Rams And Cowboys Joint Practice Ends In A Huge Brawl
Dez Bryant is in the news again for being a part in the Dallas Cowboys vs St Louis Rams rumble in Oxnard on Tuesday’s practice between the two teams.
The third fight between the Cowboys and Rams included the punch on Bryant and ended the practice, although the Cowboys ran a few more plays with their own players while the Rams huddled with coach Jeff Fisher before walking to their buses.
Rams owner, Stan Kroenke, in fact, has basically done everything within his power short of playing 2015 home games in Los Angeles to get the Rams back to California, 20 years removed. “I just think we have to emphasize we don’t want this in our game”.
“That’s a good football team over there”.
It’s silly. Grown men getting paid at least hundreds of thousands of dollars to play a sport risk injury to mostly push and shove and slap each other in a brief, meaningless display of bravado.
The two teams were practising with each other for a second straight day in Oxnard, near Los Angeles, when things got a little out of control.
“It’s really the same answer I gave you guys early on about all these guys”, Garrett said.
It was just one of the happenings in an eventful day from the Cowboys and Rams’ joint practice.
A pair of brawls highlighted Tuesday’s joint practice between the Cowboys and the Rams. “I think at times we can do better than we did”. Can you imagine what kind of team the Cowboys would field if every player had Bryant’s passion?
Romo, coming off the most efficient season of his career in helping the Cowboys win the NFC East at 12-4, said four consecutive days of work doesn’t change the daily maintenance required to take care of his back.
Coaches will never publicly back an on-field fight.
The NFL sent a memo out just last week to all 32 teams warning about fighting in training camp. He has purchased land in Inglewood, Calif., and partnered with developers to build a palatial football stadium capable of housing two NFL teams – but done it without explicitly saying he intends to move the Rams. On the field, with 41 TDs over the course of the past three seasons and his more-than-mild-mannered sideline antics, we’ve heard plenty from him, but as far as the police blotter and the headlines are concerned, Dez has been virtually silent by Dez’s standards and that’s a good thing. “I know our players aren’t proud of it. But it’s going to happen”. The situation was different, but violence is increasing during these ultra-competitive training camps, and the inter-squad practices might be a contributing factor.