Frisco, Texas – George Pickens seems to be renewed, refreshed and as if he had an additional rebound in his approach when he was walking from the flight from the west of the Pennsylvania to set foot in northern Texas, having become the most wide receiver for Dallas cowboys through a business with the Pittsburgh steelers on Wednesday.
“I feel good,” said the old second round choice. “I like the mojo here. I like the swag. There are a lot of new players I met.
“(We have) a good thing in progress, that’s for sure.”
It is an exchange of rare superproductions for Dallas, a team that often stands out from these things, their last being to acquire Amari Cooper in 2018, but keeping in the vein to hope to resolve an urgent need for the broad receiver. This time, it is the entirely wide CEEDEE lamb at the top of the throne and Pickens, which was a coil of human highlighting and the target n ° 1 for the steelers (ideally, in any case), understands that it was brought to create a tandem.
Seeing that he and LAMB have a long -standing personal relationship which has before trade, which the lamb has alluded to a GIF acting on social networks only hours before the breaking of news, the chemistry between the two seems to be prepacké.
“It excites me a lot,” said the 24 -year -old player. “In the football game, we can work on top of each other, and that is why it amounts to building a winning culture.”
Those who wonder how he considers himself in the future should know that he does not subscribe to the WR1 / WR2 story, or even the variant 1A / 1B, pointing how, when he “grew up looking at football”, the elite teams had two elite receivers, much more often than otherwise.
This is something that cowboys can attest, although more historically than recently.
In addition, helping to establish early chemistry, Pickens not only talked to Lamb, but also the quarter-back All-Pro Dak Prescott.
“(It is a) very prolific, and intelligent QB,,” he said about Prescott. “I am very happy to work with him.”
This declaration brings a lot of nuances if we consider the carousel of the quarter-rear that the former Georgia receiver was responsible for building chemistry in Pittsburgh, producing some of the best figures in the NFL despite this merry-go-round of a quarter-depth graph.
And with regard to a red flag attached to him, in particular with regard to questions about his maturity, Pickens has been anchored, humble and well aware of himself by describing his perspective with the cowboys in the future-not once defensive or considering the question as an attack on his character.
Instead, he mainly nodded and stood in front of this proverbial train.
“I’m going to take it one day at a time,” he said. “Everyone in the world works to grow and improve. I have the impression that growth is that I progress in a large direction and that you come to the cowboys. … Work every day. This is how you build a winning culture in any sport.
“I will work every day.”
This work could lead to one of his best seasons as a pro, given that he will play in front of the lamb and in an offense led by a quarter-Arrière All-Pro which, a season, was a finalist for the MVP honors of the League behind Lamar Jackson. This can only help Pickens in what will be a contractual year, of course, but he “does not think of the contractual conversation” – a point he made sure to throw on the table in his first interview with the media.
“I’m afraid of coming here and trying to help build a winning culture,” he said. “… I win a championship in Georgia – I really know how to win.” Given that he also helped lead the Steelers to the playoffs in each of his two seasons, despite the dubious quarter game, it is impossible to argue against this point.
The DAWG is a DAWG and, channeled correctly, it will be for the best and not the worst in Dallas.