Matt Eberflus jumps right back in,
turns back clock with Cowboys after losing Bears job
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[February 19, 2025]
By SCHUYLER DIXON
FRISCO, Texas (AP) — New Dallas defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus
never really stopped to consider a year away from coaching after
getting fired by the Chicago Bears.
Not that his wife, Kelly, would have let him.
“She said she wanted me to go to work now,” Eberflus said Tuesday in
his first meeting with reporters since getting hired by the Cowboys.
“And I did, too.”
The 57-year-old Eberflus is back where his career took off. He had a
seven-year stint on the Dallas defensive staff — from 2011-17 — that
led to the defensive coordinator's job with Indianapolis.
Four years later, Eberflus took over the Bears, getting fired 12
games into his third season, the day after his poor clock management
in the final seconds cost Chicago in a sixth consecutive loss. He
was 14-32 with Chicago.
“I was excited after a couple of days, a couple of weeks, taking
that break,” Eberflus said. “I was excited about looking at
different opportunities, and this was the best opportunity, that I
felt was really cool for me to come back to Dallas. I have a lot of
familiar faces here, starting from the top all the way to everybody
in the building.”
A first-time NFL head coach with the Bears, Eberflus is now under
someone in the same situation, with longtime assistant Brian
Schottenheimer taking over for Mike McCarthy.
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The Cowboys and McCarthy parted ways after five more seasons of
Dallas not getting as far as an NFC championship game. The drought
goes all the way back to the 1995 season, when the storied franchise
won its fifth Super Bowl.
Eberflus lived it. The Dallas defense couldn't get a stop late in a
divisional playoff loss at Green Bay during the 2014 season, and
gave up an improbable — and decisive — third-down completion to
Aaron Rodgers in the final seconds of another divisional loss to the
Packers, this time at home, when the Cowboys were the NFC's top seed
in 2016.
Now he'll try to help Schottenheimer end it.
“The first couple meetings I had with him, I said, ‘I’m here for
you,’” Eberflus said. “I want to really just do a good job of
bouncing ideas off of (him), experiences that I had and just working
together to be able to utilize me. Because I do have the experience
of being a head coach for him and to make his job easier.”
Eberflus has four assistants from last season's Chicago staff in
defensive passing game coordinator Andre Curtis, linebackers coach
Dave Borgonzi, secondary/cornerbacks coach David Overstreet II and
defensive line assistant Bryan Bing.
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Dallas Cowboys defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus responds to
questions during an NFL football news conference at the team's
headquarters in Frisco, Texas, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025. (AP
Photo/Tony Gutierrez)
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Darian Thompson, a former Dallas player, is the
only holdover on the defensive staff. He is helping Overstreet in
the secondary after working with linebackers his first two seasons.
The other newcomers are defensive line coach Aaron Whitecotton and
young assistants J.J. Clark and Tanzel Smart.
The only returning member of the offensive staff is Lunda Wells, who
will coach tight ends after having that role for all five of
McCarthy's seasons.
“It's good,” Wells said. “Just make sure you get the names right.”
Schottenheimer was the offensive coordinator the past two seasons
with McCarthy calling plays, and the arrangement will be the same
with Schottenheimer's replacement, Klayton Adams.
The offensive line coach for the Arizona Cardinals the past two
seasons, Adams was on the Colts' staff with Eberflus. His first
priority in his first year as a coordinator is helping improve one
of the league's worst rushing offenses. The question of whether he'd
eventually like to be a play-caller can come later.
“At the end of the day, our job when we’re putting things on the
call sheet is to be problem-solvers,” Adams said. “That’s the part
that I’m really looking forward to focusing on. It's also a
leadership position within a great organization.”
Wells and pass game specialist Ken Dorsey are the most experienced
coaches on the offensive staff. Dorsey has had a rough couple of
years, getting fired midseason as offensive coordinator in Buffalo
in 2023 and again after this past season from the same job in
Cleveland.
“We've got to be able to win football games, and when you don't then
there's always those possibilities of things happening,” Dorsey
said. “In life, you're going to get knocked down. You're going to
get punched in the gut. It's how you get back up and keep swinging,
keep fighting.”
Eberflus can relate, and now they're on a staff together.
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