The Dallas Cowboys had an eventful NFL combine. Jerry Jones and Stephen Jones were working the media circuit, fans got to learn more about Christian Parker through a few interviews, and there was drama surrounding the reports of Brandon Aubrey’s contract negotiations.
Dallas, TX
Scouting report: Dallas Mavericks
There are two NBA teams I watch play every game: The Celtics, and the Dallas Mavericks.
I was at the first game the Mavericks played, a win over the San Antonio Spurs and George “The Iceman” Gervin. Ice had 33. Dallas would win only 14 more games in that 1980-81 season which culminated in Larry Bird’s first championship leading the 62-win Celtics over Houston. Here’s a look at the Celtics’ NBA Finals foe Dallas:
Starters
Luka Doncic: The 5-time first-team All-NBA swingman, NBA scoring leader (33.9 ppg) and WCF MVP is, at 25, one of the best players in the world. Doncic (6-7, 230) is second all-time in playoff scoring ppg (31.1) behind only Michael Jordan. The hype is real. Luka has incredible range and shot-making ability, gobbles up rebounds, and is an elite passer. Part of the reason he was in the MVP discussion this season is that he improved his defense and free-throw shooting, a career high 78.6 this year (80.6 in these playoffs).
He basically has no weakness, although being so ball-dominant, he led the NBA in turnovers this year with 282. He’s also a bit of a hothead, beefing with referees, but has toned that down a bit during the playoffs.
Teams throw their best defenders at him, and some of them try to rough him up (Lu Dort of OKC, Russell Westbrook of the Clippers, for example). Doncic is beefy and plays physically, and Boston has an array of choices to try and slow him down (Jrue Holiday, Jaylen Brown, Derrick White, Jayson Tatum) but all are smaller and lighter than Luka. Double him, and he has the passing ability to find the open man. Go one-on-one, long night ahead. He plays big in the biggest games and how well the Celtics can moderate his play will be something to watch.
Kyrie Irving: Irving’s two seasons in Boston ended ugly. Fans in Boston don’t like him, but guys like Doncic and Irving tend to actually feed off of that kind of hate. Dallas had success this year with the two-headed backcourt because in crunch time (where Dallas was very successful this season, winning over 70% of those games), doubling one of them means a) the other one is loose and b) role players like P.J. Washington have been capable on three-point shots.
Irving, 32, is undersized at 6-2, 195 but his elite handles allow him to get wherever he wants on the floor. He’s deceptively quick and explosive and most likely will draw single coverage. How the Celtics choose to guard these two will be a test of coach Joe Mazzulla’s “pick your poison” strategy.
Dallas’ giving up on Kristaps Porzingis (who had injury issues … sound familiar?) indirectly led to the acquisition of Irving after Jalen Brunson left to join the Knicks.
Irving’s eccentricities and questionable off-court decisions (logo-stomping, the anti-semitic tropes, the flat earth views, and refusal to take the Covid vaccine forcing his limited availability while with Brooklyn) were packed amongst his baggage when he came to Dallas, but by all accounts he’s been a model citizen there and has many supporters, with his current team and around the league. Part of that seems to be his determination to get another ring, and this is as close as he’s gotten in a long time. He’s a great shooter, deadly at the foul line (88.6 career), and hard to rattle, even when water bottles are thrown at him.
Even more than Doncic, Celtics fans dread the idea of Kyrie being successful. Breaking up is hard to do.
P.J. Washington: The Dallas-area native languished in Charlotte before coming to the Mavericks when they gave up on poor fit Grant Williams. Washington’s been a wild card contributor during his first playoffs, with three 20-point games against the Thunder and a tendency to show up in key moments. Washington also handles much of the primary on-ball defense against an opponent’s top threat, so he’ll see lots of time against Tatum and Brown. He’s had some foul troubles and that has forced Mavs coach Jason Kidd to shuffle his rotation at times. If Washington avoids fouls, he can be a factor.
