Thursday, December 13, 2007

Cowboys hope receiver Glenn will catch Romo's playoff passes

By Jaime Aron | Of The Associated Press
December 13, 2007

Digg Del.icio.us Facebook Fark Google Newsvine Reddit Yahoo Print Single page view Reprints Post Comment Text size: Cowboys receiver Terry Glenn went through some drills at practice for the first time all season Wednesday, a good indication the already dominant Dallas offense could have another weapon by the playoffs.

Glenn, out because of two knee operations, is not expected to play Sunday against the Eagles. He's more likely to make his season debut the following Saturday at Carolina or in the regular-season finale at Washington. If the Cowboys get a first-round bye, Glenn would have four weeks of practice before the first playoff game.

Coach Wade Phillips said he'd like to see Glenn be able to tolerate several practices in a row before using him.

''It's a slow progression, certainly, but we want to be careful,'' Phillips said. ''He didn't seem to be limping on his leg at all, so there were some positive signs from him being out there. He looked very quick. That was a good thing. … (After practice) he was still smiling. That's my doctoring right there. If they're smiling, they're getting better.''

Glenn was supposed to be Tony Romo's deep threat until he had arthroscopic surgery on his right knee during training camp. He was hurt again in his first practice back, leading to a second arthroscopic procedure in September. It wasn't a typical scope, though, which is why he's been so slow to return. At the time, he also was considering season-ending microfracture surgery.

Dallas has kept Glenn on the roster all season exactly for this scenario -- a return just in time for the playoffs.

''Terry is an anomaly, he's a guy that really can't be covered one-on-one,'' Romo said. ''We're going to see to what extent he comes back, obviously. If it's the old Terry Glenn, this guy is unbelievable. … I like our offense a lot right now, obviously. With him coming back, I think that we add another dimension that helps us be even more explosive.''

Glenn's return to practice had been expected for several days. He's been working out at team headquarters in recent weeks, and on Friday he ran routes and caught passes.

This time, he came out wearing a red Ohio State hat, a blue Cowboys sweatshirt and with his right leg tightly wrapped. He limbered up with teammates, then spoke with assistant trainer Britt Brown as individual drills began. Glenn then went to the end of the line as fellow receivers caught passes being lobbed by a coach. The next session required cuts off the line and he made them smoothly, with flashes of his great speed.

The Cowboys already have clinched the division title and can wrap up a first-round bye with a win Sunday at home against the Eagles. If Dallas wins and Green Bay loses at St. Louis, the Cowboys also would clinch home-field advantage throughout the NFC playoffs.

Glenn caught 70 passes for 1,047 yards and six touchdowns last season, with his best days coming after Romo replaced Drew Bledsoe. So when Glenn went down in the preseason, it was expected to slow the Dallas offense.

The Cowboys have done just fine without him, though, leading the NFC in scoring and yards, and on pace to set club records in both categories. Still, they're eager to have him back.

''Everyone knows the impact Terry Glenn (can have) and once he gets out there and gets his feet underneath him, I'm sure he'll be back to his old self,.'' fellow receiver Terrell Owens said.

Although he's 33 and in his 12th season, Glenn -- when healthy -- is among the fastest players on the roster.

Even at less than full strength he could hurt defenses that pay too much attention to Owens and Jason Witten.