Cowboys' special teams need one thing: To be left alone " Inside The Star
Briefly

Cowboys' special teams need one thing: To be left alone " Inside The Star
"Brandon Aubrey continues to hit long bombs and even had a better success percentage in 2025 than he had in 2024. He even ran for a first down on a trick play. Bryan Anger had another strong year as the team's punter and holder. Trent Sieg's long-snapping is so flawless that one might suspect he's a machine underneath the outer shell of skin."
"Aubrey hit all 25 field goals under 50 yards that he attempted in 2025. He was 11-of-17 from 50 and beyond. That includes a 64-yarder that sent the first game against the Giants into overtime, where Aubrey hit the game winner. He connected on 47 of his 48 extra point kicks and adjusted well to the new dynamic kickoff rules."
"He just completed his fifth season in Dallas, and is signed up for a sixth. It is the longest of his stays among four NFL teams since the 2012 season in Jacksonville. In his five seasons in Dallas, he's averaging 48.9 yards a punt, his best among his four stops. In 2025, he averaged 48.6 yards. Anger did not have a single touchback in 2025. But he did pin the opponent inside their own 20 on 14 different occasions."
Brandon Aubrey provided elite kicking performance in 2025, converting all 25 attempts under 50 yards, making 11-of-17 from 50-plus, and drilling a 64-yard kick to force overtime and later win the game. He connected on 47 of 48 extra points and adapted to new kickoff rules; over three years he is 112-of-127 on field goals (88.2%) and has missed only four of 130 extra points. Bryan Anger averaged 48.6 yards per punt in 2025 (48.9 career Dallas average), recorded zero touchbacks and pinned opponents inside the 20 fourteen times. Trent Sieg’s long-snapping remained flawless. KaVontae Turpin’s kickoff return production surged despite reduced punt-return opportunities and earned a Pro Bowl nod.
Read at Inside The Star
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