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TEARS OF “IRON MIKE”: Brandon Aubrey Bows His Head After Mistakes That May Have Ended the Cowboys’ Season

ARLINGTON, Texas – Sometimes an athlete’s career isn’t defined by the highlight reel, but by the nights they’d give anything to forget.

For Brandon Aubrey — the rookie phenom once nicknamed “Iron Mike” for his near-perfect kicking performance — Sunday night in Arlington was one of those unforgettable moments for all the wrong reasons.

In a must-win showdown against the Minnesota Vikings, where every point carried deep playoff implications, the Cowboys’ most reliable weapon finally faltered. Aubrey, who had been automatic all season long, missed two field goals in a 34–26 loss that effectively buried Dallas’ faint postseason hopes. 
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The Biggest Gut Punch of the Season

All year, Aubrey had been flawless. More than just a feel-good story, he had become one of the league’s most consistent kickers — a player Cowboys fans trusted implicitly when the game was on the line.

But under the pressure of a season-defining night, “Iron Mike” finally cracked.

Those six points lost loomed large as the game reached its final stages. In a contest decided by eight points, each miss felt like a devastating blow, turning what could have been a classic Cowboys comeback into another painful chapter of a difficult season. 
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No Excuses, Just Accountability

In the quiet, shell-shocked locker room after the game, there were no excuses from Aubrey. No blaming the wind, the snap, or the hold. Just a kicker standing before reporters, eyes glassy, shoulders heavy, and voice struggling to stay steady.

“That’s on me,” Aubrey said. “I get paid to make those kicks, and I didn’t. I let my teammates down. I let the fans down. I’m sorry.” 
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He didn’t need to be told what those misses meant — the scoreboard made it painfully clear.

From Hero to Heartbreak

On paper, it was just two missed field goals. In reality, it was the razor-thin line between still dreaming of a Super Bowl run and starting the offseason early.

In a season where the Cowboys’ defense has taken heavy criticism, where coaching decisions have been questioned, and where the offense has had its share of ups and downs, one factor had been constant: Brandon Aubrey. The rookie who never blinked. The kicker who didn’t miss. 
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That’s what makes this stinging loss so different.

The heartbreak of Brandon Aubrey has become the heartbreak of the 2025 Dallas Cowboys. A season that once felt built on quiet confidence and a breakout special-teams star now feels defined by one brutal, unforgiving truth:

Hope was real. Momentum was real.
And it all slipped away the moment “Iron Mike” finally showed he was human.

Bears Pro Bowler Breaks Silence on Record Contract Request, Leaving Front Office in a Tough Spot
Chicago, Illinois – January 2026 The Chicago Bears entered the offseason with plenty of momentum after a strong 2025 campaign, but that progress is now facing a significant obstacle: the salary cap. One of their top defensive players has emerged as a key figure, but contract talks have stalled due to one major issue — price. The player in question is Nahshon Wright, who went from a rotational option to a Pro Bowl-caliber performer, becoming one of the NFL’s most impactful defenders last season. His breakout performance redefined Chicago’s secondary and reshaped the way opposing offenses approached the Bears' defense. Wright’s numbers from 2025 are impressive: 80 tackles, five interceptions, 11 passes defended, and a league-leading nine total takeaways. These stats not only earned him his first Pro Bowl selection but also significantly boosted his market value as he heads into free agency. Sources close to the situation reveal that Wright’s camp is seeking a three-year deal worth around $50 million, a figure that would place him among the highest-paid cornerbacks in the league. From Wright’s perspective, his request is rooted in more than just on-field performance. “I grew up homeless, and I still have a lot of responsibilities on my shoulders. I’m only asking for what I believe I’ve earned. I love Chicago, and I know I’ll prove I’m worth every dollar,” Wright said. For the Chicago Bears, the challenge is finding a way to meet Wright’s demand while staying within their limited salary-cap flexibility. Committing over $16 million per year to one cornerback could force them to make difficult sacrifices elsewhere, weakening the depth of the roster as they continue building toward long-term playoff contention. Negotiations between both sides are still ongoing, but the gap is significant, and the possibility of letting Wright test the open market remains very real. For Chicago's front office, this decision goes beyond a single contract. It’s a defining moment that will set the tone for how the Bears balance rising talent, financial discipline, and their vision for the next phase of roster construction. The choice they make here could shape the future of the team for years to come.