Budda Baker Proves His Worth In Dallas

Big Red

Well-known member
Mar 16, 2019
1,355
0
a6arl4cjlwotpsxaodvy


Budda Baker got the cash in training camp, and on Monday he added some cachet.


The highest-paid safety in the NFL showed the Cowboys -- and the country -- why he deserved the big bucks with an outstanding performance on "Monday Night Football."


Baker had seven tackles, a sack, a forced fumble and an interception in the 38-10 win, earning plaudits from the likes of Deion Sanders, Tyrann Mathieu and others who tuned in to the primetime performance.


"Budda," defensive tackle Jordan Phillips said, "is worth every penny."


Baker was dominant from start to finish.


He forced the first of Ezekiel Elliott's two fumbles by poking the ball out on a short pass, which kept the game knotted at zero and set up the Cardinals' first touchdown.


"I knew Zeke didn't see me, so I tried to rip the ball out," Baker said. "Luckily it came out."


He had the sack and another hurry of Andy Dalton on blitzes, and then helped cap the win with his first career interception.


"He is everywhere," coach Kliff Kingsbury said. "You watch the game, and '32' shows up in every situation, all night. Such a tremendous player."


Baker broke quickly on the fourth quarter pass by Dalton and hauled it in despite playing with a cast that is shielding his injured right thumb.


"It definitely felt tricky, not being able to squeeze it in," Baker said. "I tried to catch it (by scooping). It went right to my body. It was a great spiral by Dalton and I was able to get it."


Baker missed the Cardinals' game against the Panthers in Week 4 with the injury, and the defense looked lost without him. He's been their compass in the two games since, playing well in his return against the Jets and spearheading the dominant performance against Dallas.


Baker celebrated his pick by rolling the football at his teammates like a bowling ball, and they toppled over for the strike.


"The bowling thing was Pat's idea," Baker said. "Pregame Pat explained to us, 'This is what we should do when someone makes a play.' We did it. It was cool."

Continue reading...
 
Top