The Cowboys went hunting for help off the edge this offseason, and they took a couple of big swings before landing on Rashan Gary. Dallas tried hard to pry Maxx Crosby away from the Las Vegas Raiders, but the talks never turned into a deal.
When that path closed, the Cowboys turned to Green Bay and sent a fourth-round pick to the Packers for the veteran pass rusher. The reaction around the move was skeptical, but the price tag tells a different story. Dallas gave up a mid-round pick, adjusted Gary’s contract so it barely touches the salary cap, and addressed a major need with a player who brings more than just pass-rush juice.
Gary may not be the kind of edge defender who leads the league in sacks, but that was never really the point for Dallas. He gives them a balanced presence who can hold up against the run and still pressure the quarterback. That kind of all-around help matters, especially for a defense looking to firm up the edge.
Now entering his eighth season, Gary has piled up 271 tackles and 46.5 sacks. That production is enough to land him at No. 9 on our list of the top 10 players on the Cowboys’ roster.
His 2025 season had a strange shape to it. Through seven games, he had 7.5 sacks and was tracking toward 18. Then the production vanished over the final nine games, when he didn’t record a sack and had trouble creating pressure.
That finish made the year look far less impressive than the early stretch suggested, and it’s part of why Green Bay was willing to move on. It also explains why Dallas was able to get him to accept a pay cut after the trade. The Packers were especially frustrated because they needed him to step up after Micah Parsons suffered a torn ACL late in the year, and Gary couldn’t deliver.
For Dallas, though, the expectation is different. The Cowboys do not need Gary to be a double-digit sack machine. They need him to be the steady veteran in a room with young edge rushers still trying to figure things out.
Donovan Ezeiruaku, in his second season, and rookie Malachi Lawrence both have the kind of talent that can change games off the edge. What they lack is experience, and that’s where Gary fits.
As those younger players grow, Gary can serve as the stabilizing presence, helping on early downs and still bringing disruption as a pass rusher. His 2025 struggles are real, but a new setting could give him the push he needs. And for Dallas, the cost to find out was relatively light.
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