Derrick Jones Jr.: Pulled off the scrap heap, Jones’ 5th NBA team in 8 seasons has benefited from the high flyer’s acceptance of his role in Dallas. He established career highs in virtually every category this year while making 66 starts. He specializes in on-ball defense and attacking the rim
Daniel Gafford: Rescued from the Wizards at the trade deadline, Gafford and rookie C Dereck Lively II have given Dallas top-notch rim-running and shot-blocking. Gafford at one point this season made 33 consecutive shots, just two off Wilt Chamberlain’s all-time streak.
In the rotation
Dereck Lively II: The Duke rookie turned 20 mid-season, and the team has embraced him as he deals with the death of his mother in April. Kidd has been reluctant generally to give younger players minutes, but Lively opened the year as a starter and while being displaced by Gafford still usually finds his way onto the floor in crunch time. He’s been getting coaching from Tyson Chandler, who had a similar skill set as a member of Dallas’ only title team in 2011.
Josh Green: One of 8 foreign-born Mavericks (including fellow Australians Dante Exum and Irving), Green is an energy guy who plays fast and can dunk and shoot 3s. He’s often Kidd’s first sub after Lively.
Maxi Kleber: The second-best player ever to come out of Wurzburg, Germany (Dallas had the best one, too), Kleber is a “3-and-D” guy who isn’t really great at 3-ing or D-ing. He’s slowing down, and his shot is less reliable. He also suffered a severe right shoulder dislocation mid-playoffs and is less confident on the floor. Kidd liked to play Kleber in crunch time, a go-to that was affected by Kleber’s injury.
Jaden Hardy: The explosive second-year player has surprisingly gotten more minutes as the playoffs have gone on. Hardy is seizing the opportunity as Tim Hardaway Jr.’s game has deserted him.
Deep bench
Tim Hardaway Jr.: He came to Dallas in the Porzingis trade. The shoot-first guard has the potential to light up the scoreboard but has had the yips since mid-season and has fallen out of Kidd’s rotation.
Dante Exum: Another player who the Mavs took a flyer on, he was solid earlier in the season but now rarely leaves the bench as Kidd has shortened his rotation.
Coach
Jason Kidd: Has taken Dallas to the WCF twice and the Finals once in three years after replacing Rick Carlisle. Unlike in the regular season, he’s kept guys on a short leash and substitutes aren’t getting a lot of run time if they don’t show results quickly.
Overview
Dallas knocked off seeds 1, 3 and 4 in the West to get here. They’re legit. They don’t have anyone who can guard Porzingis, if he’s back, and would likely stick Washington on him on the perimeter. Doncic will be the engine on offense, and if the Mavs hit 3s, it will be a series. They’re a better defensive team than they get credit for and will be tougher to beat than Miami, Cleveland or Indiana was. They’re a little ahead of schedule to make it this far, so all the pressure is on the 64-win team with home court advantage. The Celtics won almost every game in the playoffs when it came down to crunch time, but that’s also when Dallas has been one of the league’s best at closing games. If the Celtics try and play with their food, they’re playing with fire.
Dallas, TX
Wilonsky: A mom deported, 4 kids left behind and an 80-year-old Dallas Girl Scout troop leader’s good deeds
Early the morning of Feb. 9, Ana, a 45-year-old mother of four, woke up in the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center outside Abilene. Bluebonnet, it’s called, so named for the toxic state flower. She was hustled from bunk to bus for a ride to Del Rio. By noon, she was standing in the middle of the International Bridge that connects Del Rio with Ciudad Acuña across the Mexican border.
Ana was told only: You’re free to go – back to Monterrey, which she left in 2006 and where her parents still lived. She did not know how she was going to get there. Or when she would see her girls again.
Only five weeks earlier, Ana had a job at an ice cream shop at Lombardy Lane and Brockbank Drive in northwest Dallas, where she’d worked for six years. A single mother, she alone cared for her daughters, two of whom are in elementary school – fifth and sixth grades – and struggle with dyslexia. Her 12-year-old, diagnosed with severe depression, had twice tried to harm herself just last year. Her eldest, a 17-year-old senior at Thomas Jefferson High School, is set to begin college in the fall.
