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DeMarvion Overshown quickly bought into what Christian Parker brings

Agent 0 is a big fan.
 Dallas Cowboys linebacker DeMarvion Overshown
Dallas Cowboys linebacker DeMarvion Overshown | Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

The Dallas Cowboys’ 2026 schedule might be a behemoth, but that shouldn’t dampen any of the excitement they’ve built this offseason. After all, a schedule rarely proves to be as arduous as it looks once it's released.

At the end of the day, the Cowboys have a rising star leading their defense in Christian Parker, taking over for Matt Eberflus, who fell short in just about every key area in 2025. While Parker has never called plays, the early signs suggest he’s the anti-Eberflus: a hands-on teacher who wants to run an interchangeable defense.

You can include DeMarvion Overshown among the players already impressed by Parker, even if most of their interaction so far has been restricted to meetings.

"When you see the scheme actually playing out in real life time, you're just knowing that 'okay, this is what's gonna help us win a Super Bowl.' How he explains the calls, how he goes into depth on the reasons why we're doing everything.

...When you break it down like that, a guy like CP, he comes to work ready to work every day. He's quizzing us in the room, making sure we're ready. That's the kind of leadership you need. So I'm very excited about him and (linebackers) coach [Scott] Symons."

DeMarvion Overshown is already loving working with Dallas Cowboys new DC Christian Parker

Well, that didn’t take long.

It already sounds like Parker knows exactly how to deploy Overshown, who’s at his best tracking down ball-carriers, whether downhill or sideline to sideline.

In explaining why he’s excited about Dallas’ new-look defense, Overshown made it clear he doesn’t enjoy being “parked” on one side of the field. Some plays are designed to unleash him, while others require him to be in the run fits every down.

If you look back at Overshown’s 2024 breakout season before his knee injury, he was most effective wreaking havoc at the line of scrimmage. Cowboys fans saw him swat passes, track them down, and take them back for touchdowns. OK, that sequence only happened once, but it was arguably the play of the season, and he still finished with four passes defended in 13 games.

Overshown was also a menace as a blitzer, showing blinding closing speed that rivaled Micah Parsons, while logging 20 pressures, five sacks, 12 hurries, and 38 defensive stops, per Pro Football Focus.

An athlete like Overshown needs to be turned loose -- in isolation, not on every rep -- and it seems that Parker understands that. If he stays healthy, which has been a big question mark early in his career, he can be a weapon in this defense.

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