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  • Dallas Cowboys player arrested on charge of reckless driving

    If you were hoping for a normal Dallas Cowboys offseason, you’re off to a bad start.

    Cowboys rookie defensive end Donovan Ezeiruaku was arrested and booked on a charge of reckless driving on Sunday night in Collin County, according to court records. He posted $500 bond and was released the same day.

    The Cowboys are aware of the situation, a team official told the Star-Telegram.

    Ezeiruaku, 22, was a second-round draft pick out of Boston College in 2025 and appeared in all 17 games as a rookie, including nine starts. He combined for 40 tackles, including nine tackles for loss, and two sacks.

    Heading into 2026, he is one of just two defensive ends on the Cowboys’ roster not hitting free agency this offseason, along with James Houston.

    Ezeiruaku has been viewed as an on-field and locker room leader early in his time in Dallas.

    “I think just the passion for the way he plays the game is real,” head coach Brian Schottenheimer said in December. “The way he plays the run is unique for a rookie that came out of [Boston College] as a known pass rusher, but the physicality that he plays with in the run game is very unique in my opinion. That’s why I think he’s going to be a star in this league.”

    Since the arrest did not involve weapons, drugs, alcohol or anything violent, this won’t be viewed as a serious mistake toward his NFL future or any possible suspension. In a social media post, his agent, Andre Odom of Athletes First, also co-signed Ezeiruaku’s character.

    “He’s a great kid,” Odom said. “Will learn from this.”

    The Cowboys are out of the team facility until April when they are due to return for voluntary workouts.

    This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

    This story was originally published January 12, 2026 at 7:44 PM.

    Nick Harris

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Nick Harris is the Dallas Cowboys beat reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He has experience working on the beat for DallasCowboys.com and previous work experience at Yahoo Sports/Rivals and 247Sports.

    Nick Harris

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  • Cowboys season-end presser: New d-coordinator, Pickens deal; Could Jerry retire?

    When the NFL playoffs kick off on Saturday afternoon, the Dallas Cowboys will be at home watching from the couch for the second season in a row, and it’s a reality that has frustrated owner Jerry Jones.

    Speaking at the end-of-season press conference on Wednesday at The Star in Frisco, Jones addressed a myriad of topics alongside son and executive vice president Stephen Jones and head coach Brian Schottenheimer about how he sees an opportunity for improvement in 2026 that can not only get them back into the second weekend of January, but potentially further.

    The presser came on the heels of the firing of first-year defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus after a porous season defensively that put the Cowboys dead-last in points allowed and 30th in total yards allowed across the NFL.

    As the search begins for the team’s fourth defensive coordinator in as many years, let’s start with the task at hand for Jones and the front office.

    What Dallas is looking for in a new defensive coordinator

    Getting this hire right will be arguably the most important thing that Brian Schottenheimer, Jerry Jones and Stephen Jones do all offseason. As they begin to have conversations on what that hire could look like, certain aspects will be sought out from the next defensive leader on staff.

    “We’ve had this conversation a lot,” Schottenheimer said. “The best coaches, in my opinion, are flexible. So, we’re not going to pigeon-hole ourselves and say we have to be 3-4, 4-down, whatever it is … Good coaches take the players they have, they have an identity, and they fit their players into the model that fits what they do well. You’re looking for a teacher. You’re looking for a guy that has the ability to instruct and to buy in.”

    When evaluating the defensive shortcomings from this past season, Schottenheimer has pointed at the lack of takeaways multiple times. The Cowboys’ defense finished 30th in the NFL in takeaways.

    “We weren’t able to take the ball away,” he said. “We didn’t play good enough in terms of the ball. Minus-nine in the giveaway-takeaway ratio? That’s terrible. So, we have to protect the football on offense. We didn’t do that at a high enough level. And we have to get more turnovers.”

    Schottenheimer can voice all of his desires, but will he have a say at the end of the day? Jones was adamant that he be as big a part of the process as anyone in the room.

