Dallas Cowboys Madden 18: Franchise Mode Guide, Player Ratings, Roster, Depth Chart, Playbooks & Tips

The Dallas Cowboys are the most recognizable NFL franchise around. They have won five Super Bowls and earned the moniker "America's Team" because of their success. However, their last Super Bowl triumph was all the way back in January 1996. They have won just one playoff game this decade, but thanks to Madden 18 you can lead them back to the top of the mountain and hang another Super Bowl banner in the AT&T Stadium.

Team Rating

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The Cowboys have a great team rating of 88 OVR. This is thanks to a remarkably strong 97 offensive rating. Their defense is not as strong, rated 83 overall, but they are still a viable option even if you don't make any improvements to them within your Franchise Mode.

Depth Chart & Full Roster

Here is the full roster you will begin your journey with, starting with the quarterbacks.

QB
OVR
Speed
Throw power
Short accuracy
Medium accuracy
Deep accuracy
Play action
Dak Prescott
87
82
93
88
84
81
88
Kellen Moore
69
76
80
84
80
70
75
Zac Dysert
63
77
85
79
72
67
60
HB
OVR
Speed
Agility
Carrying
Elusiveness
Catching
Ezekiel Elliott
92
92
94
88
83
71
Alfred Morris
80
87
82
90
70
63
Darren McFadden
78
89
82
86
67
66
FB
OVR
Speed
Run block
Pass block
Strength
Keith Smith
81
77
72
69
76
WR
OVR
Speed
Agility
Route running
Catching
Catching in traffic
Dez Bryant
93
89
89
87
95
97
Cole Beasley
82
88
93
89
87
85
Terrance Williams
80
90
87
83
87
86
Brice Butler
74
92
88
73
81
78
Ryan Switzer
74
89
93
84
85
82
TE
OVR
Speed
Agility
Route running
Catching
Catching in traffic
Run block
Jason Witten
94
77
78
87
93
92
72
Geoff Swaim
75
82
79
60
74
69
76
James Hanna
74
87
82
52
73
75
81
OL
OVR
Speed
Strength
Run block
Pass block
Impact block
Zack Martin
97
70
93
91
90
93
Travis Frederick
95
56
92
92
89
97
Tyron Smith
94
75
92
89
94
93
La'el Collins
81
72
88
80
77
94
Jonathan Cooper
76
69
88
75
84
82
Byron Bell
76
57
91
73
75
69
Kadeem Edwards
71
64
86
82
76
69
Emmett Cleary
70
65
81
76
75
82
Joe Looney
70
70
82
76
72
79
DE
OVR
Speed
Strength
Play recognition
Power moves
Finesse moves
Block shedding
David Irving
82
78
73
78
73
85
77
DeMarcus Lawrence
82
79
76
76
82
70
80
Tyrone Crawford
78
78
81
78
82
70
67
Taco Charlton
78
78
79
65
71
83
74
Randy Gregory
77
84
79
66
70
81
73
Charles Tapper
72
85
80
53
81
67
74
DT
OVR
Speed
Strength
Play recognition
Power moves
Finesse moves
Block shedding
Stephen Paea
82
71
96
79
81
61
75
Cedric Thornton
78
62
88
78
78
60
69
Maliek Collins
77
71
84
73
65
81
71
Joey Ivie IV
68
68
80
58
62
76
79
LOLB
OVR
Speed
Acceleration
Play recognition
Tackle
Hit power
Kyle Wilber
77
83
88
76
80
73
Damien Wilson
76
81
87
75
82
76
MLB
OVR
Speed
Acceleration
Play recognition
Tackle
Hit power
Anthony Hitchens
76
81
90
80
81
84
Jaylon Smith
75
85
88
71
86
88
Mark Nzeocha
64
83
86
65
81
69
ROLB
OVR
Speed
Acceleration
Play recognition
Tackle
Hit power
Sean Lee
92
83
90
96
96
83
John Lotulelei
69
77
89
62
80
83
CB
OVR
Speed
Acceleration
Agility
Man coverage
Zone coverage
Press
Orlando Scandrick
83
90
92
91
85
77
82
Anthony Brown
80
95
91
85
84
77
82
Chidobe Awuzie
77
91
92
88
82
75
86
Jourdan Lewis
76
90
90
92
81
75
83
Nolan Carroll II
76
90
90
87
80
71
78
Leon McFadden
71
87
92
93
80
72
69
FS
OVR
Speed
Acceleration
Agility
Tackle
Play recognition
Man coverage
Zone coverage
Byron Jones
85
91
93
96
69
79
81
84
Jeff Heath
76
89
89
83
67
73
70
79
SS
OVR
Speed
Acceleration
Agility
Tackle
Play recognition
Man coverage
Zone coverage
Robert Blanton
74
87
90
85
81
73
58
68
Xavier Woods
71
89
90
87
73
64
65
72
K
OVR
Kick power
Kick accuracy
Dan Bailey
82
92
94
P
OVR
Kick Power
Kick accuracy
Chris Jones
80
93
92

