dbair1967

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Rookie TE Szczerba Proves To Be More Than Just A Blocker

Posted 1 hour ago

By Jonathan Auping

OXNARD, Calif. - When rookie Andrew Szczerba showed up to training camp in Oxnard, he was considered a blocking tight end with a relatively small shot at making the final roster of 53. Quite a bit has changed since then.

Szczerba has not only proven to be a viable receiving threat, but he also may end up as the third tight end on the squad for the opening game against the New York Giants on Sept. 5 if Jason Witten is still recovering from his spleen injury.

At 6-6, 256 pounds, Szczerba made a name for himself as a terrific and physical blocker in his four years at Penn State. He was not exactly catching a lot of passes, though. In his senior season he only had 12 receptions for 101 yards. The Cowboys are learning that those statistics might have a little more to do with Penn State’s offense than they do with Szczerba’s actual skill set.

Szczerba has the prototypical size for a tight end and has actually done an excellent job of running his routes and catching passes thus far in training camp. He showed this was not just a case of playing well when no one was watching by catching a 20-yard pass in the first preseason game against Oakland.

While many people are surprised with Szczerba’s pass catching abilities, he is not one of them.

“I feel like I’m a full tight end,” Szczerba said. “I feel like I can block and I can catch. I wasn’t surprised that I had a 20-yard catch. We’re catching balls all day out here.”

A timetable for Jason Witten’s return is still up in the air, but he will likely not play in any of the remaining three preseason games. That will leave John Phillips as the primary tight end. Phillips inherits the job due to his three years of experience and the flashes of potential he has shown while with the Cowboys. But even Phillips only just returned to practicing in full pads on Wednesday after recovering from an ankle injury. After Phillips, the candidates are Szczerba and James Hanna.

Hanna was drafted in the sixth round out of Oklahoma last March. Hanna has also looked impressive in camp and caught two passes against Oakland. He is projected by many to be the third tight end on the depth chart due to his impressive speed and his potential as a receiving threat. However, Szczerba’s reputation as a blocker may serve to his advantage. Hanna is considered the better passing threat, but if Szczerba can continue to impress as receiver than he may prove to be the more well-rounded player.

Szczerba, however, is not concerned with his “identity” as a tight end. He hopes that his skill set will show as long as he puts in the work.

“It doesn’t matter if the fans think I’m a blocking tight end or a receiving tight end,” Szczerba said. “It matters what the coaches think. I’m just going to come out here and do my best with blocking and receiving.”

On Wednesday, the Cowboys signed a fifth tight end in Harry Flaherty. When a new player comes in whom the other tight ends have no prior relationship with, there is a unique conflict between viewing him as either a teammate or competition. Szczerba explains that he sees him as both.

“If he (Flaherty) has a question, obviously we’re all going to help him,” Szczerba said. “But we come out here and compete every day, so everything is a competition with this team.”
One thing that Flaherty cannot learn from Szczerba is size. Szczerba is the largest tight end on the roster not named Jason Witten. Head coach, Jason Garrett, likes to say that quality players do not grow on trees. Those as big as Szczerba certainly don’t grow on trees either, which might make him quite the commodity.
 

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sounds good. God knows we've invested a ton of picks in that position including two second rounders and only have Jason "My window of opportunity is shutting down" Witten to show for it.
 

dbair1967

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sounds good. God knows we've invested a ton of picks in that position including two second rounders and only have Jason "My window of opportunity is shutting down" Witten to show for it.

I didnt think Fasano or Bennett were wasted picks. They both played extensively while here. They were just stuck behind a superb player.

I really wont be all that surprised if Bennett catches 50-60 balls for the NYG this year, and he's always been an exceptional blocker.
 
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I wonder if John Phillips could be a "suprise" cut?

If this PSU guy shows well as a blocker and a decent receiver, and we know James Hanna is a potential match up nightmare, then we'd have to make a tough decision. Doubtful we keep four tight ends.
 

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Bennett was a wasted pick.

Not really. He played alot of snaps and was one of the best blocking TE's in the league while he was here. He did help us to run the ball better.

Didnt work out as a bigtime pass catcher, but he was never more than the 4th or 5th option anyway.

Wasted picks are guys that dont play at all, or are absolutely miserable when they do play. Which leads to them not playing.
 

dbair1967

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Doubtful we keep four tight ends.

If Witten is questionable for the first game or two, I think its likely we'll keep 4. They might not keep 4 for the entire year, but they run alot of 2TE sets. Hard to believe they'd go with only 2 active TE's.
 
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Let me ask you this, Bledsoeboy, when we spent a 2nd round pick on him... was it because we liked his athleticism and thought he'd be a match up nightmare? Or was it because we really saw him as a glorified offensive tackle?

He was a wasted pick. Hence, the complete lack of effort in resigning him.
 

dbair1967

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Let me ask you this, Bledsoeboy, when we spent a 2nd round pick on him... was it because we liked his athleticism and thought he'd be a match up nightmare? Or was it because we really saw him as a glorified offensive tackle?

He was a wasted pick. Hence, the complete lack of effort in resigning him.

We'll just agree to disagree

I have a different definition of "wasted pick" than you do.

Guys like Jacob Rogers, Bobby Carpenter, Jason Williams Robert Brewster etc etc...those are wasted picks IMO
 
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And I get your point.

We just didn't draft the guy as a blocker. He was a lazy underachiever his entire time here. We could've gotten a blocking TE in UDFA.

2nd rounder is a tough pill to swallow.
 
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