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Matt Eberflus’ latest decision sparks outrage as fans accuse him of quietly derailing DaRon Bland’s breakout season.QQ

When I look at DaRon Bland’s season, I don’t see a corner who suddenly forgot how to play football. I see a player, and a defense, being square pegs trying to be shoved into round holes.

Bland is a press-man corner, but Matt Eberflus hasn’t been playing him that way, and fans, analysts, and anyone else who knows football sees this, except for the man making millions to coach him.

The Coverage Percentages Show the Massive Failure

I looked up the coverage percentages for the Dallas Cowboys defense, and I was not surprised at all by what I found.

According to Sharp Football, Dallas has lined up in zone coverage on 76.8% of its defensive snaps, while playing man coverage just 15.9% of the time.

More than 50% of those looks are middle-closed, showing a scheme built to sit back, read concepts, and protect space. How good are they in space? The answer is… Terrible, thanks Kenneth Murray and Logan Wilson.

CBS Sports reinforces that point.

Through the early part of the season, the Cowboys played zone on 87.2% of their snaps, the highest rate in the NFL, while using man coverage just 7.9% of the time.

That imbalance matters when you have a cornerback room filled with press-man corners. I mean they even drafted one in Shavon Revel Jr.

The Washington Game Showed What Worked

The clearest proof came in Week 7 against Washington, the one game where Dallas finally changed its defense.

In that matchup, the defense played man coverage on 49.2% of their snaps, nearly half the game and easily the highest rate of the season.

Bland looked like himself again.

He finished that game with an 83.4 overall PFF grade, allowed four catches for 45 yards on eight targets, and recorded an interception. The quarterback passer rating was 27.6 when throwing his way.

That’s the difference between protecting space and pressing the receiver and dictating the route.

I saw Bland being able to press, disrupt timing, and drive downhill. Instead of bailing off into a zone and passing routes off, he was able to challenge receivers from the snap.

Press Man Helped the Pass Rush

The coverage change didn’t just help Bland. It changed the entire defense.

With the receivers being pressured, quarterbacks held the ball longer.

Dallas finished the Commanders game with 26 total pressures, including four sacks, three hits, and 19 hurries.

The pressure wasn’t blitz-dependent, it was created by coverage being able to hold up long enough for the pressure to get home.

We can see the part that keeps getting messed up and its plain as day.

When we watch the defense play zone 75% or more of the time, quarterbacks diagnose quickly and get the ball out.

This in turn makes the pass rush look average, and the corners take the blame. Fans watched the Cowboys lean into press-man coverage, and everything connected.

It’s not magic, its common sense Matt Eberflus.

Why This Matters For Bland

DaRon Bland isn’t having a down season due to a falloff of talent, he’s having one because Eberflus has consistently put him in a position to fail.

The Washington game showed exactly what happens when Dallas lets its corners play press man, coverage tightens, the pass rush gets home, and the defense plays faster.

The blueprint is there.

Until the Cowboys commit to it more often, Bland and the other corners will suffer. If they suffer, the entire defense suffers.

We have seen the fix, and it worked, but the man in charge of the defense refuses to change his style to fit his personnel.

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