The Cowboys starters are particularly good, especially on offense. Dak Prescott's strong rookie campaign makes him a very good Madden quarterback with his solid athleticism (82 speed) and strong arm (93 throw power) meaning he can stretch the defense both vertically and laterally.

The star of this roster is the running game, with Ezekiel Elliott's awesome physical traits (92 speed, 94 agility) and the blocking of the offensive line, particularly the trio of Zack Martin, Travis Frederick, and Tyron Smith (91, 92, & 89 run block respectively).

The receivers lack high-end athleticism, but that is made up for in the sure hands of Dez Bryant and Jason Witten (95 & 93 catching).

Defensively there are a couple of standouts, but the whole defensive roster lacks depth and talent. Sean Lee is the star of the group (96 tackle, 96 play recognition) and is always around the ball. Byron Jones is another quality player at free safety (91 speed, 84 zone coverage), and both David Irving (85 finesse moves) and DeMarcus Lawrence (82 power moves) are strong defensive ends. However, the rest of the defense can be troublesome.

Playbook - Offense

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I Form - H Pro

I Form - H Wing

I Form - Slot Flex

Strong I - H Pro

Strong I - H Slot

Strong I - H Y-Off

Singleback - Ace

Singleback - Ace Pair

Singleback - Ace Slot

Singleback - Bunce Ace

Singleback - Dice Slot

Singleback - Wing Flex

Singleback - Wing Pair

Singleback - Wing Tight

Singleback - Wing Tight Z

Singleback - Y Off Trips

Singleback - Y Trips

Pistol - Doubles

Shotgun - Bunch

Shotgun - Doubles Flex Wk

Shotgun - Doubles Offset

Shotgun - Doubles Y Off Wk

Shotgun - Empty Cowboy

Shotgun - Empty Trey

Shotgun - Empty Trey Stack

Shotgun - Empty Trips TE

Shotgun - Spread Y-Slot Wk

Shotgun - Trey Open

Shotgun - Trio Offset

Shotgun - Trips Y-Flex

Shotgun - Y Off Trips Wk

Shotgun - Y Trips Z-Trip

Playbook - Defense

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4-3 Normal

4-3 Over

4-3 Over Plus

4-3 Under

4-3 Wide 9

46 Bear

Nickel Normal

Nickel Double A Gap

Nickel Wide 9

Dime Normal

Dollar 3-2-6

Quarter Normal

Quarter 3 Deep

Goal Line Defense 5-3-3

Goal Line Defense 5-4-2

Tactics

Dallas need to be played in a rather specific way if you want to get the best out of them. That style is the rather old-fashioned "ball control" one in which you run the ball, bleed as much of the clock as you can on offense, maintain field position with your special teams, and don't expose your defense too much.

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Given the quality of the offensive line and the depth at running back this shouldn't be too much of a problem. With Smith at LT, Frederick at C, and Martin at RG, you should be looking to run off the left edge and to the right of center. Elliott's amazing athleticism allows you to play from under center and use outside runs, counters, and leads, but it also allows you to open up a little and play in the shotgun and use zone runs, screens, and a variety of pass plays with the running back releasing.

