A Trade Won’t Fix the Dallas Cowboys’ Defense’s Problem

4
Dallas Cowboys news by Inside The Star

The Dallas Cowboys’ defense isn’t broken by talent — it’s broken by Matt Eberflus’ soft coverage. Until the system changes, no trade will save this unit.


A Trade Won’t Fix the Dallas Cowboys’ Defense's Problem

A Trade Won’t Save This Defense

After Sunday’s loss to the Denver Broncos, one truth is obvious: a single trade can’t fix the Dallas Cowboys’ defense.

The problem isn’t a lack of players — it’s how those players are being used. Defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus continues to force a rigid system that doesn’t match his roster’s strengths.

Even a big trade before the NFL trade deadline wouldn’t solve the deeper issue: a scheme that handcuffs its own defenders.


The Zone Coverage Is Crippling the Pass Rush

Eberflus’ soft zone defense gives quarterbacks clean, quick reads and open receivers almost immediately after the snap. By the time edge rushers can disengage, the ball is already gone.

That’s why James Houston and Donovan Ezeiruaku have struggled to generate sacks or consistent pressure — not because they lack ability, but because the coverage behind them collapses too fast.

When quarterbacks can find open targets in under two seconds, no pass rush has a chance to get home.

The entire front seven suffers from this disconnect. A talented group built to attack is being forced to wait, watch, and react — the exact opposite of what made them effective in the first place.


Keep the Draft Picks — Fix the Leadership

Instead of sacrificing valuable draft capital for a short-term fix, the Cowboys front office should focus on leadership.

The defense needs a new coordinator who can evaluate players correctly and design a system around their strengths.

Young defenders like Shemar James, Marist Liufau, and Donovan Ezeiruaku have upside — they just need direction and a philosophy that lets them attack.

With the right voice in charge, Dallas could rebuild its defensive identity without wasting future picks.


The Offense Is Championship-Ready — the Defense Isn’t

The Cowboys’ offense is one of the league’s best. Dak Prescott, CeeDee Lamb, George Pickens, and Javonte Williams form a top-tier scoring core capable of hanging points on anyone.

Yet every explosive drive is undermined by defensive breakdowns. Dallas has the firepower of a contender — and the coverage discipline of a rebuilding team.

Until the Cowboys find a coordinator who adapts instead of forcing his system, no trade will make a difference.


Turning Point Ahead

A new player won’t fix a broken structure. The Cowboys don’t need another body — they need a vision built on accountability, smarter coaching, and modern defensive concepts.

Cowboys QB Dak Prescott when asked if a trade could jump start this team: u201cI trust and like the guys that we have. I honestly do, and thatu2019s not just a political answer. u2026 Our roster is OK. Can it be better? Thatu2019s for you guys to write about and to judge. I trups://t.co/30dVjMmGSn
Tweet media

The true rebuild begins with leadership, not transactions. If Dallas commits to that change this offseason, the defense can finally rise to the level of its offense — and the Cowboys can start playing like the contender they were built to be.

Was this helpful?


Cody Warren is a sports journalist at InsideTheStar.com, where he has published 302 articles reaching over 1 million readers. He is a Law Enforcement Officer with nearly 20 years of professional service across multiple assignments, bringing investigative rigor and a commitment to factual accuracy to his Dallas Cowboys coverage.

4 Comments

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Loading comments…
Previous Story

Cowboys continue roller-coaster 2025 with a crushing loss

A man in a suit and tie looks ahead with a serious expression.
Next Story

Jerry Jones’ post game was interesting after Broncos loss