Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott recently offered a positive rehab update after having suffered a season-ending hamstring tear in early November.
The issue required surgery and has had the $60 Million Man on crutches since the procedure … up until a few days ago, when NBC’s “Sunday Night Football” crew provided good news on his recovery.
“Dak tore his right hamstring Week 9,” sideline reporter Melissa Stark said on the telecast. “Ten days later, on November 13, he had surgery, and I caught up with him pregame. He said he just got off crutches last week.”
All of that is factual, and Prescott has recently been on the sideline before games and in a suite during the action … a habit that may continue when Dallas plays at Philadelphia on Sunday.
But here is the surprise: Stark’s report is being morphed into stories about how Dak is “a mobile quarterback.” Some have even suggested that his mobility can be improved with rehab.
That is nonsense. All of it.
“He said he’s about a month away from starting to run and really move,” Stark said. “And right now he’s focusing on core and upper-body strength and building muscle in that right leg. He was adamant he’ll be fully ready for offseason workouts, which start in April.”
Again, all of that rings true, as that timeline fits with what Dak has himself told us.
“My plan is to start OTAs and start the offseason no restrictions, full go,” Prescott said. “That’s part in getting this jump on this surgery that we thought was inevitable anyways. At that point, I’m just doing everything I can to be the best quarterback and leader of this team to help this team come in next year with the best outfit that we can.”
Those things are achievable. But Prescott is 31 and already lacks the elusiveness of his earlier NFL years. Coming back from his 2020 ankle break, and coming back from a hamstring tear surgery, and becoming more mobile?
That’s not just a “surprise.” That’s a fantasy.