The Dallas Cowboys went into the offseason with one clear mission: fix the defense. They attacked that job from the top down, moving on from Matt Eberflus and bringing in Christian Parker, then backing that up with a string of additions designed to make the unit better on paper.
That work is part of why The Athletic’s Mike Jones put Dallas among the biggest winners of the offseason.
"Then this offseason, the Cowboys continued to reshape their defense by trading for pass rusher Rashan Gary and adding free-agent defensive backs Cobie Durant, Jalen Thompson and P.J. Locke," Jones said.
"Then they drafted safety Caleb Downs and edge rusher Malachi Lawrence in the first round and promising linebacker Jaishawn Barham in the third round. That should help improve a defense that surrendered a league-high 30.1 points per game last season and 377 yards (third most) per outing."
Jones also pointed to the offense, where keeping George Pickens mattered just as much.
"Retaining George Pickens on the franchise tag also ensures the Cowboys have a potent pass-catching duo for Dak Prescott to lean on," Jones added.
The mix Dallas assembled includes both immediate help and long-term pieces. Gary, Durant, Thompson, Locke and Dee Winters give the Cowboys a shot at helping right away, while Downs, Lawrence and the rest of the draft class are meant to build something sturdier for the future.
Downs stands out as the rookie most likely to make an instant impact. Even if Lawrence, Barham, Devin Moore, LT Overton and Drew Shelton need time, they still add depth where Dallas needed it.
Seventh-round pick Anthony Smith was part of the class too, though he’ll have an uphill climb just to make the roster.
The Pickens situation remains complicated. The belief here is that Dallas should have tagged and traded him this offseason, but keeping him on the franchise tag was still the next-best route. After giving up a third-round pick, the Cowboys couldn’t simply let him leave in free agency for nothing.
That makes the current setup the sensible middle ground: tag him, don’t commit long term, and hold onto the option to move him later. Dallas also swapped a fifth-rounder for a sixth-round selection in the process.
For now, the Cowboys are banking on Pickens to keep producing close to what he did in 2025 and to stay on his best behavior. If that happens, the team could look to trade him in 2027 after tagging him again. And if Dallas gets two solid years out of him and eventually recoups the third-round pick it spent to get him in 2025, that will count as a win.
In Other News...
Cowboys Early Roster Projection Puts Familiar Names In Serious Danger
With July approaching, the Cowboys first pass at a 53-man roster already hints at a lot of familiar names getting squeezed. The projection is less about locking anything in and more about mapping the competition at every spot, from quarterback to the back end of the defense, while also weighing which rookies can push their way into bigger roles before the season arrives.
One of the trickier calls sits behind the starting quarterback, where Dallas may end up carrying three passers but still has to sort out a backup pecking order. The same uncertainty runs through the rest of the roster, with a few players who logged real snaps last season suddenly looking vulnerable and others, including rookies like Jaishawn Barham and LT Overton, offering the kind of long-term promise that can make these early projections feel more like a warning than a prediction. [Read more 🡒]
Cowboys Are Suddenly Getting The Respect Fans Never Expected
The Cowboys have spent plenty of recent offseasons under a cloud of frustration and second-guessing, but this one is drawing a different kind of attention. Around the league, several personnel executives are looking at Dallas as one of the NFLs most improved teams, with the roster moves and coaching decisions giving the franchise a steadier, more credible feel than it has had in a while.
A big part of that perception comes from how the defense has been upgraded and how the staff has been shaped, including Brian Schottenheimers choice to bring in Christian Parker to run the unit. There is also a sense that the front office has handled the business side more cleanly, from the George Pickens situation to contract decisions that no longer seem to linger as distractions, which is why some evaluators are now discussing Dallas in a way fans have not been used to hearing. [Read more 🡒]
Cowboys Already Took A Hit Where This Roster Could Least Afford It
The Cowboys have spent enough time talking about ceilings and upside this spring, but the latest reminder of how thin the margin can be came in a place Dallas could least afford it. With Dak Prescott coming off a strong 2025 season, the bigger picture still points toward a roster that needs its quarterback to keep playing at that level while the front office tries to manage what comes next on the cap. At the same time, the defensive side is being shaped by Christian Parkers expected Vic Fangio-style approach, which puts even more pressure on the line to create disruption without much blitz help.
That is why the early look at a rookie edge rusher such as Malachi Lawrence matters so much to this team. Dallas needs pass rush juice to show up quickly, and it needs it from players who can fit into a system built around patience, discipline and pressure from the front four. If that kind of help is going to come, it has to come soon, because the roster does not have many obvious places left to absorb another hit. [Read more 🡒]
