The pose was similar to Bennett's. Both players were taking a nude photo of themselves in a bathroom.
Wade Phillips had no comments about the photo, but Hamlin said the photo isn't of him.
"It's photoshopped," Hamlin said after Tuesday's afternoon practice. "If you look at my stomach (lifts shirt up) and the shirt on the photo, it's two different things. I don't know how these photos got up there, have no idea where it came from."
There's another photo of a Cowboys' player, former seventh-round pick Mike Mickens, who didn't make the active roster.
"We discussed this matter today with Martellus and will address it further on an internal basis," Cowboys vice president of communications Rich Dalrymple said.
Hamlin and Bennett are not the first athletes to have this happen. In February, San Antonio Spurs guard George Hill apologized for having nude pictures of him appear on the internet, and Portland Trail Blazers center Greg Oden apologized for the same thing in January.
New Dallas Cowboys jerseys left tackle Doug Free says his fierce work ethic was forged working long days on his parents' Wisconsin dairy farm well before discovering sports in junior high.
The country-boy Cowboy loves hunting, fishing and knocking down defenders.
Free plays tackle with a pulling guard's ferocity. Consider last year's personal highlight when Free chugged 40 yards downfield from his right tackle spot to erase Philadelphia Eagles safety Macho Harris on Felix Jones' 49-yard touchdown dash.
It's somehow fitting then, that amid a training camp buzzing with Super Bowl expectations, a fellow Wisconsinite is being counted on to protect quarterback Tony Romo's blind side. Free hails from Manitowoc, Wis., Romo from Burlington.
At 6-6, 320, the fourth-year tackle is literally the biggest puzzle piece on a team studded with playmakers. Free played so well in last year's seven-game stint subbing for injured Marc Columbo at right tackle he convinced the Cowboys to release five-time Pro Bowl fixture Flozell Adams April 1
These kids today. They've got all the ability in the world but won't pay a veteran the respect he deserves.
It's not like I was asking him to get me lunch or wash my car or have my laptop checked for viruses. And I would never think of tying him down to a chair to give him an ugly haircut. Wouldn't be necessary. Sports writers' haircuts are ugly enough already.
While my little disagreement with the rookie was virtually ignored by the media, Bryant's dust-up with Williams made news, and not just in football-mad Dallas. In Tuesday's USA Today, it was the lead story in the sports section.
It's that time of year, a silly season when baseball - even another no-hitter - is nearly eclipsed by NFL camp news, including reports of Terrell Owens' job search.
It's not yet August, and I'm already bored by Owens, a condition that goes back to at least 2007. Except for T.O. and his agent, who wouldn't be?
Amazingly, though, Owens can still charm people who should know better. Following a meeting with Owens, and before Cincinnati reportedly agreed with him on a one-year contract, Bengals executive Mike Brown said, "I was taken by him. He was thoughtful (and) pleasant."
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