Cowboys Fans Just Got Another Brutal Micah Parsons Reality Check

Despite financial benefits, the Cowboys' trade of Micah Parsons continues to haunt them as his remarkable achievements with the Packers highlight a significant loss of talent.

The Micah Parsons trade keeps finding new ways to sting the Cowboys.

Dallas may have built more depth on defense by avoiding a record-breaking extension, but that doesn’t make the pain go away. The real issue is simple: until the Cowboys have an elite pass rush again, every reminder of Parsons is going to land hard.

That reminder showed up again through ESPN’s annual edge rusher rankings, where Jeremy Fowler surveyed NFL executives, coaches and scouts on the 10 best players at the position. Parsons came in second, trailing only Myles Garrett. The Cowboys’ current edge rushers, meanwhile, didn’t draw a single mention.

“There are two guys that never really get blocked in the NFL, and it's those two guys -- Myles and Micah," an NFL coordinator said. "You do what you can with movements and quick game, and it's not enough."

That’s the kind of quote that hits Cowboys fans right in the gut, because it underscores exactly what Dallas gave up when it sent Parsons to Green Bay. Malachi Lawrence hasn’t played an NFL snap yet, Donovan Ezeiruaku is only in Year 2, and Rashan Gary is better known for stopping the run than wrecking quarterbacks. There’s upside in that group, but none of it comes close to matching Parsons.

Fowler also pointed out just how rare Parsons’ production has been. The three-time All-Pro is one of only five players in NFL history to record at least 65 sacks through his first five seasons, joining T.J.

Watt, J.J. Watt, Derrick Thomas and Reggie White.

He’s also the only player in the league to post 12 or more sacks in each of his first five seasons. Even with the final month of last season missed, he still would have led the Cowboys in sacks by a wide margin.

That’s the part Dallas can’t escape. Parsons isn’t just a good player the Cowboys moved on from. He’s the kind of pass rusher who changes the entire feel of a defense, and every new piece of evidence only makes the trade look more painful for the people who watched him leave.

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