    “Brian will be very involved with that process, as he was last year when we made those changes,” Jerry Jones said. “We will do an intense, complete-focus job of replacing Eberflus and any holes that are here because of his job.”

    Each of the last six defensive coordinators for the Cowboys dating back to 2014 have had head coaching experience. For a box that has seemingly been a requirement to check in the past, Jerry Jones said on Wednsday it’s not a requirement this time around. He even went as far as saying he would hire a first-time coordinator.

    “The way we’ve done it in the past, that alone will cause me not to do it that way now,” Jones said. “That alone.”

    The George Pickens extension

    Arguably, the second-biggest agenda point this offseason will be handling an extension with wide receiver George Pickens.

    After he set career-highs across the board in hauling in 93 receptions for 1,429 yards and nine touchdowns, he is set to receive a massive contract extension after just one year with the team. How he ends up landing that extension could be the messy part, though.

    It was less than six months ago that Jerry Jones was in the middle of a disgruntled negotiation with Micah Parsons and agent David Mulugheta before it ultimately ended in Jones trading Parsons away to the Green Bay Packers. Now, dealing with the same agent, there is rightful questioning about if the Pickens negotiation could follow the same trajectory.

    “How bad do you want me? Does that mean you should have been at the doorstep the other night? I don’t want to get into those kinds of assessments of how much we’re trying,” Jones said. “He’s an outstanding player. We don’t have the same issues that we might have had [when the team traded for him], and we are very proud of when we signed Dak — certainly after this year, in my mind — we took on a real direction of doing things that are really friendly to his future with the Cowboys.”

    However, he doesn’t want the comparisons of Parsons’ negotiation to muddy what is ahead with Pickens.

    “So much of that has to do with the reading the move as you take the next step,” he said. “So, I wouldn’t dare to say that I’d do anything to a contract negotiation or comparison to any other contract. There won’t be any comparison.”

    With that being said, he did mention that because the team did trade Parsons, they now have the flexibility within the league’s salary cap allocated to player compensation to sign a talent like Pickens whereas they may not have been able to before.

    “It put us in a position to have the flexibility,” Jones said. “No way in the world could we have had ever entertained having the player like Pickens for the future if we hadn’t made the trade. We would not have had flexibility. There was zero chance of having that money available for that.”

    But as for the negotiation itself, consider all possibilities on the table.

    “I can be whatever you want me to be,” he said. “I can be sweet, or I can be the other way, too — however we need to do it.”

    Tyler Smith’s future on the offensive line

    One thing that doesn’t have to be addressed this offseason is the contract for three-time Pro Bowl offensive lineman Tyler Smith. In signing a four-year, $96 million extension days before the start of the season, he is locked in with the team through 2029.

    However, the discussion around Smith does still exist this offseason, but more so around which position he is best fit at going into what should be the best years of his career.

    An All-Pro left guard in 2023 and a three-time Pro Bowl player at the position, Smith was moved to left tackle for the final three games of the season due to injury to Tyler Guyton and struggles from backup Nate Thomas. Now, the conversation is built around if Smith could remain there permanently.

    Smith has made his desire to remain at left guard known to the media, and he was able to relay that to Schottenheimer in his exit interview this week.

    “It was great, Tyler and I just had [the conversation],” Schottenheimer said. “I explained to him, I said, ‘Hey, I think we feel that you’re an incredible, all-decade type guard. But at the end of the day, you’re such a good player that we have to play the five best guys.’ He wanted some direction, and I said, ‘Right now, you’re a guard. But at the end of the day, we’re going to do what’s best for the Dallas Cowboys and winning a Super Bowl.’”

    Schottenheimer added that Smith was in full understanding after the conversation. As it appears, the team will head into the offseason with him at left guard, but the possibility of him moving back out remains on the table.

    Did Jerry Jones talk … retirement?

    Could Jerry Jones actually retire from his position as owner and general manager?

    Even though he hinted at it today, don’t hold your breath if you’re in the camp of fans that want him to step down.

