There’s a lot to like about the Cowboys heading into 2026, but the spotlight still lands on Dak Prescott. He’s respected around the league, he’s got a strong supporting cast, and Dallas looks built to chase the NFC East. Still, this feels like the season that will define how Prescott’s career is remembered.
That’s a wild place for a quarterback who was the 135th pick in the 2016 NFL Draft and walked into a league that had already sent Jared Goff, Carson Wentz, Paxton Lynch, Christian Hackenberg, Jacoby Brissett, Cody Kessler and Connor Cook off the board ahead of him. Prescott turned that fourth-round gamble into immediate production. He led Dallas to a 13-3 record as a rookie, won AP Offensive Rookie of the Year and made the Pro Bowl right away.
Since then, the résumé has kept growing, but so has the criticism. Prescott has made three more Pro Bowls, in 2018, 2023 and last year, yet the playoff results have never matched the regular-season reputation.
In 10 NFL seasons, he’s 2-5 in the postseason. He beat the Seahawks 24-22 in 2018 before the Cowboys fell 30-22 to the Rams.
In 2022, Dallas rolled past the Buccaneers, then got knocked off by the 49ers.
Now the stage is set for a season with very little room for excuses. The Cowboys have a good enough offensive line, a quality run game and what might be the league’s best receiver pairing in CeeDee Lamb and George Pickens.
Defensively, there’s upside in the pass rush, strength in the middle against the run and a secondary that could end up above average. Add in Brandon Aubrey and what could be the league’s best special teams unit, and the roster looks ready to win.
That’s why the pressure is so heavy on Prescott. The Cowboys could win 14 games, Prescott could pile up 4,500-plus passing yards and 35-plus touchdowns, and he could even win NFL Most Valuable Player. If Dallas still fails to reach at least the NFC Championship Game, he’d take the heat anyway.
Prescott is also about to turn 33, and the clock is starting to tick louder. He still has the kind of team around him that can help him change the conversation, and he’s shown plenty of times that he can finish games when the Cowboys have the ball and a chance to win. He has 19 fourth-quarter comebacks and 26 game-winning drives, including three last season.
ESPN ranked Prescott No. 6 among quarterbacks entering this year, and the praise from around the league was strong. “Prescott was a fixture in the voting, appearing on nearly 75% of ballots with a healthy number of top-five votes,” Jeremy Fowler wrote.
“In fact, a gulf existed between him and the seventh spot on the list. This is long overdue for Prescott, who has mostly been a fringe top-10 QB on these lists.
“He's a true, acute progression passer,” an NFL coordinator said. “There are only so many of those types.
He can read the whole field, from pre- to post-snap. He's just really a good commander of the offense.”
“I think he can use his athleticism even more and run for first downs,” said an AFC offensive coach, referring to Prescott's modest 177 rushing yards last season. “That would give [the Cowboys] a new dimension.”
Even with all that, Prescott still needs a playoff moment that sticks. A second postseason win in the same year would help.
So would the top seed, because that would give Dallas home-field advantage and a shorter path to the NFC title game. His regular-season home record is 47-21-1, but he’s 1-3 at home in the playoffs.
Tony Romo knows exactly how that kind of unfinished business feels. “I'm not a guy with big regrets, I guess you could say,” Romo said.
“The only regret I guess I would have is that my job was to bring a Super Bowl to Dallas. And I didn't do it.
So that always sticks with me a little bit because you give your whole body, heart, soul, everything into it, and you just wanted that for all the fans, for the Joneses, for everybody that you're around.
“So that one always sticks with me a little bit just because I had that opportunity and just wasn't able to do it. So that part of it kind of still sits there.”
That’s the shadow hanging over Prescott now. He may still have three, four or five years left as Dallas’ starter, but this is the year that matters most.
He’s dealt with injuries, he still looks like a quarterback in his prime, and this might be the last season he gets to throw to both Lamb and Pickens. If Prescott is going to reshape his legacy, the time is now.
In Other News...
Cowboys Fans Are Losing It Over This Dak Offseason Photo
A viral offseason image of Dak Prescott has been making the rounds online, and it has plenty of Cowboys fans doing a double take. The picture shows Prescott looking dramatically bigger than usual, the kind of photo that can light up social media in a hurry when a franchise quarterback is trying to reset the tone for a new season.
Prescott has already made clear what he wants the standard to be in 2026, saying the playoffs are the minimum goal after Dallas missed out the last two years. There is still a long way to go before the real test arrives, but the Cowboys will get an immediate stage when they open against the Giants on Sunday Night Football in Week 1. [Read more 🡒]
Cowboys Suddenly Pulled Into A Dak Rumor That Feels Ridiculous
A fresh quarterback rumor has nudged the Cowboys into an uncomfortable spot, even if the fit looks shaky on paper. The chatter centers on a former high draft pick who has already seen his role change in Indianapolis, where the Colts made a different move at quarterback and left the door open for plenty of speculation around what comes next.
For Dallas, the timing makes the whole thing feel more like noise than a real possibility. Dak Prescott is still the starter, and the Cowboys already have depth behind him, which makes a trade for another quarterback hard to justify unless the market shifts in a hurry. Still, once a team gets mentioned in a rumor like this, it tends to linger until the next move somewhere else finally clears it up. [Read more 🡒]
Cowboys Receiver Debate Just Took An Unexpected Turn
Stefon Diggs is suddenly back on the market after his release by the New England Patriots, and with training camps only two weeks away, his next landing spot has become one of the more interesting questions around the league. The veteran receiver has also been making a case for himself in a way that naturally invites comparison, especially for teams trying to sort out where he would fit in an already crowded passing game.
For Dallas, the answer starts with CeeDee Lamb at the top of the chart and George Pickens right behind him, which makes any Diggs conversation more about fit than need. Pickens has already established himself with a huge season and a first Pro Bowl nod, while Lamb remains the clear centerpiece, so the Cowboys would have to decide whether Diggs is the kind of addition who changes the room or simply adds another name to an already complicated debate. [Read more 🡒]
