Cowboys, Rams brawl — Dez gets punched in face but finds earring
Well, at least the Cowboys are fighting with other teams now.
A couple weeks after brawls broke out among teammates at one of Dallas’ first practices in Oxnard, Calif., the Cowboys on Tuesday fought with the St. Louis Rams, who were in Southern California for a series of joint practices.
According to Brandon George of the Dallas Morning News, there were actually three brawls. While the fight in the video below does not look much different than other large scraps between practicing teams, it got a little scary toward the end when a large scrum of players fought alongside fans who were watching along a fence.
Huge fight at Cowboys-Rams practice... @NBCDFW pic.twitter.com/Jvk3P0XvrA
— Pat Doney (@PatDoneyNBC5) August 19, 2015
Perhaps even scarier for the Cowboys, this video appears to show star receiver Dez Bryant being punched in the face by a player wearing No. 45 on the Rams.
Dez Bryant took a shot to the face, via @arnoldpayne. Commentary from @clarencehilljr pic.twitter.com/InXa1hNCjp
— Jon Machota (@jonmachota) August 19, 2015
The current rosters on the Rams website lists two players with No. 45, cornerback Imoan Claiborne and fullback Zach Laskey.
The good news for the Cowboys, or for Bryant at least, is that a security guard found his diamond earring lost in all the fighting.
Security guard found @DezBryant's diamond earring, which he lost during the fight (via @VictorNBC5)... Wow. @NBCDFW pic.twitter.com/Kb5VfEAZNL
— Pat Doney (@PatDoneyNBC5) August 19, 2015
After the brawl, both clubs decided to end the practice.
Here are some tweets that captured the brawls as they happened, as well as the aftermath.
Cowboys LB Andrew Gachkar just started big fight. DE Randy Gregory was knocked to ground twice with no helmet on. pic.twitter.com/LAotEdadkp
— Brandon George (@DMN_George) August 19, 2015
Some fight pictures after it slowed some: pic.twitter.com/japqJGR8Xm
— Brandon George (@DMN_George) August 19, 2015
Cowboys CB Tyler Patmon came out of fight with four red marks on his face: pic.twitter.com/M9xuOglQTU
— Brandon George (@DMN_George) August 19, 2015
You’ll notice in several of those tweets and videos the names Tyler Patmon and Bryant. Those were the main two combatants in that intrasquad brawl in the early days of Cowboys camp.
It was the second time in less than two weeks that an NFL joint practice had to be cut short because of fights. On Aug. 8, Houston and Washington ended the mixed portion of a practice after several fights on both fields.
"I hate it. At the end of the day we know why it happens," said Cowboys executive vice president Stephen Jones, who is on the NFL's competition committee. "I can't imagine that we can't continue to have joint practices and get this right just like we do a lot of things. But we're going to have to continue to emphasize that stuff is not what we want."
Most of the St. Louis defensive players left a drill on the other field when the first fight broke out. The second fight ended with several players in a pile on a fence where fans could reach out and touch them, although no fans appeared to get involved.
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.
It wasn't clear who threw the punch on Bryant. Patmon, who fought with Bryant earlier in camp, had several red marks on his face.
St. Louis linebacker James Laurinaitis said he was trying to make a defensive call when he noticed several teammates had left his field and run toward the first fight.
"There's a fine line between defending yourself, so to speak, versus instigating it," Laurinaitis said. "You want to defend your teammates, but you never want it to turn into that. I'm just glad nobody got hurt."
Patmon, who threw the first punch in his fight with Bryant on the fourth day of Cowboys camp, said he wasn't thinking about the fact that he joined the fray without a helmet.
"All you're thinking about is having your teammate's back," Patmon said. "And that's all that matters."
Cowboys coach Jason Garrett, who meets with reporters before the afternoon workout most days at camp, declined to comment after practice. He was asked about fighting earlier when the topic was whether the Cowboys had shown enough intensity in the first joint practice Monday.
"The last thing you want when you bring another team in is to have fights," Garrett said. "We make that abundantly clear with our team. That's not why we're bringing another team in here. It's to get great work against a different group of players and coaches."
Fisher said his team got in good work "for a day and three quarters."
"There's no excuse for it. You can't blame it on anybody," Fisher said. "It's unfortunate about the end. Not going to minimize it, because we're not going to focus on it. We're going to correct it. No place for that in our game."
The Associated Press contributed to this report.