Dak Prescott could be the next great quarterback to move on to bigger and better things

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"No matter what's thrown at us, we'll be ready": Dak Prescott confident ahead of Giants matchup

One of the benefits of the Dallas Cowboys beginning training camp is having players, coaches, and front office personnel available for press conferences.

The Cowboys opened training camp with a press conference panel of Owner/General Manager Jerry Jones, Executive Vice President Stephen Jones, and HC Mike McCarthy at the podium together.

When it was Dak Prescott’s turn at the podium after the team’s first practice, he was asked about his future with the Cowboys, and he didn’t mince words.

Here is the full quote as reported by Patrik “No C” Walker of dallascowboys.com:

You know, I’m gonna say it. I want to be here but, you know, when you look up all the great quarterbacks I’ve watched, they’ve all played for other teams. So my point in saying is that it’s not something to fear. That may be a reality for me someday.

The Cowboys organization and its fans might have a heart attack reading those words, but it made me think. He’s right. There have been a handful of great quarterbacks who moved on to bigger and better things with another team late in their careers.

Should Dak move on from the Cowboys, history shows he can be successful elsewhere. Let’s take a look at some quarterbacks who have done the same.

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Peyton Manning

The easiest and most recent quarterback I can put on this list is the immortal Tom Brady, but he and Dak’s situation aren’t the same. Prescott has yet to experience a deep playoff run, much less five Super Bowl victories before choosing a new team.

Dak Prescott actually draws the most comparisons to Peyton Manning.

The Indianapolis Colts quarterback reached an AFC Championship Game in his fifth season, but didn’t get over the hump into the Super Bowl until his eighth year.

Prescott is slightly behind that timeline, entering his ninth season and yet to reach an NFC Championship Game, but there is still time. Dak is in his prime years as a quarterback, and still has a solid core of players around him.

Manning won just two more playoff games in his final four years in Indianapolis after winning the Super Bowl over Rex Grossman and the Chicago Bears in 2006.

The Colts were widely criticized for never establishing a competent defensive unit during Manning’s time.

He didn’t have that problem when he moved to Denver.

The Broncos fielded one of the most lethal defenses of this century. The Orange Crush defense was led by bookend pass-rushers Von Miller and former Cowboys’ DE DeMarcus Ware.

Peyton ended his career with a Super Bowl victory as a member of the Denver Broncos, making him the first quarterback in NFL history to win a Super Bowl as the starter for two different franchises.

Dak Prescott could be the next great quarterback to move on to bigger and better things

Brett Favre

Brett Favre played quarterback for the Green Bay Packers for 16 seasons before GM Ted Thompson traded him to the New York Jets once the bench was too warm for Aaron Rodgers to sit on.

It turns out Favre’s one season with the Jets was just a placeholder. Thompson refused to trade him to an NFC team, fearing Favre could seek retribution against the Packers in the playoffs.

Favre actually announced his retirement, but surprisingly, abruptly ended his retirement to join the Packers’ NFC North rivals, the Minnesota Vikings.

In his first season with the Vikings at 40 years old, Favre received votes for both MVP and Comeback Player of the Year, leading the Vikings to a 12-4 record and an NFC Championship Game appearance.

Minnesota lost a heartbreaker to Drew Brees and the eventual Super Bowl champion New Orleans Saints. In true Favre fashion, an ill-advised interception ended a possible game-winning drive, and put the Saints in position for the win instead.

Speaking of Drew Brees…

Dak Prescott once again finds himself in elite company 1

Drew Brees

Drew Brees is another example of a quarterback experiencing success after leaving his original team. Brees was drafted by the San Diego Chargers and, after redshirting his rookie season, had a solid four years as the starter.

A gruesome shoulder injury suffered in the final regular season game of the 2005 season forced Dean Spanos and Chargers’ brass to let him test the market and promote Philip Rivers to the leader of the offense.

Many wrote off Brees after that injury, but a first-year coach in New Orleans saw what many didn’t. That coach was former Cowboys’ offensive coordinator turned Saints Head Coach Sean Payton.

Payton and Brees experienced many great years together, including a Super Bowl victory over Peyton Manning and the Colts in 2009.

Back to Prescott, it might have been a spicy quote, but I believe it was meant as more of a threat to Jerry and Stephen than an actual desire to be elsewhere. Some consider the quarterback of the Dallas Cowboys to be the best job in the world.

It is evident by Dak Prescott’s smile and body language that he loves his job, and I don’t believe leaving the Dallas Cowboys would be his choice. I can see him one day playing for another team, but it would be a team decision to let him move on.

The same fate as Tom Brady, Peyton Manning, Brett Favre, and Drew Brees.

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Mario Herrera Jr. is a sports analyst specializing in statistical analysis and Dallas Cowboys coverage. At InsideTheStar.com, he has published 692 articles reaching over 1.1 million readers. His work integrates metrics with strategy in the context of Cowboys football, providing evidence-based analysis of roster decisions, player performance, and game planning.

3 Comments

  1. VAM
    DP is not in the same league as those SB winning QBs mentioned. And Brady... I would not mine if he does go to another team, as he has proven time after time after time NOT to be able to get to the second level. Now the team is in an even more vulnerable position, with so many quality players exiting this off season (and one has to wonder why this happened other than if not financial consideration behind it?). This will likely result in the surfacing of DP deficiencies even more overtly. The weakness of their division has been statistically very kind to DP. I'd like to see how he would fare in a strong division. I don't think it would look quite the same. That's where I think other teams would have to be very careful when contemplating bringing him in, along with his likely very high price tag, if he indeed departs the Cowboys. His gaudy stats/overrating do not equal PS success. That is very apparent.
  2. lonewolfz28
    Or, he could be another of those overrated, high-priced QB's picked up by a new team via UFA or trade and gave them zilch in the way of conference titles. Sam Bradford (multiple times), Kirk Cousins, Derek Carr, Russell Wilson, Jimmy Garappolo, and a host of others going back as far as free agency. But, I'd love to find out which it'll be, just as long as someone else is destroying their salary cap to do so. It'd be interesting how long he'd last without an offense purposely built to support him. We'll get an inkling of it this season by the looks of things. A degraded OL unless some miracle happens. A highly suspect running game, though we got a small taste of that last season. A WR corps with one true star (who is apparently holding out through camp), and a bunch of potential that has yet to be fully realized or integrated into the scheme.
    1. TeamFirst
      Yep, your list is the group he belongs in; the QBs who were overrated, paid too much, and never accomplished anything before or after they moved on.

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