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On Tuesday, Dallas Cowboys superstar defensive back Trevon Diggs was medically cleared to return from the Physically Unable to Perform (PUP) list, crossing another huge milestone in his recovery from a torn ACL.
Diggs’ injury came last season in a September practice. He made a name for himself in 2021 when he registered 11 interceptions and really took the league by storm with his incredibly aggressive playstyle.
.@Jaboowins going DEEP pic.twitter.com/CS9qGFZiTp
— Cleveland Browns (@Browns) July 30, 2024
While Diggs has been removed from the PUP list, he is not quite all the way ready to begin football activities. Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy noted on Tuesday that Diggs will remain in his rehab program but that he and the Cowboys are in “return to play mode.”
Browns fans certainly know the balancing act that surrounds the return from an injury like this. This is not a situation where Diggs can just jump back onto the practice field and be good to go. It will take some time for him to get back into playing shape.
The Browns will host the Cowboys in Cleveland on Sept. 8. That is still a long way out, and there is ample time for Diggs to continue his recovery to be ready for the Browns’ passing attack. If the Browns come into that game with their receiving corps as good as advertised, the Cowboys will need a healthy Diggs to slow Cleveland down.
Without Diggs in the lineup, Dallas’ secondary features DaRon Bland and Nahshon Wright as the book ends with former Ohio State Buckeye Malik Hooker and Donovan Wilson patrolling the middle of the field.
Bland’s historic 2023 will be hard to replicate, so it should be advantage Cleveland if Diggs is not back in the lineup come Week 1.
The Dallas Cowboys’ late-season struggles continue, extending the team’s losing streak to three games after watching their NFL playoff hopes vanish earlier in the weekend.
On Sunday afternoon, the team once again struggled to get anything going and fell to the Los Angeles Chargers, 34-17, in the team’s home finale.
While the loss was disappointing, the silver lining for Cowboys Nation is that the team’s draft position continues to improve, with the team now sitting in the mid-teens with the No. 13 overall pick.
MORE: 3 frustrating takeaways from Cowboys’ loss to Chargers in Week 16
Dallas also got some help on Saturday night, with the Green Bay Packers falling to the Chicago Bears in overtime, moving the Cowboys’ second first-round pick to No. 21 overall.
Let’s hope that the team can make good use of the picks in the spring and double-dip on the defensive side of the ball to improve the roster on the defensive side of the ball. The Cowboys will finish off the 2025-26 campaign with divisional games against the Washington Commanders and New York Giants.
If the draft were to be held today, the Giants would hold the No. 1 overall pick.
A full look at the current 2026 NFL Draft order as the Cowboys observe their bye week, via Tankathon
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The 2026 NFL Draft will be held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, from Thursday, April 23, through Saturday, April 25.
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The 2019 murder of 9-year-old Brandoniya Bennett in her Old East Dallas apartment rattled the whole city.
The bubbly girl, a rising fourth grader, was watching TV on a summer day when a bullet struck her. She was killed by a man feuding with a fellow rapper. The shooter had attacked the wrong apartment at Roseland, a cluster of Dallas Housing Authority properties.
Brandoniya’s death was framed as a turning point. City leaders, including Mayor Eric Johnson, vowed that Dallas would tamp down violence. But as revealed by a Dallas Morning News investigation this month, city officials and DHA had already put together a plan that was supposed to improve security at Roseland, a dangerous, high-crime complex. The plan was signed in January 2018, long before Brandoniya’s killing.
Despite this plan, violence continued to terrorize residents at Roseland. The complex is quieter now that it’s undergoing a planned renovation that has led many residents to relocate. City Hall and DHA find themselves at another crossroads, and it’s worth examining what went wrong with the 2018 plan so they can prevent a downward spiral once Roseland fills up again.
As our colleagues Sue Ambrose and Chase Rogers reported, Roseland for years has recorded enough criminal activity to qualify for a designation as a “habitual criminal property,” which should have led to increased police oversight. But former City Manager T.C. Broadnax opted instead for a more cooperative arrangement with DHA. The agreement called for crime reduction plans, meetings between DHA and city and police officials as well as record-keeping.
Neither the city nor DHA hewed closely to the agreement and its accountability measures. A DHA attorney referred to the documentation mentioned in the agreement as more of a wish list. Whatever you want to call it, the agreement was plainly a failure.
Shootings continued. More than one drug house took root. DHA initially resisted city requests for information about its rent roll, lease violations, community rules and a towing policy. The reports and briefings specified in the agreement didn’t happen.
We believe city and DHA officials are genuine about their desire to make Roseland safer. Police investigated crimes in the complex and made arrests. DHA invested in infrastructure and hired a private security firm in 2024 that significantly improved safety at Roseland. However, that firm left the picture in June after it couldn’t come to terms with DHA.
Dallas City Hall wisely recognized the problems at Roseland, but it was too lax with DHA, and the agency was too reluctant to cooperate. If safety deteriorates at Roseland again, the city must be more assertive about deploying its oversight powers.
Many public housing properties across the country have failed because authorities allowed crime to fester. DHA should cooperate with Dallas police to identify and expel bad actors from its properties. The agency’s No. 1 job is to create a safe and dignified environment for the families that depend on its services.
A woman and the person suspected of killing her are dead after an incident led to an officer-involved shooting near Town East Mall in Mesquite on Saturday.
The Dallas Police Department (DPD) responded to a shooting call in the 9000 block of Markville Drive at about 10:15 a.m. A woman was found shot and taken to a local hospital where she died from her injuries.
DPD determined that the suspect fled the scene.
Around 11:45 a.m., Dallas Police said Northeast Division officers were conducting surveillance and located the suspect in a vehicle near the 18500 block of LBJ Freeway in Mesquite, which is right outside Town East Mall.
Police said when they attempted a traffic stop, the suspect got out of the car armed and shots were fired.
They said no officers were hurt, and the suspect died on scene.
The shooting gave many busy mall shoppers some pause.
“I was just afraid about everybody else here, you know, like, there’s a whole bunch of families out here Christmas shopping, something else could have happened, you know,” said Alexander Evans.
“My friend and her kids are supposed to be meeting me here, so I kind of told her, I was like, ‘It might be best if you don’t.’ Just to be safe,” said Abby Rather.
Mesquite Police are now investigating the officer-involved shooting, since it happened within their city.
Dallas Police said they are still investigating the homicide case.
They also said the Dallas County District Attorney’s Office responded to the OIS scene and will conduct their own investigation.
Dallas Police said The Office of Community Police Oversight also responded.
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