Defensively the coverage should be mostly man, but you need to mix it up a little. Every single corner on this roster is better in man coverage than they are zone, but they aren't so good that they can do it all the time and never be beaten. Try to play man on the outside with robbers or spies over the middle and some deep help from the safeties. You won't get a lot of pressure with the front four, but DeMarcus Lawrence can provide good pressure off the edge and Maliek Collins is a better pass rusher than you'd think on the inside. If you do blitz try to leave Sean Lee in coverage as his ability to see what is happening and bring down ball carriers in the open field is far better than anyone else on this team.

Training

There are only a handful of players with the "superstar" development trait. They are Zack Martin, Travis Frederick, Dez Bryant, Tyron Smith, and Ezekiel Elliott. Frustratingly, those players are all about as good as can be already, and while there is nothing wrong in gaining extra XP to develop Elliott's catching ability for example, it is a little wasteful given some of the holes elsewhere in the roster. So who should you focus on?

Dak Prescott is good, but he could certainly be better. He has a "quick" development trait, so it's worth investing time in him. Jaylon Smith (MLB) also has a "quick" trait and given his strong physical stats already (85 speed, 88 acceleration), gaining some XP to put into the mental side of his game will quickly improve his level of play.

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Rookie wide receiver Ryan Switzer also has the "quick" trait, and improving his technical stats will soon turn him into a Julian Edelman clone that can dominate from the slot.

Salary Cap & Contracts

Dallas start Madden 18 with $54.2 million in cap space, which is a lot compared to recent years where they have been very hard pressed. However, that doesn't mean you can go out and splash the cash on free agents and trades.

Both DeMarcus Lawrence and David Irving are in the last year of their contracts and will not be cheap to re-sign. Giving them both a new contract will eat some $10-12 million in cap space. Right tackle La'el Collins also needs an extension that will cost you something in the region of $4-6 million per year. Starting middle linebacker Anthony Hitchens is also an impending free agent, as is starting left guard Jonathan Cooper and both backup running backs.

You also have the contracts of Zack Martin and Byron Jones that will expire after your second season with the Cowboys, both must be re-signed for the Cowboys to be a good team.

Acquisitions

So, how can you quickly improve your team? Well, the cheapest way to add some speed to your secondary and a player than can be developed reasonably quickly is to sign Jonathan Jones from the New England Patriots practice squad.

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His 95 speed and acceleration immediately makes him the best athlete in the Dallas secondary, and he fits in with the man coverage style that you will need to play. The overall rating (62) is low, but used in the right way he can be useful.

There are also several players on the trade block that could be good pieces to add at a relatively low cost. Paul Richardson (94 speed, 85 catching) is available for as little as a fourth-round draft pick. His speed gives you a deep threat on the outside that will force safeties away from Dez Bryant.

Who should you trade away?

Trading away Dez Bryant will incur a net cap penalty of around $3 million, but with just 89 speed, physicality that is on the decline, and some $22.3 million due after the initial season, he is a long way of clearing a lot of cap space, and you will get offers of a 2019 first-round pick for him as well, which is very nice.

Other than Dez there aren't many spare pieces on this roster that can be profitably traded. If you weren't inclined to re-sign players like David Irving and DeMarcus Lawrence, then you should trade them away immediately and take the hit while recouping a draft pick.

You should only move your 2018 first-round pick if you can get a star in return that fills your needs at defensive line or corner.

When can you expect a Super Bowl?

The Dallas Cowboys roster needs a defensive overhaul to be a real threat to go deep in the playoffs. With the starting roster you will need to be brilliant on offense to make up for the deficiencies on defense.

If you use your draft picks and cap space wisely, then it won't take long to create a defense that can hold its ground enough to allow you to challenge the powerhouses around the league. Playing with this team against the elite quarterbacks like Aaron Rodgers or Tom Brady is incredibly difficult due to the lack of pass rush and inconsistent coverage skills, but it isn't impossible. Dallas are in a tricky division, but they have the best offensive line in football and one of the best young QB-RB duos around. That is a deadly combination that good players can really dominate with.

You should be targeting at least a wildcard spot in your first year, with the NFC East crown the aim in year two and the Super Bowl a real possibility in year three.