Ana crossed the Rio Grande on an inflatable raft near Laredo 20 years ago for a life she couldn’t find in Mexico. She met a man in Lewisville with whom she had four children. He abused her, she said, so she left again, to start over in northwest Dallas.
Immigration officials gave her a preliminary court hearing: Aug. 24, 2027. Ana, who has no criminal record, went to the ICE offices on Stemmons Freeway around New Year’s Eve for her annual check-in.

A plethora of messages were created on handmade signs for attendees to hold during an ICE vigil held outside the Dallas ICE field office, located at 8101 N. Stemmons Freeway in Dallas, on July 27, 2025.
Steve Hamm / Special Contributor
And every time she returned home to her girls. Until Dec. 30, 2025, when she was detained by officers, then shuffled around the state – Dallas to Alvarado to Abilene – before being sent back to Mexico, leaving behind daughters, all born in Dallas, to whom she did not get to say goodbye.
“I was so scared,” said Ana, who, with her eldest, agreed to talk to me if I did not use her full name or her children’s names.
“And I was in shock,” she said. “The whole morning I was just praying thinking about what to do next. I thought I would see my lawyer or talk to someone about what was going on, but the way they took us, no one explained anything to us. I know I did something wrong when I came over without my paperwork, as I should have. But I wasn’t stealing or hurting someone; I was working for my family, providing.”
Ana spoke by phone from Monterrey, where, last week, she buried her father, whose heart failed him days after she was left on that bridge. She began to cry.
“The fact that they just took apart my family, it’s breaking my heart,” Ana said, trying to catch her breath. “There are a lot of people who are doing bad things. We’re just trying to provide for our kids. Why us?”
But she knows why. Everyone does. Because there have been so many stories like this in recent months it’s impossible to keep track.
Ana was transferred to and deported from the Bluebonnet Detention Center in Anson on Feb. 9. 2026.
Eli Hartman / AP
Just last week, María de Jesus Estrada Juarez of California, who came to the U.S. when she was 15 and was a Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals recipient, was arrested during her regular check-in and sent back to Mexico. In Alaska, a mother and her three children were sent to Tijuana within 36 hours of being detained by ICE. NBC News also recounted the story of an 11-year-old girl, a U.S. citizen, whose brain-tumor treatment was interrupted when her parents were deported to Mexico.
The Texas Civil Rights Project has been trying to reunite the parents with their 11-year-old girl so she can get the care she needs. I asked the Austin-based organization if they kept track of the number of parents without criminal records deported to Mexico while their children are left behind. A spokesperson said they do not maintain a database tracking such cases, but that “it happens very often under this administration.”
Which is more or less what other immigration advocacy and legal nonprofits told me: We don’t track that data. But it’s, you know, a lot. ICE didn’t respond to emails asking for that information, either.
But just because we’re inundated with these stories doesn’t mean we should turn a deaf ear to them, especially when they involve our neighbors. This feels especially personal, as Ana’s eldest will graduate from my alma mater – if she can survive the next few months of waking her sisters each morning, getting them to school, working late hours at her fast-food job, dealing with grown-up responsibilities suddenly thrust upon her and trying, somehow, to fit in homework.
“It wasn’t really a choice for me,” the 17-year-old told me. “If I don’t do it, who will? The hardest part is getting up every morning, because there’s no break for the rest of the day – it’s the same thing every day, the same loop. And if there is, I have to do laundry or get these girls to their Girl Scouts things.”
Lynn Wilbur has been a Girl Scouts troop leader since 1983. For the last decade, she’s been part of an outreach group within the Scouts that helps girls who otherwise couldn’t afford to be part of the organization.
Courtesy Lynn Wilbur
I never would have known of Ana’s story, and that of the children left behind, had I not been forwarded a newsletter from Now>Forward, the nonprofit once known as North Dallas Shared Ministries. In the newsletter was a brief telling of the tale, along with a plea for assistance, as the girls need food, rent, uniforms.
I was told to call Lynn Wilbur, a Girl Scout troop leader since 1983, when her own daughter turned 5, and, for the last decade, leader of an outreach program that provides financial assistance for girls who want to be Girl Scouts but can’t afford dues, uniforms, supplies, field trips. “Anything that has to be paid for,” Wilbur said.
