Cobie Durant Is Suddenly At The Center Of A Cowboys Dilemma

Cobie Durant's impressive offseason performance has solidified his role as a potential starter in the Cowboys' defense, spotlighting his knack for turnovers.

Cobie Durant didn’t just blend into the Cowboys’ offseason work. He popped.

By the time Dallas wrapped mandatory minicamp earlier this week, one of the clearest developments on the defensive side was the way Durant kept forcing his way into the conversation at cornerback. The battle for the spot opposite DaRon Bland has been taking shape, and the veteran free agent has already put himself in the thick of it alongside rookie Shavon Revel Jr.

Revel has been healthy this offseason and said he feels more like himself after an injury-filled start to his NFL career. Even so, Durant was the first one to leave a mark in this competition, turning heads during OTAs with the kind of playmaking that gets noticed fast.

That wasn’t just a feel-good camp story, either. The Athletic’s Jon Machota singled Durant out in his minicamp takeaways, noting both the splash plays and the trust he’s already earned from the staff.

“The veteran stood out most among the Cowboys’ corners during OTAs and minicamp. He made a highlight diving interception of Prescott in OTAs, but there were also times when Lamb got the best of him.

The coaching staff has been pleased with what it has seen. Durant is expected to have a significant role with his ability to play multiple cornerback spots.

How that position group shakes out will likely depend on the health of DaRon Bland (foot) and Shavon Revel (knee). Both said last week that they are completely recovered and ready for training camp.”

That health piece matters. Bland and Revel both said they’re fully recovered and ready for training camp, and that availability will shape how the cornerback room looks when Week 1 gets here. But even with that uncertainty, Durant has already done enough to look like a lock for the rotation - and maybe more if the season started today.

Joseph Hoyt of the Dallas Morning News had the same read on Durant’s camp, calling him his defensive MVP from the offseason work.

“My defensive MVP from camp was Cobie Durant. The Cowboys struggled mightily with forcing turnovers and getting their hands on balls a year ago.

In fact, they were last in pass breakups - even behind a New York Jets team that had zero interceptions all season. Durant has seven interceptions and 26 pass breakups in his four-year career.

He had a diving interception in OTAs in 7-on-7 and he had a diving pass breakup on Tuesday, as well.”

That kind of production matters for a defense that needs more than just clean coverage. Dallas added talent in free agency and the draft, and Jerry Jones and Brian Schottenheimer also brought in a young coordinator.

But the mindset has to change too. Limiting explosives is one thing.

Getting hands on footballs is another. Taking them away changes games.

Durant has made a habit of doing that at the pro level already, and if he keeps it up in Dallas, his run with the Cowboys could really get rolling.

For now, though, the takeaway is simple: he was impossible to ignore in OTAs and minicamp. The next test comes when the pads go on and the action gets real.

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