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NFL, American Football Herren, USA Dallas Cowboys Training Camp Jul 27, 2025 Oxnard, CA, USA Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones at training camp at the River Ridge Fields. Oxnard River Ridge Fields California United States, EDITORIAL USE ONLY PUBLICATIONxINxGERxSUIxAUTxONLY Copyright: xKirbyxLeex 20250727_tdc_al2_288

Imago
NFL, American Football Herren, USA Dallas Cowboys Training Camp Jul 27, 2025 Oxnard, CA, USA Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones at training camp at the River Ridge Fields. Oxnard River Ridge Fields California United States, EDITORIAL USE ONLY PUBLICATIONxINxGERxSUIxAUTxONLY Copyright: xKirbyxLeex 20250727_tdc_al2_288
Essentials Inside The Story
- Jack Sanborn reunited with Matt Eberflus but recorded zero sacks
- Hometown return sees Sanborn rejoin Bears after injury-hit season
- Cowboys missed on Walker, Dean, Lloyd despite linebacker urgency
Last year, the Dallas Cowboys offered one of the worst defensive performances under former DC Matt Eberflus. Just one week before the regular season began, star pass-rusher Micah Parsons was traded to the Green Bay Packers. That created a major hole in their defensive structure. Over the last 12 months, more than 13 (defense) players have left the roster. While Jerry Jones added quite a few important pieces, along with hiring Christian Parker as the new DC, their rebuilding met with another roadblock when linebacker Jack Sanborn left the team for the Chicago Bears.
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The Cowboys signed Sanborn to a one-year, $1.5 million deal last offseason. When this season’s free agency hit, the former Chicago Bears star, who’d come with 60+ tackles in his first two years with the team, had choices to make. On Wednesday (March 18), Sanborn signed a new deal that brought him back to the Bears, leaving Dallas behind. Sanborn had originally come to Dallas to reunite with then-Cowboys defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus, his former head coach with the Bears.
The reunion last season, however, saw him go without a sack for the first time in his career. Eberflus oversaw a Cowboys defense that finished dead last in the league in points allowed. And Sanborn’s personal season mirrored that misery.
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Sanborn suffered a concussion in Week 5. And when he fought his way back to the field in Week 7, a season-ending groin injury shut him down. He finished with just six games played, five starts, 34 tackles, and one tackle for loss. Now Sanborn is going back to where it all began.
He grew up in Lake Zurich, Illinois, and the Bears were always home. The hometown linebacker joins a select few who have worn the jersey they once grew up cheering for, much like Foster Moreau did with the New Orleans Saints before his recent exit.
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“I love it here in Chicago and being part of what [coach] Ben Johnson and [defensive coordinator] Dennis Allen have been building here and the success that they’ve had,” Sanborn told ChicagoBears.com. “It’s something I couldn’t pass up, and I’m grateful that I’m able to come back here and help in any way I can.”
Chicago originally signed Sanborn as an undrafted free agent in 2022. And over three seasons, he racked up 164 tackles, 4.5 sacks, 14 tackles for loss, and 6 quarterback hits. With this return, Sanborn will provide critical support following the offseason departure of Tremaine Edmunds and a season-ending injury (torn Achilles) to Noah Sewell. For Sanborn, the decision was personal. For Jerry Jones and company, it was just another name added to a growing list of defensive losses.
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Jerry Jones brings in new faces, but the defense still lacks answers
Since the new league year began, the Cowboys have made moves on both sides of the ledger. Dallas landed defensive tackle Rashan Gary, safety Jalen Thompson, and cornerback Cobie Durant. Gary has recorded 270 tackles, 46½ sacks, 111 QB hits, seven forced fumbles, and eight fumble recoveries in seven seasons for the Packers. Thompson has compiled 578 tackles, 60 quarterback blitzes, and 11 pressures over the same stretch. Durant, in four seasons, brings 141 tackles, 20 quarterback blitzes, and 6 pressures.
But beyond Gary, none of those signings directly solves the two most critical needs on Dallas’s roster. The Cowboys still do not have a reliable interior linebacker or a proven pass rusher. The team was rumored to be in the market for players such as Maxx Crosby and Trey Hendrickson, but that buzz has died down now, with the latter having gone to the Baltimore Ravens. ESPN’s Dallas Cowboys reporter Todd Archer put it plainly, calling middle linebacker the team’s “biggest remaining roster hole” heading into the rest of the offseason.
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In fairness, Jerry Jones did try to fix it. The Cowboys pursued Quay Walker, Nakobe Dean, and Devin Lloyd in free agency. They struck out on all three. Walker and Dean both signed with the Raiders. Lloyd chose the Panthers. Now, according to Archer, Dallas is reportedly searching for a “trade partner for a veteran” at the position. But Jerry Jones promised a splash. So far, his defense keeps depleting.
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