There are some 60 girls in the program, most spread across Dallas ISD elementary schools, including Ana’s three youngest daughters. Where once the program was funded by a foundation, though, the troop is having to depend on private donations – begging and scrounging, Wilbur said.
“Now, we’re just trying to help the girls pick up the pieces, along with their lives,” the 80-year-old said. When I called, she was with Ana’s daughters.
Most of the girls in Wilbur’s troop are from Spanish-speaking homes. This is the first time one of their parents has been deported. But, she fears, it will not be the last. One mother recently asked Wilbur if she would take her daughter if she, too, is deported.
“The amount of fear is unbelievable,” Wilbur said. “My house is one place they let them come because they know they’d have to kill me before I let them in the door. This has got to stop. Unless good people step up and let their voices be heard nothing is going to change. That’s why I am talking to you. We can’t let this keep happening, especially to children.”
Wilbur taught Ana’s eldest how to pay bills, how to buy a car when her mother’s recently broke down, how to deal with insurance, how to be a grown-up at 17. The TJ student was never a Girl Scout. But Wilbur, the living embodiment of a slogan that demands a Girl Scout do a good deed daily, has surely taught her how to be prepared.
“Miss Lynn has always made us feel like we’re important, that we’re loved,” Ana said. Another small sob. “That we’re human.”
Dallas, TX
NFL insiders share Cowboys rumors from the combine
A lot of knowledge is shared throughout the week, both on camera and behind closed doors, as the NFL landscape is set to shift as free agency approaches in just a few weeks. Jeremy Fowler and Dan Graziano, NFL Insiders for ESPN, emptied their notebooks on what they learned throughout the week.
Here are a few nuggets and takeaways that matter for the Cowboys.
1. How Dallas attacks the start of free agency
Jerry Jones held court on his bus during combine week and talked to media members about how the team will be active in free agency. The majority of their moves could come on the defensive side of the ball as Dallas gets their new defensive coordinator the pieces he needs to run his defense.
Clarence Hill Jr. of DLLS Cowboys was the first to report the Cowboys’ potential interest in Philadelphia Eagles linebacker Nakobe Dean. Fowler doubles down on that idea.
The Cowboys are crafting a detailed free agency plan to bolster their defense. The new scheme under coordinator Christian Parker needs replenishment. Eagles linebacker Nakobe Dean is someone to watch as a green-dot player in the middle of the defense.
Dean has been with the Eagles for four seasons after being drafted in 2022. When healthy, Dean has shown flashes of the player people viewed as the one he could become coming out of Georgia in college. The biggest concern with handing him a big contract is his health.
Out of 68 possible games, Dean was on the field for just 47 of them. He’s battled injuries throughout his young career, so if he’s expected to be the one leading Dallas’ defense, Dean has to be on the field more than he’s shown to this point.
2. The Cowboys will look to add a pass rusher
The Cowboys’ leader in sacks from last year is Jadeveon Clowney, who is set to hit the open market. Two other edge rushers for Dallas are free agents in Sam Williams and Dante Fowler Jr. Both could return to the Cowboys, but the front office might look to not only upgrade the position but also go after one of the top free agents if the price is right.
Fowler: The Cowboys will monitor the top of the pass-rush free agent options, too. They aren’t guaranteed to spend big, but I believe they will get a pass rusher at some point.
Later in the notebook, Fowler says, “Trey Hendrickson (Bengals) and Odafe Oweh (Chargers) will probably not be franchise-tagged.” That means two more premier edge rushers could be on the market. A few beat reporters have mentioned Hendrickson’s name as a possibility this offseason, but will he command too much money that Dallas is unwilling to spend? Probably.
What about Jalen Phillips? Can the Cowboys pull two former Eagles in free agency away from their rivals because of their connection to Parker? The keyword Fowler adds when it comes to Dallas’ interest in the best available pass rushers is “monitor.” If the numbers get outrageous, then they might go in a different direction. A name that could make a lot of sense for the Cowboys is Kwity Paye of the Indianapolis Colts.
