
The Dallas Cowboys made a couple of big moves at the NFL trade deadline, acquiring linebacker Logan Wilson from the Cincinnati Bengals and snatching defensive tackle Quinnen Williams from the New York Jets.
The Williams acquisition was definitely the bigger of the two, but it created somewhat of a logjam along the interior of the Cowboys’ defensive line.
Now, Dallas has Williams, Kenny Clark and Osa Odighizuwa up the middle, which means that one of them will ultimately be short on playing time for the rest of 2025 and heading into 2026.
Is it possible the Cowboys could open things up with another trade?
Bleacher Report’s Brad Gagnon thinks so, suggesting that Dallas move Odighizuwa during the offseason.
“It remains to be seen how the Cowboys will utilize Odighizuwa alongside Quinnen Williams as well as preseason acquisition Kenny Clark, but the fact is they could be positioned to leverage that newfound interior depth to improve elsewhere this offseason,” Gagnon wrote. “You’d think they’d be more likely to move on from Odighizuwa, whose play has dropped off in 2025.”
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Odighizuwa had been one of the most underrated defensive tackles in football over the first four years of his career, and it led to the former third-round pick bagging a four-year, $80 million contract with the Cowboys this past offseason.
However, Odighizuwa’s production has fallen off considerably in 2025. He has managed 25 tackles and one sack through nine games while posting a 60.4 overall grade at Pro Football Focus, his lowest mark since his rookie campaign.
The UCLA product is still just 27 years old, though, so he would definitely have some value on the trade market, although his big contract, coupled with his dip in productivity, could make him rather difficult to move.
Odighizuwa is played in 61 percent of Dallas’ defensive snaps in 2025, and while that is still the second-most of his career, it is down quite a bit from the 78 percent he tallied last season.
We’ll see if the Cowboys ultimately decide to make a move at defensive tackle during the offseason.
Shortly after Cleveland Browns rookie quarterback Shedeur Sanders endured what he referred to as a “rough” regular-season debut during the club’s 23-16 loss to the Baltimore Ravens on Sunday, Browns head coach Kevin Stefanski told reporters that the second half of the Baltimore game was Sanders’ first time playing with the starting offense since the draft.
While speaking with reporters on Monday, Stefanski was asked if he would “have changed anything about the approach” regarding the handling of Sanders after what occurred on Sunday.
“I think it’s important that you do what you think is right for a football team,” Stefanski responded, per the Browns’ website. “The development of our players is constant. It doesn’t happen just in one drill or in one practice or one meeting. So, we trust our guys, we trust our backup players to be ready to go. And Shedeur is ready to go. Obviously, I know he wants to play better. I want to coach better, all those types of things, but that’ll come through work. That’s where it will come.”
The Browns bumped Sanders up to the QB2 spot on the depth chart after they traded Week 1 QB1 Joe Flacco to the Cincinnati Bengals on Oct. 7. Sanders was called into action at the beginning of the second half of the Baltimore matchup after starter Dillon Gabriel was ruled out with a concussion.
In total, Sanders completed 4-of-16 passes for 47 yards with no touchdowns and one interception against Baltimore. He probably should’ve had at least one other pass picked off, and he committed an intentional grounding penalty and was sacked twice.
Damien Woody and Shannon Sharpe are among the former NFL players who have suggested Stefanski set Sanders up to fail via the coach’s “very strange” distribution of first-team reps. With Gabriel in the concussion protocol, Sanders is on track to serve as Cleveland’s starter for preparations leading up to this coming Sunday’s game at the Las Vegas Raiders (2-7).
“The starter gets the vast majority, obviously, if not the entire majority,” Stefanski added about possibly giving a rookie backup first-team reps during practices. “I will say this. We trust our players. Shedeur is putting in great work. You know, on the field, in the meeting room, he will be better with reps that he’s getting. …But we trust him and he’s somebody that’s continued to put in the work and will continue to do so.”
Barring a surprising development, Stefanski and Co. should be able to install a game plan built for Sanders this week. If the 23-year-old plays poorly against the Raiders, he almost certainly will return to the bench as soon as for the Browns’ Week 13 game versus the San Francisco 49ers.