🚨 BREAKING NEWS: COWBOYS SOUND THE ALARM AS TREVON DIGGS’ FUTURE IN DALLAS FACES MAJOR UNCERTAINTY AMID INJURY SETBACK AND EMERGING YOUNG STARS
ARLINGTON, Texas — The Dallas Cowboys may have walked off the field on Sunday with momentum, but behind closed doors, a storm is building around one of the franchise’s most recognizable defensive stars. Head coach Brian Schottenheimer delivered a concerning update that immediately sent shockwaves through the Cowboys fanbase — Trevon Diggs is still nowhere near returning, and his starting job may no longer be guaranteed.

For years, Diggs has been one of the league’s most electrifying ballhawks, a two-time Pro Bowler and the architect of an NFL-leading 11 interceptions in 2021, a performance that helped secure his five-year, $97 million extension. On paper, he is a cornerstone. In reality, the last two seasons have told a very different story.
SEASON-LONG STRUGGLES & A KNEE THAT NEVER HEALED
Diggs’ slide began long before his most recent setback. The star corner underwent a graft procedure on his knee in January, and according to team sources, the joint has not responded well all year. His on-field play reflected that.
Before landing on injured reserve, Diggs struggled mightily in new defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus’ system. He publicly criticized the lack of man coverage, but tape revealed the deeper problem: whether in man or zone, Diggs was failing to regain his 2021 form. His Pro Football Focus grade of 58.7 ranked just 66th among all NFL corners — a stunning drop for a former All-Pro talent.
THE CONCUSSION THAT PUSHED EVERYTHING OVER THE EDGE
Then came the unexpected twist: Diggs suffered a concussion at home back before Week 7, prompting the Cowboys to place him on injured reserve. The move wasn’t just medical — it was strategic. The team quietly hoped the forced downtime would allow both his head and his chronically problematic knee to recover.
He became eligible to be activated last week.
Dallas declined.
And now, with the Cowboys preparing on a short week, Schottenheimer confirmed Diggs’ practice window still will not open.
“He’s doing better,” Schottenheimer said Monday. “But with a short week, it’s tough. He’s working hard, he looks good, but this isn’t the time.”

THE BIGGER QUESTION: DOES DALLAS EVEN NEED HIM RIGHT NOW?
While Diggs recovers, something few expected has unfolded:
the Cowboys defense has gotten better without him.
Second-year corner Caelan Carson and rookie Shavon Revel have stepped into expanded roles — and thrived. Their emergence has energized a secondary that looked disjointed early in the season, and inside the organization, quiet conversations have begun:
If Carson keeps playing at this level, does Diggs get his job back?
The Cowboys showed earlier this month that they’re not afraid of bold changes, releasing former starter Kaiir Elam despite his draft pedigree. The message was unmistakable: performance matters more than reputation.
Schottenheimer reinforced that mindset when discussing Carson.
“When young players step up, they have to stack it,” he said. “What got him to play well — the urgency, the focus — he has to carry that every week. And he knows that.”
IS THIS THE BEGINNING OF THE END?
To many around the league, the writing is on the wall. Diggs’ contract is massive. His availability is uncertain. His replacements are improving. And his coach — for the first time — didn’t sound like a man expecting his star corner to return to dominance anytime soon.
As Dallas pushes deeper into the season, one thing has become increasingly clear:
Trevon Diggs’ future with the Cowboys is no longer secure — and it may depend entirely on what happens in the next few weeks.