IRVING, Texas -- The writing is on the wall for Miles Austin, isn't it?

This is Dez Bryant's offense now after a breakout 2012 season. The Cowboys drafted Terrance Williams in the third round in April to be Austin's successor. Austin is making too much money and the Cowboys will have to have cash -- real and the salary-cap kind -- to pay Bryant at some point.

Doesn't everybody see that Austin is always hurt, that he cashed it in after signing his big deal in 2010, that he is not the same guy anymore?

Really?

Dig deeper into what Austin did last year when he caught 66 passes for 943 yards and six touchdowns.

He outperformed the leading wide receivers on 16 other teams in catches, yards or touchdowns, including pass-catchers in Arizona (Larry Fitzgerald), Baltimore (Anquan Boldin), Seattle (Sidney Rice), Washington (Josh Morgan) and Pittsburgh (Mike Wallace, Antonio Brown). Aside from Arizona, there is not a poor quarterback throwing to anyone in that bunch.

Miles Austin still managed 66 receptions for 943 yards and six touchdowns despite Dez Bryant's breakout and Jason Witten's record season. Matthew Emmons/USA TODAY Sports

In a division with Bryant, Victor Cruz, Hakeem Nicks, Jeremy Maclin and DeSean Jackson, Austin had the fourth-most catches and touchdowns and was third in yards. And he put up those numbers on an offense that had Jason Witten set an NFL record for catches in a season by a tight end (110) and Bryant explode for 92 catches for 1,382 yards and 12 touchdowns.

"I look at the season not necessarily solely on my stats, because what would change a good season from a bad season? Is it X amount of yards?" Austin said. "I equate a good season and a bad season on how much you win, did I contribute to the team, how much of an impact do you have? It's not always on the field. It's helping guys, showing up on time, being the right guy, doing the right things."

Despite his ever-present smile and seemingly always-happy disposition, Austin understands the game. He is entering his eighth season. He has seen players cut for all kinds of reasons: poor play, too costly, too old, too much of a pain in the butt.

And that's just the receivers he has been around.

"I'm very cognizant of what's happening around me, but at the same time, I realize what my job is," Austin said. "My job is to care for my teammates, do my best for them, myself, my family, the coaches and bring it every day. That's what my job is. If you worry about other things that don't necessarily control your circumstance, then you're wasting energy."

Some players famously use the doubt to drive them. They look for slights, perceived or real, to keep them going.