Despite Late Push as Rookie, Will Taco Charlton Struggle to See Field in 2018?

Jul 21, 2018
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Despite Late Push in Year One, Will Taco Charlton Struggle to See the Field in 2018? 1
Aug 26, 2017; Arlington, TX, USA; Oakland Raiders offensive tackle David Sharpe (71) blocks Dallas Cowboys defensive end Taco Charlton (97) in the fourth quarter at AT&T Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Tim Heitman-USA TODAY Sports

It feels like ages ago that the Dallas Cowboys spent the 28th overall pick in the 2017 NFL Draft on Michigan Defensive End Taco Charlton. Perhaps this is a result of the constant distancing fans have made from this unpopular pick, or the corresponding moves the Cowboys have made at DE since drafting Charlton.

These moves include using the franchise tag on DeMarcus Lawrence after seeing him explode for 14.5 sacks, spending a fourth round pick this year on Kansas’ Dorance Armstrong, and seeing Randy Gregory reinstated in time for training camp.

Across the entirety of the Cowboys roster, there will be plenty of “odd men out” that miss the cut down to 53 players. Defensive end remains one of the most cluttered spots on the current 90 man roster however.

Despite Late Push as Rookie, Will Taco Charlton Struggle to See Field in 2018?
Dallas Cowboys DE Taco Charlton, DT Maliek Collins (Tom Fox/The Dallas Morning News)

Prior to establishing the depth the Cowboys now have up front on defense, they did Taco no favors by starting his career at right defensive end. While Gregory may still be a long way from earning the starting role here, similarly styled players like Armstrong have the edge here over Charlton.

This relegates Charlton to the strong side, where he always projected best out of college. By the time the Cowboys realized this a season ago, they also knew a franchise pass rusher was playing his way into the team’s long-term plans.

Lawrence’s stellar consistency off the edge reduced Charlton’s role in the Cowboys rotation of pass rushers. An ideal spot for the rookie to develop with less pressure on him, Charlton’s opportunities to continue playing left end may only be reduced this season.

The first-round pick is capable of kicking inside at defensive tackle, a position the Cowboys could certainly use help at. However, asking Charlton to go through another position shift would only halt the progress that took quite a bit of patience from Dallas to see.

It’s far from unheard of for the Cowboys to do this with their young players, but for now Charlton remains a defensive end looking to make his impact. The Cowboys are in much better position now than they were at this time a year ago when it comes to setting expectations for him to do so.

Given everything he showed on tape at Michigan as well as in his pre-draft interviews, Charlton is a player that needs to succeed at the task at hand. When this plan is altered, the 6’6″ pass rusher is much less effective — without even considering any athletic struggles that Charlton has compared to other prototypes at defensive end.

As a unit, the Cowboys defensive line has all the pieces to be very effective this season. Taco Charlton is a piece to this puzzle, a backup left end that must find a way to flourish in this role.

For most former 28th overall picks, doing so would be considered a fall from grace. For the Cowboys, it’s simply an example of strong roster building that’s forced life to come at Charlton quickly. How he responds with a full season under his belt will make or break the hype this deep Cowboys defensive line has garnered, lead of course by the starter at Charlton’s position in DeMarcus Lawrence.

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Chuck Wright
Chuck Wright
Jul 21, 2018 11:55 AM

Competition makes players better. Hopefully that happens with Taco as our DE comp is off the charts right now. Which (yes I’m harping on that dead horse) with players like Crawford and Irving’s “position flex” means we REALLY should have nabbed a true 1 Tech.
I say that with the mind set that Randy G is a pure 3rd down pass rusher at best for us. Anything else is too high an expectation.

Steve
Steve
Jul 21, 2018 8:21 PM

RG could come out of the gates swinging for the fences and have a realistic chance of 10 sacks this year, but unless DLaw gets hurt I dont expect seeing Taco hardly any and that is just for a breather! Irving will be a stud out of the gate come week 5 and IF we can stay relatively healthy our defense has true potential to be a top 5 unit this year and IMO that’s without ET!!

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