The Dallas Cowboys don’t have a defensive-line issue — they have an allocation issue: too many rotations, not enough Houston and Ezeiruaku dominance.
The answer is staring them in the face: build the pass rush around James Houston and rookie Donovan Ezeiruaku, then unleash veterans Dante Fowler Jr. and Jadeveon Clowney to finish the job.
James Houston: The Playmaker Dallas Keeps Shelving
James Houston has quietly become Dallas’ most dangerous edge threat.
Through limited snaps this season, he’s logged 3.5 sacks, 10 solo tackles, 18 total tackles, and a forced fumble — efficiency that rivals Pro Bowl production per rep.
When Houston played extended reps in Week 5, he posted 1.5 sacks on just 23 pass-rush snaps, a sign of what’s possible if the Cowboys stop holding him back.
Every metric shows he’s creating pressure faster than any other Cowboy defensive end. The more he plays, the more offenses adjust — and that’s exactly the kind of player you build a scheme around.
Donovan Ezeiruaku: Rookie Numbers, Veteran Impact
Then there’s Donovan Ezeiruaku — the rookie who’s already producing like a starter.
Through 235 snaps, he owns a 70.8 overall PFF grade (35th/113), including a 67.4 pass-rush mark. He’s stacked 11 solo tackles, 16 total tackles, 1 sack, 1 forced fumble, and 14 total pressures (8 QB hits, 5 hurries).
Ezeiruaku’s relentless motor gives Dallas something it’s lacked since Micah Parsons departed — a true tone-setter on the edge. Every game, he looks less like a rookie and more like a long-term cornerstone.
Veteran Backbone: Fowler and Clowney Still Matter
Dante Fowler Jr. has quietly become the stabilizer of the group. His 75.0 overall grade (25th) and 18 pressures — including 10 hurries and 7 QB hits — show veteran efficiency. Fowler doesn’t chase flash; he wins with timing and awareness.
Meanwhile, Jadeveon Clowney remains a force in limited reps. Through 96 snaps, he’s earned a 63.4 overall grade, 72.3 pass-rush mark, and 9 total pressures — the kind of anchor every rotation needs to handle the run and collapse pockets from power sets.
The Problem: Snaps Going to the Wrong Guys
The numbers make one thing clear — players like Sam Williams and Marshawn Kneeland aren’t producing enough to justify meaningful snaps. Dallas has been spreading opportunities instead of consolidating around its best four.
That needs to end now.
Bottom Line
If Dallas truly wants to fix its defense, it’s not about signing a star — it’s about trusting the ones already in-house.
James Houston brings explosion, Donovan Ezeiruaku brings energy, Dante Fowler Jr. brings consistency, and Jadeveon Clowney brings muscle.
Give those four the majority of snaps, and the Cowboys’ pass rush could finally return to elite form — just in time to save their season.
Can Eberflus recognize this issue? Was very slow to adapt to man to man coverage since he is preconditioned to stay with zone coverage. I don’t see why Schottenheimer and Jones are so enamored with this guy? But who listens to the casual observer?
He’s trying to run a 34 zone scheme from a 43 base using players who were brought in to play more man to man single high or cover2. Still, there is no excuse for these DBs to not understand how to play a cover 3 zone. That’s just lazy and careless of them. As a DB, you learn to play man and zone from Pop Warner Football. This is about not wanting to play the scheme or assignments more then anything IMO. No excuse for that. If you don’t want to play, trade em and bring in players who will. I don’t love the scheme but you can not allow players to dictate what the scheme is going to be. That will never work.