When I started digging into Christian Parker's last stops, I first looked at the front seven. I wasn't trying to force some type of narrative, I wanted to see what showed up on the field. I went back again and looked at the same stops: Green Bay, Denver, and Philadelphia to see what the secondaries looked like. The more I compared the rosters, the clearer the pattern became.
Christian Parker may be the coach who changes the narrative. When I went back and looked at Parker's coaching history, from the Green Bay Packers (2019-2020) to the Denver Broncos (2021-2023) and the Philadelphia Eagles (2024-2025), I don't just see the schemes. The thing that stood out to me the most was the types of players these defenses deployed throughout the front seven. I see a consistent blueprint that could shape the Dallas Cowboys defense in 2026.
I've spent the last few days digging through every major 2026 linebacker board I could find - Bucky Brooks, ESPN, NFL Draft Buzz - and one thing is clear. This linebacker class could be one of the strongest positions in the entire draft. If I'm the Dallas Cowboys and even thinking about addressing the position in the 2026 NFL Draft, there will be options. Not just depth pieces, but impact players.
The Dallas Cowboys officially introduced Christian Parker as the team's new defensive coordinator during a press conference on Wednesday. Parker has arrived in Dallas as the new architect of the defense, signaling a fresh start for a unit that struggled mightily last year. The change will bring a new scheme and hopefully renewed energy within the facility. The road to this hiring was anything but brief.
"Every impression we had with CP just left us wanting more," Schottenheimer said. "The conviction that he has, but curious, his calm demeanor, just the way he carries himself, is awesome. The process was thorough. It was long. ... We got into the weeds. Every time we spent time with CP, it became very clear that he was the guy for the job. "He's wise beyond his years. ... Every time we talked, we'd get off a call or get off a zoom or get (done) with an interview, and I'd just be like, 'Damn, I want more of that.'"
Veterans bring clarity to a defense by being able to be the calming force in a sometimes hectic game. A veteran doesn't have to necessarily be the most vocal, but must let their game speak for itself. That sets the tone for younger players trying to adjust to the NFL. A good free agent pickup can reduce mental mistakes, stabilize alignments, and allow younger players to develop, which is the key to a successful defense.
The biggest lesson is that defense can win championships, period. And I say "can" because most leave that word out of the adage, but it applies in Dallas, because the Cowboys' offense could likely win a championship if only its defense was also as good - or even anywhere near it. That's the point of doing away with Matt Eberflus after only one season and bringing in a fresh, young fast-riser in Christian Parker,
The Cowboys haven't lacked talent on defense, but they have lacked unpredictability. Everything in 2025 looked the same before the snap, and offenses have known exactly where to go with the ball. Parker's background suggests that's not how he wants to run a defense. His approach leans toward more movement, disguise, and putting more on the safeties to read what's developing instead of just sitting. That alone could put the safety position front and center in this reset.