Dallas Cowboys Officially Part Ways with Matt Eberflus After Historic Defensive Meltdown
In a move that shocked absolutely nobody who watched a single quarter of Dallas football this past season, the Cowboys have officially fired Defensive Coordinator Matt Eberflus.
The writing wasn’t just on the wall; it was spray-painted in neon letters across AT&T Stadium. After just one season calling the shots, Eberflus was shown the door on Tuesday, ending a tenure that can best be described as a defensive catastrophe. If you’re a Cowboys fan, you probably saw this coming before the Thanksgiving leftovers were even cold.
A Season of Historic Futility for Eberflus
The 2025 season was a nightmare for the defense. Under Eberflus, the Cowboys didn’t just struggle; they set records for all the wrong reasons. The unit allowed a staggering 30.1 points per game—the most in franchise history. For a team with a proud defensive tradition, that is a tough pill to swallow.
It wasn’t just elite quarterbacks torching them, either. We watched middling signal-callers look like Hall of Famers against this secondary. Russell Wilson threw for 450 yards in Week 2. J.J. McCarthy carved them up for 250 yards. Perhaps the most damning stat? In a late-season loss to the Chargers, the Cowboys failed to sack Justin Herbert a single time, despite Herbert being the most-sacked QB in the league entering the game. That is a special kind of futility.
The Personnel Problem: Was Eberflus Dealt a Bad Hand?
While Eberflus is the one packing his bags, it’s hard not to feel a tiny bit of sympathy for the guy. His job became infinitely harder the moment the front office decided to trade superstar pass rusher Micah Parsons to the Green Bay Packers less than two weeks before the season opener.
Add in the injuries to Cornerbacks DaRon Bland and the eventual waiving of Trevon Diggs, and Eberflus was essentially trying to stop a flood with a roll of paper towels. Even the mid-season trade for Defensive Tackle Quinnen Williams couldn’t stop the bleeding. The brief spark he provided was quickly extinguished as the unit reverted to its porous form down the stretch, culminating in a 7-9-1 finish that left Dallas watching the playoffs from the couch.
Jerry Jones and the Search For Answers
Owner Jerry Jones was vocal about his frustration, stating, “Everybody had their finger in what we did out there defensively.” While Jones admitted it wasn’t a “one-man blame,” someone had to take the fall. It wasn’t going to be the GM (Jerry), and it appears Head Coach Brian Schottenheimer is safe for now. That left Eberflus holding the bag.
What’s Next For the Cowboys Defense?
So, here we go again. The Cowboys are now looking for their fourth defensive coordinator in four years. The coaching carousel in Dallas is spinning so fast it’s making everyone dizzy. Rumors are already swirling about Brian Flores potentially stepping in, but whoever takes the job has a massive reclamation project on their hands.
For Eberflus, it is a second straight year getting a pink slip, having been fired by the Bears in 2024. For the Cowboys, it’s back to the drawing board. Again.
