What began as a day of potential woe for Ezekiel Elliott is rapidly turning into anything but.

After reports surfaced the Dallas Cowboys' star running back was involved in a late-night altercation at Clutch nightclub in Dallas on Sunday night, the remainder of the day has been a fact-finding mission for the team, the fans, the media and -- most importantly -- the police. The official report from Dallas PD makes no mention of Elliott in their investigation into the events, but do note there was a physical altercation of some sort.

"On July 16, 2017, at approximately 9:40 pm, Dallas officers were dispatched to a disturbance call in the 2500 block of Cedar Springs Road. The disturbance involved a 30-year-old male victim who stated he had been physically assaulted. According to the report, the victim did not know who assaulted him. The victim was transported to an area hospital for non-life threatening injuries. There were no arrests made for this offense, nor were there anyone listed on the report as a suspect. This investigation is ongoing and we will update you as information becomes available."

By all accounts, Elliott was in fact present during the incident -- with some witnesses claiming it was the 2016 NFL rushing leader who threw the infamous punch. Those sources have either been randomly tweeted, or anonymously sourced to various media outlets.

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There were no arrests and no formal complaints made by any patrons -- including the aforementioned who proclaimed he threw the punch -- or off-duty officers, making it difficult to believe someone of Elliott's celebrity could deliver such a wanton act of violence in a crowded area and walk away as if nothing happened.

With the collective public opinion effectively finding Elliott guilty before the police have concluded their suspect-less investigation, at least one witness has now surfaced proclaiming the second-year back was nowhere near the assault victim.

NEW: friend of victim told DPD Zeke Elliott was at bar, but not near his buddy when they found him on the floor w/broken nose @wfaachannel8 pic.twitter.com/1kMVo06gvB — David Goins (@dgoins) July 17, 2017

And yet another spoke with Fort Worth Star-Telegram, supporting this account:

Michael Huffman, a bouncer from Wichita Falls who was in Dallas on Sunday night, shared on Facebook that Ibeneme, a deejay who goes by the name DJ d’Train, was the instigator and that Elliott didn’t do anything. He reiterated his stance in a private message to the Star-Telegram. “It didn’t go down like that,” said Huffman, who said he had a good view because he was close to Elliott hoping to get a selfie. “Everybody is saying that, but he didn’t throw the punch ... “Zeke was just standing there arms folded chilling feeling the crowd. Then I seen DJ getting loud toward the vicinity of Zeke and then I see an overhand right come over the back of Zeke shoulder that landed square in DTrain’s face and he went to sleep. He didn’t even see it. Then the crowd circled and dispersed. I’m surprised a whole video hasn’t been released yet.”

Dallas PD spent another 90 minutes on Monday afternoon speaking with club employees and nothing points towards Elliott being the attacker at this point. What is known is no one has advised law enforcement of such, and anything outside of that is speculation at the moment.

In other words, it's "he said, she said" for now, but there's more working in Elliott's favor now than against.

This is a developing story, and more information will released as it is received.

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