Josh Sweat gave the Arizona Cardinals exactly what they paid for on the field in 2025. The problem is everything around him looks a lot messier, and that’s the kind of situation Jerry Jones and the Dallas Cowboys should be watching closely.
Sweat signed a four-year, $76.4 million deal with Arizona, but he skipped the team’s voluntary offseason program and showed up only for mandatory minicamp to avoid fines. Even then, he didn’t take part in on-field work. Reporters have pointed to an organizational disagreement as the source of the tension, and it comes after Sweat turned in a career year with 12 sacks.
That production matters. Sweat also posted 30 tackles while playing in all 17 games, and he did it after winning a championship ring at Super Bowl LIX. For Arizona, it was one of the few real bright spots on a defense that finished tied for the third-fewest sacks in the league.
The frustration appears to trace back to the coaching change. Jonathan Gannon, who coached Sweat in Philly and helped bring him to Arizona, was fired in January after the Cardinals’ 4-13 season. Sweat is now working under a new staff he didn’t choose.
NFLTradeRumors’ Logan Ulrich summed up the situation last month, writing, "There's no shortage of reasons for him to be frustrated with the Cardinals right now, and the rest of the league knows it."
That’s where Dallas comes in. The Cowboys’ edge group remains unproven, with Rashan Gary failing to top 7.5 sacks in either of the last two seasons, Malachi Lawrence and Donovan Ezeiruaku still raw, and Sam Williams still developing.
There’s also a contract wrinkle that makes this worth monitoring. Sweat has no guaranteed money left after this season, and if Arizona slips out of the playoff picture, the Nov. 3 trade deadline could become a real factor. If that happens, Jones would be wise to be ready.
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