The Charles Snowden signing isn’t going to make the front page of the newspaper, but I can’t treat it like it’s nothing.
I like this move because it gives Dallas a different kind of body in the edge room. Snowden is not here to save the pass rush, but he is here to compete for one of the final roster spots, and I think he has a real shot.
This also ties into a bigger question Dallas has to answer before the season: how deep is this edge room behind the top names?
The first thing you will notice with Snowden is his frame.
He is nearly 6’7” and 250 pounds with an 82 plus inch wingspan. That kind of length doesn’t just grow on trees.
Now I don’t know if he can use that length to keep tackles off his chest, but with the Dallas Cowboys pass rush guru, maybe they can make something out of this guy.
The Cowboys have pass rush talent. What they need at the bottom of the roster is reliable depth. Snowden gives them a player with NFL snaps, starting experience, and a trait that is easy to see. Length.
Charles Snowden’s 40-yard dash numbers aren’t the cleanest because he didn’t have a normal NFL Combine testing process after an ankle injury.
Some sites have him at 4.75, I have seen 4.6, and 4.51 forty times. I’m not going to try to build everything around a reported 4.51 because it’s unofficial.
My takeaway is simple: Snowden moves well enough for a player with his size. He’s not a stiff defensive end, and has enough athletic ability to stand up, rush, drop, and play in different looks.
I see Charles Snowden as a depth edge defender who has to win with usefulness.
He can play on early downs if needed, help set the edge, and can use his length to bother quarterbacks. I like that Snowden gives the Cowboys more flexibility as a stand-up outside linebacker or a hand-down defensive end.
We don’t need him to be a superstar. We just need a role player that gives the defense a different look when he steps on the field.
I found he had an OK two years with the Las Vegas Raiders. In 2024 and 2025 combined, he had 67 combo tackles, missed 2.9% of his tackles, 4.5 sacks, and 17 total QB pressures on 730 snaps. A normal starter at defensive would get about 800 snaps a season.
Even if he was a rotational starter, averaging about 650 snaps, his numbers could increase to roughly 4.5-6.0 sacks, 16-22 QB pressures, 26-36 solo tackles, and about 26-36 defensive stops.
Charles Snowden doesn’t have to come in and beat out a top pass rusher, just the last pass rusher the Cowboys are thinking about keeping.
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