He’s totaled 30.5 sacks over his five seasons in the NFL and could play a similar role in Parker’s defense to what Brandon Graham had in Philadelphia with inside-out versatility.
3. Dallas may want to add a few pieces in the secondary
One of Jerry Jones’ biggest regrets in recent history seems to be not re-signing Jourdan Lewis last offseason. Dallas would have been much better off with Lewis, given his skill set, familiarity with the defense, and leadership off the field. His presence was missed in more ways than one. It sounds like Jerry isn’t willing to make the same mistake twice.
Fowler: They [Dallas] will also comb the free agent safety class (Arizona’s Jalen Thompson makes sense), and they need a nickel corner. Dallas has felt the void since Jourdan Lewis left.
Christian Parker talked about how important the nickel position is for his defense at his introductory press conference. There are a few free agent corners out there who should be an upgrade from what Dallas had last year, but the route that makes the most sense is drafting a cornerback in the first round.
Donovan Wilson and Juanyeh Thomas are free agents, leaving Malik Hooker and Markquese Bell as the two players under contract on the team with starting experience at safety. Bell is someone who could play a more significant role in Parker’s defense given his position versatility. Where does that leave Hooker? Dallas could save almost $7 million if they cut him before June 1, but how does Parker feel about him fitting into his scheme?
How Dallas approaches the safety position at the start of free agency will tell us a lot.
4. Brandon Aubrey could have a contract sooner rather than later
You know the negotiations with Aubrey go sideways when he, his wife, and Todd France (Aubrey’s agent) go to Instagram and call the reports around it all “fake.” The Cowboys have remained optimistic in getting a deal done with Aubrey to make him the NFL’s highest-paid kicker. The holdup is just how much Dallas is willing to go and raise that number.
The Cowboys made an offer to Aubrey last year to be the highest paid at his position. The number has never been $7.5 million per year. Aubrey and his camp reportedly asked for $10 million per year, which would blow past the current mark with Harrison Butker ($6.4 million annually), but that has also been a disputed figure.
If it comes down to it, the front office is prepared to apply a second-round tender on their kicker, bringing his salary for 2026 between $5.5-5.8 million. It seemed as though negotiations had stalled after things got out of hand, but a resolution may be coming soon.
Graziano: Sabre rattling aside, I expect the Cowboys to reach a deal with Brandon Aubrey at some point in the first week or two of March that makes him the highest-paid kicker in the league. If they don’t get a deal done by the restricted free agent tender deadline, Dallas plans to put a second-round tender on Aubrey. That means he’d make $5.767 million this season if the two sides don’t reach a deal and the Cowboys would get a second-round pick if another team made Aubrey a contract offer they didn’t want to match.
Getting a deal done within the next 10 days before the second-round tender would be ideal for both parties. The front office would lock up the league’s best kicker long-term, and Aubrey will be making more than the price that comes with the tag.
Dallas, TX
Abbott is ramping up protection across Texas after Iran airstrikes
Texas Governor Greg Abbott has directed the Department of Public Safety and the Texas National Guard to increase protection at key state sites following U.S. and Israeli airstrikes on Iran.
Abbott issued a statement Saturday supporting the military action, writing “Texas stands with President Trump in sending a clear message to Iran: its aggression toward American and the West will no longer be tolerated.”
The governor said he directed DPS and the Texas National Guard to ramp up surveillance and patrols at energy facilities, ports and southern border.
“Texas is working closely with our federal partners to protect Texans and our critical assets from potential threats of retaliation,” Abbott said.
In a post on X, the Texas National Guard announced its activation of service members.
Iran has retaliated by firing attacks toward Israel and U.S. military bases in the Middle East.
Across the U.S., law enforcement has stepped up patrols at sensitive areas, including houses of worship and diplomatic sites.
Security expert Eric Jackson, who retired as Special Agent in Charge of the Dallas FBI field office, said law enforcement would be analyzing intelligence closely for potential threats at home.
“These types of matters bring out the best in the [FBI],” said Jackson. “Everybody’s working hard and everybody’s focused on protecting the homeland.”
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