FRISCO, Texas — What’s the first thing that comes to mind when thinking about Dallas Cowboys running Ezekiel Elliott?
For many people, the answers would range between bulldozing defenders for first downs or breaking away downfield for touchdowns. Those were regular occurrences during Elliott’s prime, first four seasons from 2016 through 2019 when he registered over 1,300 rushing yards three times, including two rushing titles in 2016 (1,631) and 2018 (1,434).
The answer to that question for Elliott’s teammates now that he has returned to Dallas on a one-year deal after a year away with the New England Patriots in 2023 following his early release from a six-year, $90 million contract extension he signed back in 2019 is simple. It’s his personality.
“The first day he’s back he put a big smile on everyone’s face in the locker room,” Cowboys seven-time First-Team All-Pro right guard Zack Martin said Tuesday at mandatory minicamp when asked about Elliott’s return to Dallas after the 2024 NFL Draft. “He’s got an infectious personality, maybe something we missed at times last year. So, it’s great to have him back.”
That personality was on full display shortly after his interview session with local media on Wednesday after the Cowboys’ minicamp practice. Elliott jogged back into the middle of the locker room and jumped into hitting the Whip and Nae Nae dance moves while shooting a towel he used during practice into the laundry bin in the middle of the room. Elliott was smiling and laughing without a care in the world.
“[It’s] the f—– best,” Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott said of Elliott’s return and first full month back in Dallas.
“It means a lot. It means a lot,” Elliott said Wednesday at mandatory minicamp when told of his teammates’ appreciation. “I definitely work to be that guy. Being recognized means a lot. The main thing is we’re going to have fun, but we’re going to work. We’re going to get work. We’re going to be taking ourselves forward, but we got to have fun doing it.”
The backfield duo came into the NFL together as a part of Dallas’ 2016 NFL Draft class with Elliott being selected fourth overall and Prescott coming off the board 135th overall in the fourth round. The three-time Pro Bowl quarterback called the three-time Pro Bowl running back his “little brother” and a best friend obviously” prior to the Cowboys facing Elliott when he was on the Patriots in Week 4 last season. Despite being away during the 2023 season, those around the building at The Star in Frisco, Dallas’ facility, feel like Elliott ” really never left” as he’s reintegrated himself into the Cowboys offense.
“It just feels like Zeke really never left,” Dallas Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy said on May 30 at organized team activities when asked about Elliott’s first month back. “There’s things that are different. He’s had some new learning schematically, language, things like that. The foundation of what he’s done. Frankly, probably his experience in New England [in 2023] to learn another system … He’s picked it up. Looks good.”
Elliott himself agreed with McCarthy’s assessment regarding what’s been a seamless transition back to a place he views as home.
“I wouldn’t say I was at all worried about how I was going to feel when I got back,” he said when talking about fitting back into the team. “I was gone for however long, but I still talked to a lot of the guys in the locker room. Still hung out with a lot of guys in the locker room. Kind of just picked up where I left off.”
Even though Elliott’s return after a year away with the New England Patriots in 2023 means more competition for snaps and carries in 2024, Dallas running back Rico Dowdle, who served as Tony Pollard‘s back up last season, cracked a big smile when asked about having the big bruiser as a teammate for a second time with the Cowboys.
“Great. That’s a guy, a vet that’s been here before. Great to have him back. Guy brings the energy every day. Keeps everyone together,” Dowdle said at organized team activities on May 30, smiling when asked about Elliott. “That’s my guy. … That guy’s a character man, he’s going to make a memory every day. Nothing in particular (in terms of a memory), just coming out and having fun. We’re enjoying each other, going out there and competing but no particular memory. He’s just a vet guy, leads the right way. Coaching us, the younger guys, up in the meeting rooms and stuff.”
What does Elliott bring to a running back position that currently has eight players in it entering training camp out in Oxnard, California? The football life of a player whose 2,065 career carries rank as the most in the NFL since he entered the league in 2016 and whose 8,904 rushing yards rank as the second-most in the same span behind only Derrick Henry‘s 9,502 yards on the ground.
“Shoot, eight years,” Elliott said when asked what lessons he imparts on his younger teammates at the running back position. “Eight years, however many carries, however many reps, however many blitz pickups. Just the experience. I’ve seen just about everything. Just give them a little bit of my experience, and any tidbit or nugget that could help them with their game…. We got a lot of guys. A lot of good young players that bring a lot of good things to the table. I’m excited to get to work with them in camp and continue to help them develop.”
Entering his ninth NFL season in 2024, Elliott has put a lot more into his offseason conditioning as well as pre and post-practice warmup regimen. The diet is a little different approaching 29 (his birthday is on July 22) than it was when he was a 21-year-old rookie in 2016. Steak is no longer a regular component like it once was.
“Definitely got to. Definitely got to,” Elliott said when asked if his diet has changed over the years. “That metabolism is definitely slowing down. Can’t do as much Nick and Sam’s as I want. Definitely have to tighten up there.”
HIs pre-practice warmup also looks markedly different than it was in the earlier stages of his career.
“Just have to do so much more. My routine is a lot more complex,” Elliott said. “I have a lot of new exercises and things to help me prep my knees so I’m ready to go. It definitely takes a little more to get warm and get ready for those practices.”
Part of his pre-practice routine involves warming up with a resistance band connected to his waist as well as associate athletic trainer/director of rehabilitation Britt Brown’s. Once Elliott is nice and warm, he ends the session with a hug for Brown, who joined the Cowboys in a full-time capacity in 1996.
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Author: Garrett Podell
June 5, 2024 | 9:30 pm