
Discipline became a talking point on Wednesday
The Dallas Cowboys went through a testy, scrappy practice on Wednesday. We take a look at who helped themselves and who struggled.
Stock up
Nate Thomas
The Cowboys avoided the worst case scenario with Tyler Guyton, as their left tackle’s ACL is still intact and he will only miss a few weeks. Still, the Cowboys need someone else to step up in the interim, and it wasn’t immediately clear who that would be.
Wednesday’s practice changed that. Nate Thomas, the team’s seventh-round pick from last year, stepped in to handle the first team reps at left tackle.
Nate Thomas will work with the first team at left tackle in Tyler Guyton’s absence. Schottenheimer told Thms to “just go play.” He’s a “Big man. Great feet. Great Length and powerful.”
— Todd Archer (@toddarcher) July 30, 2025
Schottenheimer has singled out Thomas before as someone showing real improvement, so this isn’t exactly surprising. Still, Thomas being the next man up at the most important position on the offensive line is significant considering the presence of longer tenured players.
Kemon Hall and Troy Pride Jr.
These two are getting lumped together for good reason. The Cowboys cornerbacks are currently accounting for a majority of the team’s injured list, granting opportunities to players towards the end of the roster. Both Kemon Hall and Troy Pride Jr. seem to be the two taking most advantage of it.
On Wednesday, the two took turns working with the first team defense, depending on where DaRon Bland lined up. When Bland played in the slot, Pride took the field on the outside. When Bland was out wide, Hall came in to play in the slot.
The two starting corner combos I’ve seen for the Cowboys today are contingent on DaRon Bland’s position.
When Bland is outside: Bland, Kaiir Elam and Kemon Hall in the slot.
When Bland is in the slot: Bland, Elam and Troy Pride Jr outside.
— Joseph Hoyt (@JoeJHoyt) July 30, 2025
Israel Mukuamu later saw some work outside in place of Pride, but he has better odds of making the roster. Hall looked like a potential 53rd man last year before an injury, while Pride is a former fourth-round pick out of Notre Dame.
Jaydon Blue
The eve of training camp brought unsubstantiated reports that rookie running back Jaydon Blue had work ethic issues, despite there being hardly any evidence to corroborate such a claim. Schottenheimer took a moment on Wednesday to specifically praise Blue.
Cowboys coach Brian Schottenheimer on rookie RB Jaydon Blue: “I think in the spring he picked it up slower than we had hoped. But not now. He’s got it. He’s figuring it out. He’s one of those guys that doesn’t say much, but there’s a big time competitive fire in there. He wants… pic.twitter.com/yE6WHiakaJ
— Jon Machota (@jonmachota) July 30, 2025
Blue has an intriguing skillset, for sure, and Schottenheimer’s comments Wednesday certainly don’t sound like someone with poor work ethic. Seemingly every running back has had a moment or two already in camp, but Blue might be hitting his stride now.
Stock down
Discipline
There’s a tough line to walk in training camp. Coaches always want to preach effort and intensity, and that’s been a key point of emphasis for Schottenheimer since taking the job, but fights cannot be tolerated. Earlier in camp, Schottenheimer pulled some players early for getting into a scrap.
Wednesday, though, saw the intensity boil over to a new level. Schottenheimer made it explicitly clear how unacceptable it was, stopping practice to have the players run sprints.
things are again getting chippy at practice so Brian Schottenheimer is making the players run sideline to sideline.
and for several minutes. #Cowboys #trainingcamp pic.twitter.com/X9cF1vs1DX
— Patrik [No C] Walker (@VoiceOfTheStar) July 30, 2025
Schottenheimer even ended practice early because of it. He gave a fiery speech to his players, reportedly with some colorful language, and CeeDee Lamb later gave a PG version of the speech that touched on the team’s lack of discipline.
Wednesday’s practice was cut short after one early ejection and a number of skirmishes that led Brian Schottenheimer to force the players to run a series of sprints. What was the coach’s message to the team?
CeeDee Lamb: pic.twitter.com/klxowiJ1xT
— Todd Archer (@toddarcher) July 30, 2025