Cowboys Fans Wont Like How Quinnen Williams Is Being Judged

Quinnen Williams' undervalued rank in ESPN's defensive linemen ratings sparks debate, highlighting his impressive skill set and potential for a standout performance with the Dallas Cowboys.

ESPN’s annual defensive lineman rankings have Quinnen Williams sitting lower than many around the league would expect, and the Dallas Cowboys defender came in at No. 6 on the list compiled from NFL executives, scouts and coaches.

That placement is one spot below where Williams landed in 2025, even though his ceiling has clearly been viewed as higher before. One voter left him off the list entirely, while his best showing in the voting was No. 3.

“The Jets will knock you down -- the same thing happened to Leonard Williams -- but I expect Quinnen to be better in Dallas, be rejuvenated a bit,” one NFL coordinator said told Jeremy Fowler.

“As far as skill sets, he's still so gifted and such a matchup problem,” a veteran NFL offensive coach said.

The top 10, from No. 1 through No. 10, was Leonard Williams, Jeffery Simmons, Jalen Carter, Chris Jones, Derrick Brown, Williams, Dexter Lawrence, Zach Allen, Milton Williams and Jordan Davis.

The case for Williams being higher is easy to make. He’s one of the most complete defensive linemen in football, and his value shows up all over the stat sheet. Pro Football Focus had him second among interior defensive linemen in overall grade last season at 88.8, and he posted the best run defense grade at 91.7.

The pass-rush numbers are the part that likely dragged him down. Williams finished 2025 with a pass-rush grade of 69.6 and only 2.5 sacks, production that doesn’t jump off the page.

Even so, ESPN’s own metrics still painted a strong picture. Williams posted a 14% pass-rush win rate, tied for fourth-best among interior defenders, and he was second in run-stop win rate. He also finished with 51 pressures, the seventh-most at the position.

That pressure total becomes even more notable when you break it down further: 32 of those pressures came after he joined the Cowboys, and he played one fewer game for Dallas than he did for the New York Jets.

There’s also the context of where he spent the first half of the season. Williams was playing for a Jets team described as a dumpster fire, with no real help around him, which made it easier for opposing offenses to focus their attention on him.

The sack total was still a letdown, but it stands out more as a blip than a trend. Williams had at least 5.5 sacks in each of the previous five seasons, including 12 in 2022, so the production has been there before.

In the end, the ranking appears to have leaned heavily on that one down year in the sack column while overlooking the advanced numbers that still showed Williams as a force. If he keeps dominating against the run and gets his sack total back toward his earlier levels, a full season in Dallas could push him much higher next year.

In Other News...

Cowboys Suddenly Have A Huge DaRon Bland Problem Again

DaRon Blands place in the Cowboys future was supposed to be settled long before the season turned into another test of depth at cornerback. Dallas locked him up on a four-year extension worth up to $92 million, betting on the kind of impact he flashed in his breakout 2023 run, when he became one of the leagues most disruptive playmakers and looked like a cornerstone on the back end.

Instead, the conversation around Bland has shifted back to health and availability, with recurring foot problems once again clouding his role. He tried to play through the pain in 2025 and still gave Dallas useful snaps, but the production never matched the standard he set two years ago, leaving the Cowboys waiting on a return to form at a position where they cant afford many more setbacks. [Read more 🡒]

Cowboys Fans Just Got Another Brutal Micah Parsons Reality Check

Micah Parsons keeps stacking up the kind of company that reminds Dallas just how rare his rise has been. In ESPNs annual survey of NFL executives, coaches and scouts, the former Cowboys star was again viewed as one of the leagues premier pass rushers, and his place in the sports record book only sharpens the point. Parsons already belongs to a small group of edge defenders who have piled up at least 65 sacks through their first five seasons, a list that includes names like T.J. Watt, J.J. Watt, Derrick Thomas and Reggie White.

For Cowboys fans, the sting is not just what Parsons has become, but what the roster looks like without him. Dallas did not have any of its current edge rushers crack the surveys top 10, a reminder of the talent gap that has opened since Parsons was traded to the Green Bay Packers. Even with the season now moving forward, the comparison lingers because Parsons production would still have towered over the Cowboys pass rush, and that is the reality check that keeps hanging over the franchise. [Read more 🡒]

Cowboys Secondary Could Get A Veteran Twist Fans Did Not Expect

Dallas spent last season trying to patch together a pass defense that never really stabilized, and the front office is still banking on better years from DaRon Bland and Shavon Revel in 2026. There are other corners in the mix too, including Caelen Carson, Cobie Durant and Devin Moore, but the bigger question is whether the Cowboys want to add another proven body to a room that badly needs help after finishing at the bottom of the league against the pass.

One analyst has floated a veteran name as a possible fit, and the idea comes with plenty of baggage. The corner in question was released by Washington earlier this offseason and is trying to work back from a torn ACL, with availability and performance both in question after he has not topped 10 games in a season since 2021. For Dallas, it is the kind of move that would make sense on paper if the team wants insurance, but it would also force a hard look at whether the upside is still worth the risk. [Read more 🡒]