The Dallas Cowboys have added Kyle Fuller, a former NFL offensive lineman, to their coaching staff as assistant offensive line coach under head coach Brian Schottenheimer. Fuller, a Baylor alum who played high school football about 25 miles from the team facility, will work with second-year OL coach Connor Riley and offensive coordinator Klayton Adams, reporting directly to Schottenheimer.
Fuller replaces Ramon Chinyoung, who left Dallas to become the Pittsburgh Steelers’ running backs coach under first-year Steelers head coach Mike McCarthy. The acquisition clears the path for Fuller to contribute to a unit that rebounded in 2025 after a 2024 decline, with the Cowboys aiming to sustain progress behind a developing group led by first-round pick Tyler Booker.
The Fuller hired by Dallas is the former NFL offensive lineman Kyle Fuller, not the longtime cornerback with the same name. This Kyle Fuller spent five NFL seasons (2017–2022) with the Houston Texans, Washington Commanders, and Seattle Seahawks, appearing in 51 games and starting 12, including nine starts for Seattle in 2021. After stints on practice squads with the Broncos and Ravens in 2023 and a brief involvement with the Michigan Panthers of the USFL in 2024, he transitioned to coaching, serving as a graduate coaching assistant at North Carolina in 2024 and taking a role as Las Vegas Raiders assistant-quality control coach in 2025.
Dallas’ 2025 offensive line rebounded to reach the mid-teens in rankings, aided by improvements and the addition of Booker in the first round. The Cowboys will rely on Fuller, Riley, and the rest of the staff to continue developing a young, talented line to protect quarterback Dak Prescott and support the rushing attack, while managing a roster transformation ahead of the 2026 season.