Cowboys Have A High-Upside Tight End Decision Brewing Behind Ferguson

Can undrafted rookie Michael Trigg overcome past concerns to seize a crucial role on the Cowboys' tight end roster?

Every summer, the Cowboys tend to uncover one undrafted rookie who starts pulling extra attention from fans. In 2026, that player is Baylor tight end Michael Trigg, and the buzz around him is louder than it usually is for a first-year free agent.

Trigg brings the kind of body type and skill set teams chase at tight end now. He’s long-armed, athletic and best known for what he can do as a receiver.

Among the 2026 tight end prospects, he was one of the more dangerous pass-catching options and put together one of the class’s better highlight reels. Even so, a deep tight end group and concerns about his makeup pushed him out of the draft.

Dallas moved fast anyway, giving him about $280k in guaranteed money to land him.

Those concerns are real and they follow him from school to school. At Ole Miss, before he transferred to Baylor in 2024, he served a one-game suspension.

He was suspended again for one game in his first year in Waco. Last season, he was also involved in a sideline argument with Baylor’s athletic director, reportedly over a clothing violation.

On top of those headline-grabbing moments, Trigg was also said to have had issues at times with practice habits and academics.

But there was growth in 2025, and that’s what keeps him interesting. Trigg turned in his best college season with 50 catches for 694 yards and six touchdowns.

He earned First-Team All-Big 12 honors and was one of three finalists for the John Mackey Award, given to the nation’s best tight end that season. He’s also 24, which makes him an older rookie, and the hope in Dallas is that he’s finally matured enough to turn his talent into something real.

His contract reflects that the Cowboys saw enough to invest. Trigg has three years left and a 2026 cap hit of $896k. The guaranteed money is the key number here, and it stands out even more when stacked against the $105k WR Jordan Hudson got in his Cowboys deal.

The path to a roster spot is there, but it won’t be handed to him. Jake Ferguson is locked in as the starter, and beyond that the depth chart is wide open. Brevyn Spann-Ford is the current favorite for TE2 after edging Luke Schoonmaker by the end of last season, though the gap was small enough to keep the summer battle alive.

That matters for Trigg. If Spann-Ford keeps the job, Schoonmaker becomes easier for Dallas to move on from.

He’s on an expiring contract, turns 28 in September and could free up about $1.6 million in cap space if released, money that would help the team’s rollover for 2027. If Trigg can prove he’s ready to contribute in the regular season, special teams included, he gives the Cowboys another reason to keep him over the former second-round pick.

There’s also the possibility that Dallas carries only three tight ends, though that’s not a given. A fourth spot would be hard to justify with FB Hunter Luepke still on the roster, unless Trigg can offer something as a receiver, perhaps as a big slot.

And with C.J. Goodwin no longer taking up a 53-man roster spot, Dallas has some flexibility to use that space however it wants.

For Trigg, the next few weeks are about more than just catching passes in camp. He needs to show the Cowboys he can handle the professional side of the job, clean up the doubts that have followed him, and keep flashing the talent that made him such an intriguing UDFA in the first place. He should get plenty of preseason snaps, and he’s likely to stay a talking point right up until final cuts.

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