The Hidden Story Behind Dallas’ Week 11 Offensive Line

The Hidden Story Behind Dallas’ Week 11 Offensive Line
Inside The Star Inside The Star

The Dallas Cowboys offensive line sits top-10 in key protection metrics through Week 11. Here’s how Tyler Smith and Tyler Booker are shaping the interior in 2025.


A Line Under Pressure but Refusing to Break

Through Week 11, the Dallas Cowboys offensive line has been a study in extremes. Injuries, reshuffling, and inconsistent tackle play have put the offense in constant stress—yet somehow the interior has quietly built a foundation strong enough to keep Dallas afloat.

Despite the chaos, the Cowboys remain top-10 in most major pass-protection categories:

  • 10th in Pressure Rate Allowed (34.2%)
  • 10th in No-Blitz Pressure Rate Allowed (30.8%)

Even when the ball must come out fast—Dallas ranks 19th in Time to Throw (2.8 seconds)—the middle of the line has kept the offense from collapsing. And that success can be traced directly to two players.


Tyler Booker: The Rookie Who’s Already Playing Like a Pillar

The Cowboys needed power, stability, and a long-term answer at right guard. Booker has delivered all three—and more.

Through Week 11, he has emerged as one of the NFL’s best run-blocking guards, posting a dominant:

  • 79.0 run-blocking grade — 6th among all guards
  • 71.5 overall grade — 13th among guards

In pass protection, the rookie has been better than the raw grade (60.4) suggests. His true pass set numbers tell the real story:

  • 137 true pass set snaps
  • 100% pass-block win rate
  • Only 1 sack allowed
  • Only 7 total pressures allowed (1 sack, 3 hits, 3 hurries)
  • 97.5 pass-blocking efficiency

That is elite efficiency for a first-year interior lineman. Booker’s ability to anchor and reset defenders has added a level of physicality Dallas desperately needed.

More importantly, his presence has stabilized the right side of the line—something Dallas hasn’t been able to say confidently in years.


Tyler Smith: The Battle-Tested Enforcer With Room to Clean Up

While the rookie is flashing early dominance, the veteran next to him has carved out a different type of impact.

Tyler Smith remains one of the most physically imposing guards in the league, and his run-blocking grade of 70.9 (16th among guards) reinforces that the Cowboys can still move bodies when running behind him.

But it’s a mixed season. The highs are clear:

  • 63.8 overall grade
  • 98.0 pass-blocking efficiency
  • Zero games with more than two pressures allowed

And so are the issues:

  • 7 penalties — among the highest at the position
  • 11 total pressures allowed
  • 57.7 pass-blocking grade

Smith has shown plenty of dominant snaps—especially in games against Green Bay (86.1 run block grade), Denver (73.2), and Arizona (68.7). But the penalties and occasional technique lapses in pass protection have kept him from matching Booker’s efficiency.

Still, when the Cowboys need to impose their will in the run game, Smith remains the tone-setter.


The Interior Is the Only Reliable Part of the Line — and the Metrics Prove It

Beyond Booker and Smith’s individual...