First Call: Dallas QB update for Steelers game Sunday; Antonio Browns legal team in full gear – TribLIVE

Tuesday’s “First Call” features a look at this week’s Cowboys quarterback situation as the Steelers prepare for a trip to Dallas.

The Ravens made history during their loss to the Steelers Sunday. John Harbaugh is defending his team’s coronavirus practices.

And Antonio Brown’s legal team is working overtime in advance of his Tampa Bay Buccaneers debut.


Dalton or DiNucci?

The Steelers are getting ready for Sunday’s game in Dallas. And the Cowboys aren’t sure who their quarterback will be yet.

Former Pine-Richland quarterback Ben DiNucci was under center when the team lost to the Philadelphia Eagles Sunday. He was starting in place of Andy Dalton who had been concussed by former Steelers linebacker Jon Bostic two weeks ago in Washington.

And, according to The Athletic’s Jon Machota, Dalton hasn’t cleared the concussion protocol yet.

DiNucci was 21 of 40 for 180 yards. He was sacked four times, and he didn’t throw any touchdowns. The ex-Pitt Panther didn’t throw any interceptions, either. But he did fumble twice en route to a 23-9 loss.


History-making defeat

Even though the Steelers beat the Baltimore Ravens 28-24 Sunday, the Ravens made some history.

And according to CBS, on Sunday, the Ravens became the first team since at least 1950 to both outrush an opponent by 200-plus yards and outpass them and lose.

So maybe, better said, the Steelers made history by offsetting the Ravens history.


Stall ball

Former Steeler Antonio Brown is trying to drag out the civil lawsuit he is facing.

Why? Because, believe it or not, it’s good for his career.

As ProFootballTalk.com points out, “it’s clear that he wants the trial date to be delayed. Although the request may arise exclusively from the intersection of the pandemic and the legal system, any delay past the end of the NFL season benefits Brown.”

For now, Brown is tracking to play Sunday against the New Orleans Saints. And word is he reported to Tampa Bay in excellent shape.

That’s no surprise. Brown’s dedication to fitness is never a problem. His dedication to team, league, and municipal rules is usually the problem.

His Bucs may need the help. They barely beat the struggling New York Giants 25-23 on “Monday Night Football.”


Harbaugh on Humphrey

Baltimore Ravens coach John Harbaugh is defending cornerback Marlon Humphrey — and the rest of his players — in the wake of Humphrey’s coronavirus diagnosis.

He insists that his team wasn’t lax in protocol enforcement in advance of their loss to the Steelers. And that Humphrey tested positive for covid-19 before the Steelers game simply because, well, it’s a pandemic and he tested positive.

Not because he blew off the rules.

OK. I buy that. I do.

What I question is how a guy shows up sick, gets sent home on Wednesday. Then, presumably, tests negative Thursday and Friday and plays Sunday … without testing positive until the results came back Monday.

What I question isn’t how Humphrey got sick. It’s how the doctors let that happen, or how the testing didn’t catch it sooner.

Tim Benz is a Tribune-Review staff writer. You can contact Tim at [email protected] or via Twitter. All tweets could be reposted. All emails are subject to publication unless specified otherwise.

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