Cowboys Early Roster Projection Puts Familiar Names In Serious Danger

Anticipated roster changes see some surprising cuts and emerging stars in the Dallas Cowboys' projected 2026 lineup.

The Cowboys are still a long way from settling their 53-man roster, but the early picture is starting to take shape. A few names look safely in, a few others are hanging on by a thread, and there are already some tough calls baked into the offense and defense.

On the offensive side, Randy Gurzi of Sports Illustrated projected Dallas to keep five receivers: CeeDee Lamb, George Pickens, Ryan Flournoy, KaVontae Turpin and Anthony Smith. That leaves Jonathan Mingo and Marquez Valdes-Scantling as the notable cuts. The tight end group in Gurzi’s projection includes Jake Ferguson, Brevyn Spann-Ford and Michael Trigg, with Luke Schoonmaker left out.

Up front, the offensive line comes out to nine players: Tyler Guyton, Tyler Smith, Cooper Beebe, Tyler Booker, Terence Steele, Drew Shelton, Nate Thomas, T.J. Bass and Nick Leverett.

Gurzi also noted that Dallas goes with three quarterbacks in his projection, though he said it’s possible the team keeps only two. He pointed to Sam Howell as the backup with the edge right now, saying there is reason to believe in him even if Joe Milton is the more exciting option.

At running back, Phil Mafah gets the nod over Malik Davis, though Gurzi added that the Cowboys would be happy to stash Davis on the practice squad for depth.

One of the trickier offensive decisions is at receiver, where Valdes-Scantling’s minicamp buzz may not be enough to save him. Gurzi wrote that he has been solid in offensive sets, but his lack of special teams experience is what works against him.

The defense has its own roster squeeze coming. Mark Heaney of Inside The Star highlighted Reddy Steward and Trikweze Bridges as two players who could be pushed out despite logging real snaps last season.

Steward appeared in all 17 games and finished with 63 tackles, 1.5 sacks, three passes defended and a forced fumble after Dallas claimed him off waivers. Bridges played in 16 games and had one of his best moments against Denver, when he picked off Bo Nix.

But Heaney said the additions Dallas made this offseason changed the equation, and the front office was not willing to roll into 2026 with those two near the top of the depth chart again.

There’s also a clear push for the Cowboys’ rookie class to matter quickly. Mike Crum of Cowboys Wire pointed to linebacker Jaishawn Barham and defensive end LT Overton as two newcomers who could shape what Dallas becomes on defense.

Crum called Barham a possible future at linebacker and laid out the roster math around DeMarvion Overshown and Dee Winters. If Barham becomes the answer, Dallas would get a centerpiece on a controllable deal instead of paying a free agent top money.

Crum also praised Overton as a fit for the new defense, saying Dallas needed defensive ends who can handle blocks from guards and help keep the run game in check. He noted that Jonathan Bullard already fills that role but is on a one-year deal, while Overton could give the Cowboys that kind of presence for the next four years if he develops the way they hope. At 21, he brings upside too, and Dane Brugler had him among his top players entering the 2025 season.

Another name drawing attention is Cooper Beebe. Jason Kandel of The Landry Hat said the center is set for a bigger platform this season, while Yahoo Sports’ Nate Tice predicted he could become a household name beyond Cowboys fans.

Tice described Beebe as a player whose build he once compared to “Spongebob Squarepants,” then added that Dallas may have found its long-term answer at center after moving him there from the 2024 draft class. He also said Beebe has built a strong connection with Dak Prescott through pre-snap communication.

Tice’s point is easy to understand. Beebe may not have the longest frame, but he has the bulk and the game to make it work.

And that doesn’t come out of nowhere. At Kansas State, he was a two-time Big 12 Offensive Lineman of the Year and a two-time All-American, the kind of resume that made him look ready for the NFL from the start.

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