    “My goal in life is to retire as the owner that won the most Super Bowls,” Jones said. “That’s my goal. We’ve got three. How many more do I have to go as a single owner? [Patriots owner Robert Kraft] has how many, six? So, I’ve got work to do, but at least I’m up to the second rung in the ladder.”

    Jones, 83, will need to get to work quick to accomplish that goal. But even in saying that with a smile on his face, he knows how this journey ends for him. And while he caught himself from actually saying it, his son to his right finished it off for him.

    “I will go down … no, I’m not going to say that,” Jerry Jones said.

    “He’s a ten-toe-high guy,” Stephen Jones said with a laugh.

    Retirement? Unlikely, but it sure is crazy to think of a world where he is sitting on his couch as the Cowboys continue operating.

    Nick Harris

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Nick Harris is the Dallas Cowboys beat reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He has experience working on the beat for DallasCowboys.com and previous work experience at Yahoo Sports/Rivals and 247Sports.

    Nick Harris

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  • 3 things to watch in the Cowboys’ last 3 games that will affect next season

    While the Dallas Cowboys are on the precipice of being eliminated from playoff contention, several storylines are still relevant for the final three games of the season.

    With just one more loss or one more Philadelphia Eagles win, the Cowboys will officially be eliminated from postseason contention and will direct their sights to the offseason. Before then, there are still three games that will shake out some of the unanswered questions that the offseason will bring.

    Here are the three biggest storylines to track in the Cowboys’ final contests:

    Can Matt Eberflus save his job?

    When looking at the Cowboys’ problems this season, the buck starts and stops with the defensive unit.

    Defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus has had far from a successful first season back in Dallas after being fired during the 2024 season from his head coaching job with the Chicago Bears. Through 15 weeks, the Cowboys’ defense is 29th in yards allowed per game (374.9) and 31st in points allowed per game (30.0).

    In the Cowboys’ Week 15 loss to the Minnesota Vikings, the defense allowed first-year starting quarterback J.J. McCarthy to throw for a career-high 250 yards. He was the fourth quarterback to own his season-high passing total against the Cowboys’ defense in 2025, joining Caleb Williams, Russell Wilson and Justin Fields.

    On Tuesday, owner Jerry Jones appeared to put some public pressure on Eberflus for the first time this season.

    “We let their quarterback have a big day on us,” Jones said on his weekly radio interview on 105.3 The Fan. “That wasn’t the plan. We could have used more pressure, without question, at different times. The result was that we let [McCarthy] make some pretty significant plays out there. Plus, he played pretty well. It seems like we’re always saying that about these quarterbacks. Some of them hadn’t played as well, but when they play us, they play better. I think that’s telling, too.”

    In a last-ditch effort of sorts, Eberflus will head to the coaching booth for the remaining three games of the season. He came to the decision after multiple conversations with head coach Brian Schottenheimer, as they see it as a way for Eberflus to make adjustments quicker with a full field view.

    “It’s a chance for me to get good perspective, get good information, see the game develop in terms of the view on the sideline,” Eberflus said. “So, I’m going to go upstairs and call from up there. It’s going to be a good adjustment.”

    Can Eberflus find even the slightest of positivity in the final three weeks? Conversations will be had about the practicality of replacing Eberflus in the offseason versus having four defensive coordinators in as many seasons if the team does decide to move in a different direction.

    If the defense can show some consistency down the stretch, Eberflus will at least have one argument to remain in Dallas.

    Will George Pickens rebound?

    It was determined before the season started that wide receiver George Pickens would be playing on his expiring rookie contract in a one-year “prove it” situation in his first season with the Cowboys. And if you look at the numbers, he has proven it and then some.

    Through 14 games, Pickens has hauled in 81 receptions for 1,212 yards and eight touchdowns — all team highs and career highs. But in the past two games, criticism has swirled around Pickens, as he’s posted just eight receptions for 70 yards and no touchdowns.

