Witten is herding the Dallas Cowboys by example

The senior tight end has outlasted coach Bill Parcells and flamboyant receiver Terrell Owens, and his leadership hit a new level this year in part because the Cowboys dumped franchise sacks leader DeMarcus Ware and former Pro Bowl receiver Miles Austin.

Dallas Cowboys tight end Jason Witten has been a mentor to his young teammates. LM Otero / AP Photo
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Jason Witten gets the same old questions at the start of training camp ever since offering his hauntingly prophetic line two years ago that it could not be the “same old story” for the play-off starved Dallas Cowboys.

The nine-time Pro Bowl tight end’s phrase caught on because of his role as a leader and because it has been the same ending three years running, with the Cowboys losing to an NFC East foe with a trip to the post-season on the line.

Witten’s answers are just a little bit different this time. An increasingly younger roster has the franchise leader in catches more aware than ever of the weight of his words and actions.

“The team’s gotten young in a hurry,” Witten said. “I don’t know that it changes other than leadership’s more vital now than it’s ever been. To be able to show those guys the way. It’s important. It’s a big part of this game.”

Witten bases this on the fact the Cowboys are not adding young players in backup roles. Three offensive linemen – all first-round picks – will be 23 when the season starts. Others who have not reached their 25th birthday figure to be counted on throughout the much-maligned defence.

Coach Jason Garrett figures those younger players are in good hands.

“I’m not so sure I have ever been around a guy who is a better leader for this team than Witten is,” said Garrett.

“You think about some of the teams we had in the ’90s, there was leadership that was out there, outspoken, loud, and there was leadership that didn’t say a word. Leadership is about influencing a group of people that you’re close to. Witten has done that.”

Witten also dictates the pace for the tight ends, as second-year player Gavin Escobar noted when he said the off-season conditioning work “definitely kicked up a notch” when Witten was around.

“Whatever he says goes,” Escobar said. “We weren’t going to talk back. We were just going to do it.”

Witten, 32, has outlasted coach Bill Parcells and flamboyant receiver Terrell Owens, and his leadership hit a new level this year in part because the Cowboys dumped franchise sacks leader DeMarcus Ware and former Pro Bowl receiver Miles Austin.

He goes into his 12th season as the league’s active leader among tight ends in catches (879) and yards (9,799) with the retirement of Tony Gonzalez.

Witten has missed one game in 11 years, most notably returning 23 days after rupturing his spleen in a pre-season game so he could play in the opener against the New York Giants in 2012 – the “same old story” year.

His signature moment came at Philadelphia in 2007, when Witten’s helmet was knocked off on a hit by a Philadelphia Eagles defensive back and he ran almost 30 yards without it before getting tackled.

Witten will always remember 2007 more as the best year the Cowboys have had in his career. They were 13-3 and seeded No 1 in the NFC play-offs. But Dallas lost the first play-off game to the New York Giants and has just one post-season win since Witten arrived – a stretch that goes back to 1997.

“No one cares more about that than Witten does,” Garrett said. “But there have been a lot of great players in this league and in other leagues who haven’t had Super Bowl championships or NBA championships or World Series championships.”

Witten does not figure to give up that pursuit anytime soon. For one thing, he has signed through 2017, and, for another, Gonzalez played 17 seasons before he retired at 37. Shannon Sharpe was 35 when he quit after 14 years.

It should not take Witten long in 2014 to join those two as the only tight ends with at least 10,000 yards receiving. But he is probably more focused on ending a four-year play-off drought that is now just one season shy of the franchise record.

“There’s no question there’s a lot of sleepless nights there, but really, nobody cares,” Witten said. “This is a tough league. Nobody cares about last year.

“You move on, so we’ve got to be better. I think we’ve got the right guys who will go do it, but it’s a long ways away.”

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