BREAKING: Micah Parsons leads the Cowboys’ excellent collection of defensive ends on the depth chart.
|As the formal start of the Brian Schottenheimer Sam Williamsera draws near on July 21, the Dallas Cowboys are less than a month away from leaving for training camp in Oxnard, California. We will examine each position group in the Cowboys Depth Chart series to ascertain which players are safe, on the bubble, or need improvement in order to make the 53-man roster at the end of training camp in late August. The entire defensive unit should be strengthened by the Cowboys’ abundance of pass rush talent at the defensive end position. There are a few physical defensive ends available in run support to go with them. Only a select few can make the 53-cut in such a talented room.
Here’s a look at the defensive end position going into camp.
SAFE (5)
Micah Parsons, Dante Fowler Jr., Donovan Ezeiruaku, Marshawn Kneeland, Sam Williams Time will tell if a contract extension for Micah Parsons will come before the season or not. Regardless, he is expected to be on the 53-man roster and play in week one with or without the extension in his hand. Who starts opposite of Parsons will be fun to track, as Dante Fowler Jr. is back in the fold fresh off a double-digit sack season with the Washington Commanders and Sam Williams returns after tearing his ACL in training camp last season. The last two drafts have seen the Cowboys take a defensive end in the second round, as rookie Donovan Ezeiruaku brings one of the deepest pass rush arsenals in all of the rookie class, and second-year player Marshawn Kneeland provides early down value with his run defense knacks.
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ON THE BUBBLE (2)
Payton Turner, Tyrus Wheat.
A former first-round pick who finally played a full season in 2024 after going through multiple injuries early in his career, Payton Turner arrives in Dallas with high hopes that he can provide help in defending the run off the edge. Can he stay healthy and does he still have a quick enough burst to handle that responsibility? Answering yes to both of those questions will earn him the final roster spot. If he cannot live up to those expectations, Tyrus Wheat is once again available as a big-bodied option that can provide special teams value.
WORK TO DO (2)
Luiji Vilain, Earnest Brown IV.
While Luiji Vilain did show some flash in the offseason program, he still has an uphill battle at earning a roster spot. At the least, a practice squad spot could be in his future with a strong camp. The same could be said for Earnest Brown IV who will have to show something in the preseason to prove he is more worthy of a roster spot than the large cluster of names above him.