    Any decision that doesn’t result in Pickens wearing a Cowboys uniform in 2026 would be foolish, but could a reality exist where he plays next season on the franchise tag? If these past two games have given ownership any pause about a long-term deal, it could be more realistic. But if he’s able to finish strong, it would put the doubts to bed and instead put a bow on one of Jerry Jones’ best trades in his 36 years of ownership.

    “Just one day at a time,” Pickens said this week. “You never know what can happen, so I just keep grinding.”

    Does Trevon Diggs finish on a high note?

    It’s been yet another tumultuous year for cornerback Trevon Diggs, as he has missed nine games with knee soreness and has been at the center of controversy around how he has approached things off the field with the team.

    Since having his 21-day practice window opened in his slowed return from injured reserve, Diggs has expressed frustration about feeling healthy enough to play but the team not throwing him on the field. That appeared to boil over last week when he said he expected to play after being part of the game plan all week just to be told on Saturday he would not play.

    Schottenheimer has emphasized consistency being the reason he hasn’t been activated, but the tune appears to be changing heading into Sunday.

    “Diggs is having a very good week,” Schottenheimer said. “When you look at Trevon this week, what I’ve loved about him is he’s having fun playing football. He’s smiling and running around. To his credit, he’s having a really good week.”

    Diggs was activated off injured reserve Saturday and will play Sunday against the Chargers. Heading into an offseason that has the writing on the wall of a release of the former All-Pro cornerback, these next three games could either change the narrative on that decision or further cement it.

    The Cowboys could get out of Diggs’ contract this offseason with a post-June 1 designated release that would save them $15.5 million toward the salary cap in 2026 with a dead cap hit of just under $3 million.


    Game schedule dates, times, locations

    • Dec. 20 at Philadelphia, 6 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Dec. 22 at New Orleans, 7 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Dec. 23 vs. Denver, 7 p.m., NBC
    • Dec. 25 at Golden State, 4 p.m., ABC, ESPN
    • Dec. 27 at Sacramento, 4 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Dec. 21 vs. Florida A&M, 3 p.m., ESPN+
    • Dec. 29 vs. Jackson State, 7 p.m., ESPN+
    • Jan. 3 vs. Baylor, 1 p.m., TNT
    • Jan. 6 at Kansas, 8 p.m., ESPN or ESPN2
    • Jan. 10 vs. Arizona, 3 p.m., ESPN or ESPN2
    • Dec. 20 vs. Kansas State, 4 p.m., ESPN+
    • Dec. 31 at BYU, 8 p.m., ESPN+
    • Jan. 3 at Utah, 8 p.m., ESPN+
    • Jan. 7 vs. Oklahoma State, 6:30 p.m., ESPN+
    • Jan. 11 vs. Arizona State, 4 p.m., ESPN+
    • Dec. 21 vs. Toronto, 6 p.m., NHLN, Victory+
    • Dec. 23 at Detroit, 5:30 p.m., TNT, truTV, Victory+
    • Dec. 27 vs. Chicago, 7 p.m., Victory+
    • Dec. 31 vs. Buffalo, 7 p.m., Victory+
    • Jan. 1 at Chicago, 7:30 p.m., Victory+
    • Alamo Bowl
    • Dec. 30 vs. USC (at San Antonio), 8 p.m., ESPN
    • New Mexico Bowl
    • Dec. 27 vs. San Diego State (at Albuquerque, N.M.), 4:45 p.m., ESPN
    • Dec. 21 vs. L.A. Chargers, noon, Fox
    • Dec. 25 at Washington, noon, Netflix
    • Jan. 3 or 4 at N.Y. Giants, TBD
    • End of the regular season
    • May 1 NASCAR Truck Series: SpeedyCash.com 250
    • May 2 NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series: Andy’s Frozen Custard 340
    • May 3 NASCAR Cup Series: Wurth 400

    Nick Harris

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Nick Harris is the Dallas Cowboys beat reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He has experience working on the beat for DallasCowboys.com and previous work experience at Yahoo Sports/Rivals and 247Sports.

    Nick Harris

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