Mike Zimmer proving his worth in Cowboys pseudo “prove-it” season
Signed to a one-year deal over the offseason, 2024 has been a prove-it season of sorts for Mike Zimmer. With a lifetime of experience and plenty of skins on the wall in Dallas, Zimmer didn’t need to prove his value to the Cowboys organization, he had to prove his value to the current roster and to whomever takes the head coaching reins in 2025.
Since Mike McCarthy was entering the last year on his deal this season it’s understandable the Cowboys wanted the other coaching contracts to synch up. Not many coaches would except a one-year offer since schemes, personnel, and strategies take time to implement. But Zimmer did and he likely did so with an eye on something else down the road.
He’s really proving he can work with the Cowboys’ main pieces they have on defense. He’s proving he can effectively follow a player-friendly coach like Dan Quinn. He’s proving he has a good thing going if and when a new head coach comes in over the offseason. Based on Jerry Jones’ familiarity, he may even be proving he’s a candidate for head coach.
Whatever he happens to be trying to prove this season, he appears to finally be getting some traction. The Cowboys defense started the season horrifically. The defense’s talent, discipline and depth were exposed. Through the first 11 weeks of the season, Zimmer’s defense ranked 30th in EPA allowed and dead last in run defense.
Zimmer’s defense was always supposed to take time to implement, and growing pains were expected, but not to the degree that unfolded. The injuries and front office malfeasance provided cover, but if 2024 was an audition, Zimmer looked like a one-and-done coach early on.
Then things started to click. As the schedule softened and the running game on offense started to pick up, the defense hit its stride. Over the last four games the Dallas defense has shockingly played like a top five unit (based on EPA/play). With Micah Parsons back in the fold, the Dallas pass rush has led the league in sacks and pressures. They’ve done so with smart play design and well-timed blitzing.
Every layer of the defense has suffered significant injuries, yet Zimmer’s group is getting better by the week. For the first time in years discipline and accountability appear to be a thing on defense and it’s beginning to produce results, even if the talent is less than ideal.
Zimmer deserves to be in the conversation for 2025. That’s a statement that would have been laughed at just one month ago. It’s a statement that speaks to what a coach with a fairly complicated playbook has accomplished with a revolving door of players and undeniable roster holes to overcome.
It doesn’t demand his return in 2025 or warrant a promotion, but it keeps him in the conversation. Whoever takes over next season will see a pretty compelling case to keep the veteran coach around.
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