domcosentino1
Dom Cosentino
domcosentino1
Dom Cosentino is a staff writer at Deadspin.

Mayock said he wasn’t at today’s practice, nothing more. Read more

The second tag interferes with things, though.

They can maybe flip him in a year for more draft assets. Read more

The Poop Standard Selection Committee (me) has taken your point under advisement and determined it does not dole out participation trophies. Read more

Three Super Bowls in 10 seasons (with three different QBs!) at a time when the NFC East was a phenomenal division (except for the Cardinals) is an incredible feat. And, yeah, 1992 was a long time ago. But you’d still have to double the length of that journey and add another eight years to get to the Lions’ little pit Read more

I honestly considered going this route and including the Chiefs, Chargers, Vikings, and Falcons as candidates. Though not the Eagles, obviously, since I’m a firm believer in the five-year rule, which forbids any fan from complaining for five years after a title. Read more

In fairness, Pompei introduced the section that included the sleeplessness/caffeine chugging and the childbirth by calling Gase a “maniac.” Read more

Another team wouldn’t have to pay a market-setting contract if he were to become an RFA; they’d simply have to offer something better than the one-year RFA tender, which wouldn’t be too expensive. This scenario also doesn’t depend on Zeke skipping the entire year; he forfeits the accrued season simply by avoiding camp Read more

With three accrued seasons in 2021, he’d be a restricted free agent. That would allow the Cowboys to tender him at (roughly) $5 million, with a first-round pick as compensation if he were to accept a better offer from another team. Read more

The Cowboys already picked up the option—they had to do it before May 3, per the CBA—and they can’t rescind it. Their only option for getting rid of the option for 2020 would be to cut Elliott, which would make him either subject to a waiver claim or an unrestricted free agent, depending on when they were to pull the Read more

They were bargained with the NFLPA into the CBA, and they’ve increased 5 percent every year since 2012. The fine money goes to a pair of programs (here and here) that benefit former players. Read more

This is fair, though the TV money accounts for the lion’s share of it. Read more