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Analyst says Cowboys did little to address 'primary concern' this offseason
Cowboys DTs Osa Odighizuwa and Mazi Smith on the field in the game against the Jacksonville Jaguars. Tim Heitman-Imagn Images

To their credit, the Dallas Cowboys addressed most of their concerns this offseason.

They added two running backs in free agency as well as in the 2025 NFL draft to help shore up the ground game. They traded for Joe Milton to give them a trusted No. 2 quarterback. They even made a huge move in adding George Pickens, giving them a potentially elite receiving duo.

What they haven't done is fix their run defense.

Dan Orlovsky recently said this was a concern on ESPN, and now Bleacher Report's Alex Ballentine has given his take on the same subject. He stated they gave up nearly five yards per attempt last season, but then didn't do much to address their primary concern.

"The primary concern when looking at their roster is how they plan to improve a run defense that gave up a whopping 4.8 yards per carry. Solomon Thomas was the only notable defensive tackle they added this offseason."

Dallas is once again leaning on 2023 first-round pick Mazi Smith as their starting nose tackle, and hoping he's finally made progress. If he hasn't, they can be in trouble with seventh-round pick Jay Toia serving as the top threat to take Smith's job.

Toia was an elite run-stuffer at UCLA, but there's no scenario where he should be in line to start as a rookie.

This article first appeared on Dallas Cowboys on SI and was syndicated with permission.

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