You don’t lose a rookie season and come back quiet.
You come back with an edge.
DeMarvion Overshown isn’t tiptoeing into 2025. He’s naming his target: Comeback Player of the Year. Not a hope. A goal. And the way he says it—steady, unshaken—feels less like ambition and more like inevitability.
Because Overshown didn’t miss games. He missed becoming.
His ACL tore in the preseason, before the story could begin. No breakout moment. No headlines. Just rehab. Isolation. Watching the game unfold without you in it.
And now, he’s ready to take it back.
The Stillness Before the Strike
Injury changes everything. Especially when it comes early. It rewrites identity. For Overshown, the year on the sideline didn’t just sharpen his body—it sharpened his intent. He’s no longer just a rangy linebacker with potential. He’s a man playing against time. Against narrative. Against the idea that potential is perishable.
The Cowboys know what they lost when Overshown went down. They didn’t just lose a role player. They lost unpredictability. Speed. Disruption. He was built for the modern game—hybrid instincts in a body that bends with fluidity and force.
And now, his return isn’t just expected.
It’s charged.
Awards Aren’t Goals. They’re Signals.
Comeback Player of the Year is often a sentimental honor. But Overshown’s pursuit of it feels surgical. He doesn’t want applause. He wants presence. To prove that a missed year isn’t a lost career. To remind the league—and maybe himself—that what was paused has not been erased.
And if he wins it?
That’s not the finish.
That’s the reintroduction.
So watch him closely in 2025. Every tackle, every pressure, every sideline sprint will carry more than athleticism. It will carry memory—of what he missed, what he endured, and what he never stopped preparing for.
DeMarvion Overshown isn’t coming back to be seen.
He’s coming back to be undeniable.
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