Cowboys Training Camp Could Expose One Defensive Problem All Over Again

As the Dallas Cowboys gear up for training camp, concerns loom over their ability to secure a dominant edge rusher in their defensive lineup.

The Cowboys spent the offseason trying to cover up a problem that could show up fast in camp: who, exactly, is going to win off the edge when the play breaks down?

Dallas already knows what life looked like after the 2025 trade of Micah Parsons to the Green Bay Packers. The pass rush never really recovered, and the defense finished with an NFL-worst 30.1 points allowed per game. So the front office tried to patch the damage by bringing in defensive coordinator Christian Parker and adding Quinnen Williams and Rashan Gary.

Even with those moves, the concern hasn’t gone away.

On a recent episode of Locked On Cowboys, hosts Marcus Mosher and Landon McCool pointed to the same issue that hangs over the unit now: there may not be a proven edge rusher on the roster who can consistently win a one-on-one matchup.

"If we're talking about pure edge rushers winning one-on-one situations, I think you have an argument that we don't have a lot of certainty there," McCool said. "If you start talking about what the Cowboys have on the interior, and their ability to hopefully create double teams or... free those guys up so everyone's getting one-on-ones - I think that helped last year."

That’s the gamble Dallas is making. The idea is that Williams and Clark can squeeze the pocket from the inside and make life easier for the edge rushers by turning more snaps into favorable matchups.

It’s a workable plan, but it depends more on structure than on a true edge monster taking over a rep. Parsons used to solve that problem on his own.

Gary can bring production, but he has not been asked to be the lone alpha of a pass-rush group.

And after him, the margin for error gets thin in a hurry.

Donovan Ezeiruaku is still coming back from late-January hip surgery that kept him out all spring, even though he is expected to be ready for training camp. The Cowboys will need to manage his workload early.

First-round rookie Malachi Lawrence is another piece in the mix, and he got first-team reps this spring. The UCF product is projected to handle 40% to 45% of the snaps as a third-down speed specialist, but he remains untested at the NFL level.

Neither player has proven he can beat an NFL tackle yet.

That is why camp matters so much here. If the edge rush doesn’t start sorting itself out in Oxnard, Dallas may have to look outside the building before Week 1. The team does not sound eager to chase Von Miller, but Jerry Jones could still turn to veteran options such as Haason Reddick, Derek Barnett, or Yannick Ngakoue if the younger pass rushers don’t separate.

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