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NG.TOP STORY: Quinnen Williams’ Blunt Words After Eberflus’ Dismissal Exposed a Deeper Cowboys Problem No Coaching Hire Can Instantly Fix

The move was swift. The reaction was anything but quiet.

Just hours after the Dallas Cowboys officially parted ways with defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus following a disastrous 2025 campaign, one of the team’s most influential defensive voices subtly challenged the narrative surrounding the decision — not with anger, but with a pointed question that immediately shifted the conversation inside the organization.

That voice belonged to defensive tackle Quinnen Williams.

Eberflus’ dismissal came after Dallas finished the season allowing a league-worst 30.1 points per game, a collapse that made a coaching change feel inevitable. Yet as ownership moved quickly to signal accountability, Williams made it clear that changing the man on the sideline does not automatically change what happens between the lines.

I understand how this league works,” Williams said during exit interviews. “But the real question isn’t who’s calling the plays. It’s whether we, as players, are executing what’s being called. You can change voices — but if nothing else changes, the results won’t either.”

The comment resonated deeply inside a locker room already searching for answers after another disappointing finish.

Williams’ stance was notable not because it defended Eberflus outright, but because it rejected the idea of scapegoating. Days earlier, Williams had publicly stated that Dallas’ defensive failures belonged to the players, not the coaching staff — a rare and uncomfortable admission in a league where firings often absorb blame by default.

Now, his words carried sharper implications.

The Cowboys have cycled through four defensive coordinators in four seasons. The schemes have changed. The terminology has changed. The results, increasingly, have not.

As Dallas begins its search for Eberflus’ replacement, league sources have identified Minnesota Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores as the primary name to watch. Flores, widely regarded as one of the NFL’s most demanding and detail-oriented defensive minds, is believed to be a leading internal favorite as the Cowboys evaluate their next move.

According to sources close to the team, Williams’ comments reflect a growing belief among veterans that instability itself may be part of the problem. While Flores’ reputation commands respect across the league, Williams cautioned that no hire — regardless of résumé — can correct foundational breakdowns on its own.

“Coverages don’t magically fix themselves because a new guy walks in,” Williams said. “Football hasn’t changed that much. Accountability still starts on the field.”

That perspective places added pressure on the Cowboys’ front office. Whoever is hired next won’t simply inherit a struggling unit — he’ll inherit a roster acutely aware that another schematic reset may be the last excuse available.

For ownership and the coaching staff, the stakes are unmistakable. Dallas has invested heavily in elite offensive talent and carries postseason expectations every year. Another defensive collapse would place scrutiny far beyond the coordinator’s office.

Inside the locker room, Williams’ message was clear: the Cowboys cannot treat this hire as a cure-all.

Some teams rebuild with bold moves. Others rebuild with uncomfortable honesty.

On this day, Quinnen Williams offered Dallas the latter — and reminded everyone that fixing the Cowboys’ defense will require far more than a new name on the call sheet.

🚨 Pittsburgh Steelers vs. Houston Texans at NRG Stadium | Wild Card Game Preview ⬇️

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Former Dallas Cowboys tight end Billy Truax, a player who played in the Cowboys’ victory Super Bowl VI, died Wednesday, January 7. He was 82 years old.

The Gulfport, Louisiana, native showed promise in football early on. He became a first team All-American at Louisiana State University.

Truax had lots of success as a college football player, and in 2020, he was inducted into the Sugar Bowl’s Greater New Orleans Sports Hall of Fame. Truax is also in the Holy Cross School Hall of Fame and the LSU Athletics Hall of Fame.

“Billy Truax is arguably, the finest all-around tight end ever to come out of New Orleans. He was All-Prep at Holy Cross, and named All-Southeastern Conference at LSU,” We Are HC notes. “He was a second-round NFL draft choice by both the NFL’s Cleveland Browns and the AFL’s Houston Oilers.”


Former Dallas Cowboys Super Bowl Champion Billy Truax

https://youtube.com/watch?v=u8NTOTcuBYM%3Fautoplay%3D1

From college, Truax immediately went into the NFL. In the 1964 NFL draft, he was selected the Cleveland Browns, but he didn’t appear in his rookie season due to injury.

From there, Truax was traded to the Los Angeles Rams and stayed with the team from 1964 to 70. His NFL career really heated up in 1967, when he was crowned a starter. That season, he clocked 37 passes for 487 yards and four touchdown passes, according to NFL research. The Los Angeles Rams ended their regular season with an 11-1 record and went to the postseason, but they lost to the Green Bay Packers, who won the championship that year.

Truax marked another career-high in 1969, catching five touchdown passes for the Rams and equaling his career high with 37 catches for 431 yards.

After playing with the Rams, the team traded him to the Dallas Cowboys in May 1971. Once there, Truax showed even more promise, closing out his first season with 15 receptions for 232 yards and one touchdown. In that season, Truax and the Cowboys also went to the Super Bowl and won. They beat the Miami Dolphins 24-3 for the championship.


What the Super Bowl Meant to Billy Truax

“Super Bowl VI meant even more to me because it was in Tulane Stadium in New Orleans in front of friends and family,” Truax said in an interview with the Greater New Orleans Sports Awards Committee. “I had played every game that season with the injury and I wasn’t going to miss the Super Bowl in my New Orleans.”

Truax was a strong contributor Dallas Cowboys for three seasons and then signed with the New York Giants ahead of the 1974 season. But, he was cut by New York before taking the field with them that season.

“A consummate tight end, but LSU’s offense in his era was geared towards the run and, consequently, his talents as a pass receiver were never exploited,” the Historical Marker Database notes. “It was mostly his superb blocking that earned him All-American status in 1963. He played 10 seasons in the NFL for the Los Angeles Rams and Dallas Cowboys, winning a Super Bowl ring with the Cowboys in 1971.”

Truax retired in 1973. During his career, he clocked 199 passes for 2,458 yards and 17 touchdowns.

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