The Cowboys’ running back picture is one of the few real unknowns hanging over their offense heading into 2026, and that uncertainty is exactly why Joe Mixon has surfaced as a possible fit.
Dallas has its starter in place with Javonte Williams, but the backup job is wide open. Malik Davis, Jaydon Blue and Phil Mafah are all in the mix, yet none of them brings much certainty.
Davis is the most experienced of the group, but he has only 90 carries and eight catches across four seasons. Blue and Mafah are still unproven.
That’s the opening Fantasy Sports On SI’s Daniel Outerbridge pointed to when he named the Cowboys among the best landing spots for Mixon in free agency. Outerbridge framed it through a fantasy lens, but the football logic is straightforward: Dallas could use a proven veteran in a room full of question marks.
"With Javonte Williams as the unquestioned starter in Big D, there is questionable talent behind him on the depth chart," Outerbridge said "Malik Davis and Jaydon Blue will compete for the backup job, but both players have limited experience. They combined for 128 attempts, 540 rushing yards and 4 TDs."
"Signing Mixon would stabilize the position and give the Cowboys a veteran presence with RB1 upside," Outerbridge added. "They need veteran stability and someone to mentor the younger RBs, and Mixon could be the man for the job."
Mixon has not played a snap in the NFL since 2024 after missing all of last season because of injury. The details around that injury have stayed murky. He was placed on the non-football injury list last offseason with an unspecified foot issue and never came off it, and no new information surfaced over the course of the season.
The Houston Texans cut Mixon this offseason after he requested his release, and while his health remains unclear, his request suggests he intends to keep playing in 2026.
If he is healthy, Mixon still offers plenty. He can help as both a runner and a receiver, with the power and agility to handle volume and the hands and route-running to contribute in the passing game. He’s also used to carrying a heavy load, which would make him a natural option to spell Williams, step in if Williams gets hurt again, or help Dallas protect a lead while keeping Williams fresh.
The Cowboys already showed last year that they’re willing to add to the backfield, signing both Williams and Miles Sanders in 2025. So the idea of bringing in another veteran wouldn’t be out of character, especially with the current state of the room.
Still, the team seems intent on giving Blue a real shot in 2026. Head coach Brian Schottenheimer made that clear when talking about the young back.
"He's going to be a huge part of what we want to do," head coach Brian Schottenheimer said of Blue, "but he's got to continue doing his part, which he's doing right now."
"There’s nothing that would make me and the offensive staff more ecstatic than for Jaydon (Blue) to take the step we hope he takes because of the 1-2 punch he and Javonte could potentially have and Jaydon’s ability to hurt you catching the football out of the backfield," Schottenheimer added.
For now, Dallas looks committed to letting the current competition play out through training camp. But if the Cowboys decide they need more security behind Williams, Mixon would be a name to watch - assuming he’s still available and healthy enough to go.
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Kneeland was just 24 when he died, and the news is especially sobering for a player whose NFL career had only just begun to take shape. His family donated his brain tissue for the examination, and the foundation has emphasized that the diagnosis should not be read as a cause of death or a proven suicide risk factor, a distinction that matters even as the football world keeps confronting the long-term toll of the game. [Read more 🡒]
