Dallas, TX
What’s Jerry Jones Really Think About His Cowboys Roster?

FRISCO – Dallas Cowboys proprietor Jerry Jones this week unveiled a intelligent strategy to communicate to each the holes on his roster and his religion in stated roster.
“I believe we will very simply be the place we had been final 12 months talent-wise,” Jones stated throughout Tuesday’s pre-NFL Draft media session right here inside The Star. “I’m not keen to concede in any respect that by the point we get to the playoffs this coming 12 months that we gained’t be each bit the crew that we had going into the playoffs final 12 months.”
Intelligent.


Jones, who additionally stated final 12 months’s roster in contrast favorable to most any in his 32-year Cowboys historical past – which is a mouthful, provided that the early 1990’s Cowboys could be the best assemblage of expertise ever – just isn’t hiding from truths right here.
Final 12 months’s playoff failure was a crushing disappointment for him.
And this 12 months’s roster is – at present – not what it was just some months in the past.
Dallas traded star large receiver Amari Cooper to the Cleveland Browns in a wage dump, endured the defection of Randy Gregory to Denver, reduce beginning offensive lineman La’el Collins (who all however acquired a welcome parade in Cincinnati) and did not blink when wideout Cedrick Wilson Jr. and guard Connor Williams each signed with the Miami Dolphins.
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So how does Jerry Jones suppose this group is best? He would not; dig by way of his phrases fastidiously and he is speaking concerning the promise of what could be, concerning the growth of his younger gamers, concerning the management of his veterans and concerning the hope of hitting on one other Micah Parsons gold mine on this week’s draft.
“I am not factoring to find this 12 months’s Parsons,” he stated. “I really feel very strongly that we will have a crew that can provide us each bit the promise to evolve and get us again to the place we had been within the playoffs final 12 months with the well being degree, the supply degree, in addition to the expertise degree that we had final 12 months. I can go down by way of and take a look at specifics simply inside. Dak (Prescott) needs to be in higher form than when he was going into the playoffs … That alone might put us in higher form for the playoffs.”
What Jerry is doing – craftily – just isn’t evaluating the roster to the place it was three months in the past, however quite, to the place is was 12 months in the past. That is earlier than Parsons received right here and whereas Dak was nonetheless rehabbing from main ankle surgical procedure.
In the meantime, what he’s additionally doing, with as a lot subtlety as he can handle, is telling you the 2022 Dallas Cowboys are going to the NFL Playoffs. …
“By the point we get to the playoffs this coming 12 months,” Jones stated.
It is intelligent. It is artful. It’s, Cowboys Nation hopes, true.

Dallas, TX
Mavs' Anthony Davis is upgraded to questionable against Nets after 6-week injury absence

Anthony Davis appears on the verge of returning to the Dallas Mavericks after a six-week injury absence, with the star forward upgraded to questionable against the Brooklyn Nets to start a four-game road trip Monday night.
Davis hasn’t played — and had been listed as out — since injuring his left groin in his Dallas debut on Feb. 8. That was about a week after the seismic trade that sent Luka Doncic to the Los Angeles and enraged many Mavericks fans.
The Mavs changed the 10-time All-Star’s injury designation for the first time Sunday when they listed Davis as doubtful.
The defending Western Conference champions are in a tight race with Phoenix for 10th place in the West, the final spot in the play-in tournament.
Dallas will be without Kyrie Irving for the rest of the season. The star guard tore the ACL in his left knee in a 122-98 loss to Sacramento on March 3.
While the injury to Irving could have been a reason for the Mavericks to consider shutting down Davis, he has continued to work toward a return, going on road trips and staying engaged with his teammates.
Davis had an abdominal injury before the trade, missing his last two games with the Lakers and the first two he could have played for Dallas.
When he did return in a 116-105 victory at home against Houston, Davis had 24 points, 13 rebounds, five assists and all three of his blocks in the first half before pulling up lame late in the third quarter with the groin injury. He finished with 26 points, 16 rebounds and seven assists.
Seven of Dallas’ remaining 11 games are on the road. After playing the Nets, Dallas is at the New York Knicks on Tuesday, at Orlando on Thursday and at Chicago on Saturday.
Dallas, TX
Dallas should prioritize housing in debate over park fees

Earlier this month, Mayor Eric Johnson told a group of U.S. senators that the solution to the housing shortage in Dallas and elsewhere is to cut bureaucratic red tape and make it easier for builders to build.
A dispute over Dallas park fees will give the mayor an opportunity to show he means it.
In February, the City Plan Commission considered a request to increase the fees that developers must pay to Dallas in lieu of dedicating parkland as part of their projects. City staff brought the proposal forward in light of a state law that caps how much large cities can demand in parkland or charge in park acquisition fees.
Under the state law, cities can charge a flat fee per dwelling unit of no more than 2% of the median family income. Dallas city staff proposed raising the park fee to the maximum 2%. Most developers opt for paying this fee rather than building parks themselves.
Currently, a developer must pay $1,165 in park fees for a single-family home. Raising the fee would take that number to $1,308. Apartment builders, however, would feel the increase more acutely. A developer building a complex with 250 apartments of two or more bedrooms would go from paying $229,250 in park fees to $327,000. That’s an increase of 42.62%.
The plan commission wisely interrogated the park fee increase and decided it would be better to halve it instead.
At least two park board members have blasted the move, one calling it “appalling.” They framed it as a setback, and one noted that Dallas’ park fees are among the lowest in the region.
That may be the case, but Dallas is also trying to dig itself out of a reputational hole for being a bureaucratic nightmare for developers. Keeping its fees low where it makes sense should be its strategy.
The use of the park development money collected so far doesn’t make a compelling argument for raising the fees, either. As our colleague Devyani Chhetri reported, the park acquisition fund has collected $17 million since it started in 2019 but has only used about $2.3 million to acquire land in northern Dallas.
Part of the problem has to do with rules about how the money is allocated among seven different zones. City staff is proposing reducing the number of zones to five to make it easier to acquire parkland, which makes sense.
Raising the fee, however, is another matter. Dallas voters approved $345 million in bond money for parks last year. There’s no need to be appalled about a move to lower park fees.
The matter is now expected to move to the City Council. Members should take a measured look at the facts and make a decision consistent with their stated commitment to build more housing in Dallas. It’s not a zero-sum game. The city can make life easier for housing developers while working with the private sector to expand and improve parks.
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Dallas, TX
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