Cowboys BREAKING: Dallas Making 2 Major Changes in Starting Lineup on Offense at Giants

If it seems to you that there must be a reason for the sudden reversal of opinion on Connor Williams, one of the NFL's most-penalized players ... you're right. There is.

FRISCO - If it seems to you like the Dallas Cowboys are suddenly heaping praise on recently-benched offensive lineman Connor Williams, you're right. They are.

If it seems to you that there must be a reason for the sudden reversal of opinion on one of the NFL's most-penalized players ... you're right. There is.

Sources told CowboysSI.com on Wednesday that the Cowboys are dissatisfied with the switch that allowed previous coaching staff favorite Connor McGovern to take over at left guard a month ago, and that as a recognition of the offense's recent struggles, the 9-4 Cowboys are performing another reversal of opinion that will see McGovern going back to the bench and Williams reclaiming his first-team perch.

Additionally, the plan is to use Terence Steele as the starting left tackle but to also play Ty Nsekhe there situationally.

On Thursday, coach Mike McCarthy was as effusive in his praise of Williams as he was a month ago when discussing the super-sub McGovern.

“Focused,” McCarthy said of Williams. “I love the way Connor has handled everything. Graded out very high on his participation last week. He is dialed in. He hasn’t blinked. Appreciate that from him.”

Does Dallas "appreciate'' Williams enough to give him back the job he's held for the better part of four years? Consider the circumstances that led to his benching, and the answer is "yes.''

One, the sub-packages involving McGovern - sometimes lined up at fullback, sometimes at tight end, sometimes out wide in a receiver's stance - unveiled his athleticism. And it worked. And it was, respectfully, "cute.''

Two, Williams was a penalty machine.

The Cowboys never did say that Williams played poorly. But the penalties became a bit of a phenomenon. And maybe got into Williams' head.

The Cowboys now give Williams (who in the season’s first 10 weeks had 13 penalties) credit for battling through all of that.

From right guard Zack Martin: “It’s tough when another guy comes in at your spot,” Martin said. “You (tend to) kind of check out, but that’s something he did really well. He stayed locked in. He came to work every day. He prepared as if he was playing, so when this stuff comes up, he’s just right back into the mix.”

Back into the mix?

Dallas won't have left Tyron Smith (ankle) this week, so La'el Collins is the right tackle. 

But Connor Williams is the big chance to spotlight.

From QB Dak Prescott: Williams is "just a guy that comes into the building each and every day and tries to get better and tries to do whatever he can to help this team. Stayed consistent all the way through it, through everything, through the adversity obviously. Whatever he has to do, he’s willing to do it, and that’s all you can ask for in a teammate.”

Dallas is now asking Connor Williams a familiar favor: To play left guard.


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Mike Fisher
MIKE FISHER

Mike Fisher - as a newspaper beat writer and columnist and on radio and TV, where he is an Emmy winner - has covered the NFL since 1983 and the Dallas Cowboys since 1990, is the author of two best-selling books on the Cowboys.