Cowboys news: 2 key areas Brian Schottenheimer looks to improve in 2026

Cowboys news: 2 key areas Brian Schottenheimer looks to improve in 2026
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Brian Schottenheimer Names 2 Goals Ahead of Second Season as Cowboys Head coach – Mike Moraitis, Sports Illustrated

The 2026 season inches closer.

So much of Schottenheimer’s attention has been on the offense, seeing as how he’s the play-caller. But the Cowboys head coach wants to be more involved with the defense and special teams following a season in which Dallas struggled in both areas.

“Schottenheimer was not only the head coach but the offensive play-caller last year. That’s not changing in 2026. However, he’s spending more time in defensive and special teams meetings,” Calvin Watkins of the Dallas Morning News said.

“Schottenheimer trusts the coordinators for those units, but he plans on being around to lend his voice in meetings,” Watkins added.

“Being really the head coach and in charge of all three phases and having a handle of that,” Schottenheimer said to reporters. “I think the personnel side of it has been good for me to dive back into the 3-4 world and then shoot, practice schedules, meetings.”

According to Bill Huber of Green Bay Packers On SI, the Cowboys sported the sixth-worst special teams in the NFL last season, and we know their defense was one of the league’s worst.

It certainly wouldn’t hurt to have an experienced coach like Schotty more involved as Dallas looks to improve.

Schottenheimer building relationships

Another goal for Schottenheimer is to build better relationships with his players, something he’s accomplishing over dinner. The ultimate goal is to sit down with each and every player on the roster through the offseason.

“My hope would be that these guys know I love them and care about them, and my door is always open. I remember last year, at different points throughout the season, a guy or two would pop in and close the door. We’d sit down and talk about things outside of football, anything messy in their world that they need help with,” Schottenheimer said.

“I think that’s what gives you the ability to have them trust you, love you, care about you, you love and care about them back and then at the same time we’re able to have hard conversations and tell them things they don’t necessarily want to hear,” he added.

Charity work in Aldon Smith’s final hours offers no answers in ex-Cowboy’s tragic death – Todd Brock, Cowboys Wire

RIP Aldon.

Smith passed away Saturday at the age of 36, his death called “sudden and tragic” in a statement by the 49ers, the team that drafted Smith seventh overall in 2011.

Now a friend of Smith’s has shed some light on Smith’s final hours, including the charitable kindness that would prove to be his final act, even amid his own continued personal struggles.

Bay Area resident and businessman Amir Shirazi had befriended Smith as part of a larger group of 49ers players....