Ryan Flournoy didn’t sound like a player worried about survival this spring. He sounded like someone who knows exactly where he fits.
That matters for the Cowboys, because Dallas already had enough firepower to keep its offense humming last season even while the defense struggled. Dak Prescott had to be sharp every week, and CeeDee Lamb and George Pickens gave him two of the league’s best receiving threats.
But the Cowboys’ passing game wasn’t built on those three alone. Flournoy became part of the story, too.
He opened last season by getting cut during roster trims, then worked his way past Jalen Tolbert to become WR3 by midseason. By the time the year ended, he had fans asking how far his game could go. Now, after standing out in spring practices, he looks set up for another jump.
“I think I'm neutral,” Flournoy said, via DallasCowboys.com. “I'm not anxious, I'm just out there playing freely.
I know what's on the play sheet, I know the calls, I know what play to run. For me, I'm not out there thinking, I'm just out there executing.”
That’s the kind of line that should catch the attention of the rest of the league. A receiver who’s no longer trying to simply avoid mistakes can start playing with real freedom, and that’s when the athleticism and instincts take over. For Flournoy, the game seems to be slowing down.
The Cowboys have moved past the version of Flournoy who was just trying to hang on. He’s now established behind Lamb and Pickens, and the comfort level is obvious. That’s a dangerous development for defenses.
His 2025 numbers won’t jump off the page at first glance: 40 catches, 475 yards and four touchdowns. But those numbers look a lot different when you remember where he started, how he entered the year, and who he was competing with for touches. He was not on the initial 53-man roster, he was buried when he returned, and he was working in an offense led by Lamb and Pickens.
Even then, he produced. Flournoy was reliable in traffic, strong after the catch and efficient when Prescott looked his way. He finished with a 111.8 passer rating when targeted, and 72 percent of his receptions moved the chains.
Nobody is handing Flournoy a crown based on one season. But if the Cowboys really do have a legitimate WR2 operating as their third option, that’s a problem for everyone else in the NFL.
In Other News...
Cowboys Camp Clues Already Point To Two Huge Answers
Junes OTAs and mandatory minicamp did not settle every Cowboys question, but they did sketch out a few important trends before training camp opens July 29. George Pickens has been in the building and working with Dak Prescott, while Tyler Guyton has been getting the first-team looks at left tackle, a strong sign the Cowboys are leaning toward him as the starter. On the defensive side, DeMarvion Overshown has handled the green dot work in practice, and the secondary continues to sort through several moving pieces.
There is still real competition in the back end, though, especially at the boundary corner spot opposite DaRon Bland, where Shavon Revel, Cobie Durant and Caelen Carson are all in the mix. Caleb Downs has also added more layers to his role, with work at slot cornerback, safety and on special teams, which suggests the Cowboys are still figuring out where his best fit is. Camp should bring more clarity, but for now the early clues already point toward a few answers Dallas was hoping to find. [Read more 🡒]
Giants Spent Big And Still Handed Dak A Week 1 Opening
The Giants have spent heavily this offseason, nearly $200 million by one count, with Paulson Adebo headlining the upgrades on the back end. Even so, the cornerback room still looks like a work in progress, and that matters because Dallas is set up to test it early. Adebo is viewed as the top corner, but he missed five games last season and the coverage numbers that followed him raise obvious questions about how steady that side of the field will be.
The bigger issue is what happens across from him, where the Giants still have not settled on a starter. Greg Newsome II, Colton Hood and Deonte Banks are all in the mix, which leaves New York trying to sort out a key spot right as Dak Prescott and the Cowboys' offense come into view. For a defense that has already invested so much, the opener has a way of revealing whether the spending bought stability or just created a different kind of uncertainty. [Read more 🡒]
