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Cowboys’ defense showed resiliency in comeback win vs Philadelphia
Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

Before the bye week, the Dallas Cowboys defense had become a liability, porous against the run, inconsistent in coverage, and unable to generate timely stops.

However, following a series of key additions and returns, that narrative has shifted dramatically.

The arrivals of DT Quinnen Williams and LB Logan Wilson, paired with the return of LB DeMarvion Overshown and the debut of CB Shavon Revel, injected new life into a defense that had been terrible through the first half of the season.

On Sunday afternoon against the Philadelphia Eagles, that revamped unit delivered its most impressive performance of the year, powering a remarkable comeback win at AT&T Stadium.

First Half Woes

The opening two quarters were a reminder of how quickly a game can spiral when the offense struggles to stay on the field.

Dallas opened the game with four straight disastrous possessions: a turnover on downs, a punt, a fumble, and an interception. Each mistake gifted the Eagles favorable opportunities, and they took full advantage.

Philadelphia marched down the field for touchdown drives of 50, 76, and 66 yards, building a 21-0 lead before Dallas could catch its breath.

During that stretch, the defense simply could not stop the bleeding. Jalen Hurts had clean pockets and the secondary couldn’t contain wide receivers AJ Brown or Devonta Smith.

With just over three minutes left in the first half, the Cowboys finally forced their first punt of the game. That stop proved to be a critical turning point.

The offense capitalized before halftime to cut the deficit to 14, setting up the defense for its best performance of the season.

5-Star Defensive Performance

From the moment the Eagles took a 21-0 lead with 11:32 left in the first half, their offense was effectively shut down.

Their final eight possessions of the game played out as follows: punt, kneel to end the half, punt, punt, punt, missed field goal, fumble, punt.

That’s not just improvement; that’s domination. That stretch allowed the Cowboys’ offense to roar back to life, scoring 24 unanswered points.

Brandon Aubrey nailed the game-winner from 42 yards out as time expired, but it was the defense that kept providing opportunity after opportunity.

For a unit that had struggled so badly in the first half of the season, this was a statement performance, arguably their best of the year.

How Did They Do It?

This is an early reaction, and deeper analysis will come once the All-22 film is available, but one major adjustment stood out in real time: the shift to a heavy five-man front.

The combination of Jadeveon Clowney and Donovan Ezeiruaku on the edges with Quinnen Williams, Osa Odighizuwa, and Kenny Clark anchoring the interior overwhelmed Philadelphia’s offensive line.

Eagles RG Landon Dickerson even acknowledged post-game that the Cowboys’ odd front caused significant issues because they had not shown that on film.

Saquon Barkley finished with just 22 rushing yards, and with the run game neutralized, DC Matt Eberflus forced the Eagles into one-dimensional football.

The secondary, which had been leaky early on, settled in behind the pass rush and tightened up in a big way.

Another critical factor: increased snaps for LB Logan Wilson.

Wilson’s pairing with Overshown behind that five-man wall gave Dallas the speed, instincts, and physicality it had been missing for much of the season.

The newest linebacker duo prevented Hurts from scrambling for first downs like he was able to in Week 1, holding him to just 33 yards rushing.

That tandem, combined with the revitalized defensive front, should be a staple going forward.

If the Cowboys can maintain this new-look defensive success, the path to the playoffs becomes that much clearer.

This article first appeared on Inside The Star and was syndicated with permission.

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