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From Celebration to Sorrow: Remembering Marshawn Kneeland

Hunter Tierney 's profile
By Hunter Tierney
November 8, 2025
From Celebration to Sorrow: Remembering Marshawn Kneeland

Marshawn Kneeland was 24. A second‑year defensive end for the Dallas Cowboys with the kind of frame and motor that scouts love and teammates notice. Early Thursday morning, Nov. 6, the team announced he had passed away. By mid‑morning, police in the Dallas area confirmed the worst possible version of the rumors we were all hoping weren’t true: it was an apparent suicide following a late‑night police pursuit. The NFL followed with its own statement, offering support and counseling resources to the Cowboys organization.

Two days earlier, on Monday Night Football, Kneeland had recovered a blocked punt against Arizona and fell on it in the end zone — his first NFL touchdown. That clip was still floating around social media when the news broke. You don’t expect to scroll your feed and see a headline like that.

Within hours, the details began to surface: a police pursuit, a crash, and then the heartbreaking truth that this was an apparent suicide. Euphoria to heartbreak in forty‑eight hours.

What We've Learned So Far

Here’s what we know: Around 10:30 on Wednesday night, state troopers tried to pull over a vehicle on the Dallas North Tollway. The driver — later identified as Marshawn Kneeland — didn’t stop. A short chase followed before the car was found crashed and empty on the side of the road. From there, a search began — drones, officers, everyone trying to piece together what was happening.

About an hour later, Plano officers were sent to Kneeland’s home for a welfare check after his girlfriend reached out, worried about some troubling messages he’d sent. She and other family members told police they had received alarming messages from him earlier that evening — short, emotional texts that sounded like goodbyes and left everyone scared something was terribly wrong.

Closer to 1:30 a.m., officers located Kneeland nearby, already deceased. Police later confirmed he had died from a self‑inflicted gunshot wound.

A Promising Career Cut Short

Sep 26, 2024; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; Dallas Cowboys defensive end Marshawn Kneeland (94) reacts after sacking New York Giants quarterback Daniel Jones (8) during the third quarter at MetLife Stadium.
Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Dallas took Kneeland in the second round of the 2024 draft out of Western Michigan, and if you’d seen his college tape, you instantly got it. The guy had those heavy hands that pop on film and that rare kind of power that holds up on Sundays. He wasn’t just some bull‑rush‑only strongman either — there was bend for a dude that size, balance through contact, and a knack for countering when tackles got lazy with their sets. Coaches love to throw around “speed to power” like it’s a buzzword; with Kneeland, it was the whole scouting report.

Like most rookies, he hit the league’s learning curve head‑on. But he kept showing up — grinding through special‑teams reps, carving out those rotational snaps, stacking small wins that only coaches and teammates really notice. That blocked‑punt touchdown on Monday Night Football wasn’t luck; it was the payoff of a guy who did all the dirty work.

Ask scouts from that 2024 class what they liked, and they’ll tell you the same things: a mature frame, a nasty punch, and a motor that kept him in plays most edges give up on. At Western Michigan, his defensive staff praised his film habits and how often he’d circle back to the building to watch cut‑ups. NFL coaches love that because it travels. There’s not a scheme in the league where film study and real moving power don’t fit.

The Teammate

It’s always telling what people say about a guy when the cameras are off and the quotes don’t count. With Marshawn, you kept hearing the same things: he brought juice to every room, always had a quick smile, and was the kind of teammate who made you want to work harder.

Everyone from coaches to teammates described him the same way: reliable, easy to talk to, and genuine. He didn’t chase attention — he earned respect the hard way, by being steady and kind in a league that can chew up even the strongest personalities. That’s why this hit so hard.

The Person Behind the Mask

In 2024, months before he heard his name on draft night, Kneeland’s mother, Wendy, passed unexpectedly. He spoke openly about how much she meant to his journey and wore a small necklace with some of her ashes.

Grief doesn’t follow a set calendar. You don’t schedule healing around an NFL workload. The thing about pro sports is they’re relentless even when life is, too. That’s why the image of him celebrating that blocked‑punt score — the grin, the pile‑on, the let‑me‑breathe‑for‑a‑second look — will stick with so many people. The fact that we lost him days later doesn’t erase that joy, but it certainly makes it more precious.

The tributes came fast and from every corner of the football world. Dak Prescott spoke with visible emotion, calling the day one of the hardest of his career. Micah Parsons posted that he hoped his friend had finally found peace, while Solomon Thomas, another Cowboys lineman, poured his heart out on Instagram: “I wish you knew how much we wanted you to stay.” Those weren’t the kinds of statements written for the cameras — they were from people who felt his loss deep in their bones.

His former coach at Western Michigan remembered the same qualities that drew NFL scouts in the first place: 

“My heart is absolutely broken over the loss of Marshawn Kneeland. Marshawn was so much more than an incredible football player – he was a remarkable young man who meant so much to our program and to me personally. His leadership, energy, and smile were infectious, and he left a lasting impact on everyone in our program. Having coached him during my first season here, we developed a special bond that went far beyond football. His passion for life and his teammates were unmatched."

The Bigger Conversation We Have To Keep Having

Jul 22, 2025; Las Vegas, NV, USA; Nebraska head coach Matt Rhule speaks to the media during the Big Ten NCAA college football media days at Mandalay Bay Resort.
Credit: Lucas Peltier-Imagn Images

Every time something like this happens, it hits us over the head with a truth we tend to forget: NFL players aren’t superheroes. They might look larger than life on Sundays, but at the end of the day, they’re human — twenty‑somethings juggling pressure, injuries, family issues, contracts, expectations, and all the same personal storms the rest of us face, just under brighter lights and with a louder crowd.

That’s what made Nebraska head coach Matt Rhule’s comments hit home:

“Seeing the tragic news out of Dallas today, and, you know, understanding that we — none of us know. None of us know what people are going through. That’s why I think we all should be careful about what we say to people. I think we should be careful what we tweet about people. I think we should be cognizant of what everyone’s going through.

I told our players they should take their headphones off in the cafeteria and sit down with someone and be like, ‘How you doing, man? What’s going on with you?’ Because somebody that we’re talking to — the one we’re saying, ‘What’s wrong with that guy? That guy’s messed up.’ Instead of saying, ‘What’s wrong with him?’ we should all say, ‘I wonder what happened to them,’ because everyone’s suffering…

I just think it’s a time in this world for us to be kind to people and, at the same time, care about people and ask about people. Our generation of kids — my kids — they all just say, ‘Yeah, I’m fine. I’m straight.’ You know, and it’s just like, you really got to unearth it… I would encourage everybody today, with your own kids or the people you work with, just check on them, ‘cause, you know, that young man scored a touchdown just a couple days ago, and to the outside world you’d think he’s at the pinnacle, but he’s dealing with something. I don’t know what it was, but I pray for him and his family.”

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