The Cowboys’ linebackers have exceptional potential, but there are also many unanswered problems….

As the Dallas Cowboys prepare for the 2025 NFL season, few position groups encapsulate the team’s blend of promise and peril more than its linebacker corps. Once a hallmark of hard-nosed Dallas defenses led by legends like Chuck Howley, Lee Roy Jordan, and Dexter Coakley, the modern Cowboys linebacking unit is teeming with athleticism, youth, and potential—but also riddled with uncertainty, inconsistency, and injury concerns.

With new defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer returning to the Cowboys sideline, replacing Dan Quinn who took the Washington Commanders’ head coaching job, the spotlight on the linebacker group burns brighter than ever. Zimmer, a no-nonsense architect of top-tier defenses, is tasked with refining a linebacker corps that could be elite—if it can finally put all the pieces together.

In this in-depth examination, we’ll break down the key players, analyze their strengths and vulnerabilities, and assess what must happen for this unit to realize its sky-high potential in 2025.

The Blueprint: Zimmer’s Vision for the Linebackers

Mike Zimmer’s 4-3 scheme places a premium on disciplined linebackers who can fly to the football, shed blocks, and handle both zone drops and man-to-man responsibilities. In Minnesota, he was known for extracting career years from linebackers like Eric Kendricks and Anthony Barr. In Dallas, he’ll look to do the same—but with a younger, less proven group.

Zimmer has already stated publicly that his linebackers must “play with violence, vision, and versatility.” That directive underscores the need for the Cowboys’ second-level defenders to evolve quickly—especially considering the high-powered offenses they’ll face in the NFC East and beyond.

Micah Parsons: The Wildcard Weapon

Though technically listed as an EDGE rusher, Micah Parsons still figures prominently in any discussion about the linebacker corps. In fact, his positional ambiguity is part of what makes evaluating the Cowboys’ linebacker depth so complex.

Parsons is a generational talent—already a two-time All-Pro with 40.5 sacks in three seasons. But while he was drafted as a linebacker, his transition to full-time edge rusher under Quinn left a void in the middle of the field. With Zimmer at the helm, it remains unclear if Parsons will return to a more traditional off-ball role on occasion or continue focusing on terrorizing quarterbacks.

What to Watch: If Zimmer decides to rotate Parsons between linebacker and edge—as he did with Barr in Minnesota—it could create matchup nightmares for offenses and mask some of the Cowboys’ depth concerns. But it also runs the risk of overloading Parsons and further complicating the development of young linebackers who need consistent reps.

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