678
  • Passing touchdowns, 36 to 24
  • TD/INT ratio, 4:1 to 3.4:1
  • Big time throws (ball location in tight windows), 38 to 24
  • Passer Rating, 105.9 to 102.5

I can understand Jackson beating out Prescott for NFL MVP because of his added rushing value, but determining the best QUARTERBACK in the NFL is different.

The voters got it wrong.

Micah Parsons

The voters ruined what we all thought was a given: Micah Parsons notching his third straight 1st team All-Pro nod.

I know exactly what happened.

The voters were blinded solely by sack totals but completely ignored the overall impact of the game.

Myles Garrett and T.J. Watt are elite players who offensive coordinators must account for on every play.

Their sack totals won them 1st team, but only Garrett is in the same stratosphere at Parsons when it comes to pressure rate and double-team rate.

Here are Micah’s ranks compared to the rest of the field (stats taken from PFF.com

  • Pass rush grade (93.7), 2nd to Garrett (94.8); Watt (91.7)
  • Pressures (103), 1st
  • Hurries (69), 1st
  • Pass rush win percentage (24.7), 2nd to Garrett (27.5); Watt (16.9)

Parsons deserved his third straight 1st team All-Pro award, but hopefully receiving 2nd team will be another motivator for the playoff run.

DeMarcus Lawrence

Cowboys’ 10-year veteran DeMarcus Lawrence has never received an All-Pro distinction on his resume.

This year was arguably the best season of his career, but still did not earn the distinction.

I believe this is for the same reason that Parsons was snubbed for 1st team All-Pro.

He just doesn’t have the sack numbers, and sacks for a  are the premium stat to earning accolades.

Lawrence excels in the run game, and that’s exactly where Dallas needs him.

Here are his rush defense stats, again provided by PFF.com

  • Overall run defense grade (92.4), 2nd to Maxx Crosby (92.7)
  • Stop percentage (% of tackles resulting in a loss) 25%, 1st among qualified players

Lawrence has been a menace defending the run this season, a will be a precious commodity for Dallas in the playoffs.

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