Dallas Cowboys: Reading between the lines (defense)

Dallas Cowboys: Reading between the lines (defense)
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This episode of Between the Lines we flip the attention to the defensive line, where chaos meets strategy. This is where the Cowboys’ games are won and lost so let’s dive in.

Interior Defensive Line

Osa Odighizuwa

(2025 Stats: 215 Total snaps, 17 Total Tackles, 2 TFL, 17 Pressures, 1 Sack)

Grade: 72.3

Solomon Thomas

(2025 Stats: 160 Total snaps, 14 Total Tackles, 2 TFL, 7 Pressures, 0 Sacks)

Grade: 60.5

Kenny Clark

(2025 Stats: 223 Total snaps, 14 Total Tackles, 2 TFL, 15 Pressures, 2 Sacks)

Grade: 67.7

Mazi Smith

(2025 Stats: 51 Total snaps, 1 Total Tackles, 0 TFL, 2 Pressures, 0 Sack)

Grade: 51.5

Jay Toia

(2025 Stats: 39 Total snaps, 1 Total Tackle, 0 TFL, 0 Pressures, 0 Sack)

Grade: 29.3

So the Cowboys key task this week for the defensive tackle is very blunt, cave the interior until Carolina runs out of oxygen. And the good news here is Dallas finally has the right two-man wrecking crew to make it happen. Kenny Clark has been extremely productive and plants himself in the A-gap like an immovable object, while Osa Odighizuwa plays the sudden-change defender who slices across a guard before the stance is even settled. That pairing has powered an interior group sitting at a Run Stop Win Rate of 33%, that ranks sixth in the NFL. The plan for the duo writes itself, let Clark compress the pocket from the nose, let Odighizuwa win the angle race, and force Bryce Young to throw from a shrinking pocket with the curtain closing fast.

Carolina’s answer hinges on who’s in uniform and how the protection holds up. The bookends are legit with Ikem Ekwonu on the left and Taylor Moton on the right, both grading among the top 10 tackles in run-block win rate and are a matchup nightmare in the run. The interior is the subplot, reserves Cade Mays and Brady Christensen are currently in starting roles and putting communication under a microscope. That’s a big deal when you’re handing off twist games and spike-and-loop action from Clark and Odighizuwa. Zooming out, the Panthers are 27th in pass-block win rate.

The team’s pass-rush win rate is around 25th in the league, and that snapshot mostly reflects the edge picture, not the interior. Inside, Clark’s blunt force and Odighizuwa’s first step still cloud the quarterback’s ability to play cleanly.

In the run game, Rico Dowdle ranks 18th among running backs in rush yards this year. That all sounds great but here’s the catch, 206 of those yards came in one game, and that was last week, so expect his confidence to be high along with playing against a team he’s very familiar with. Next to Dowdle is rookie Trevor Etienne providing the change-of-pace work and has only 12 attempts this year, but keep an eye on him as he can be a slippery runner. That duo fits the Panthers’ offensive plan with pound the ball first, then sell the pass off...