The Dallas Cowboys did enough this offseason to look different. ESPN apparently thought different still wasn’t good enough.
In the network’s latest round of NFL offseason grades, Dallas landed at a C+. That’s a middling mark for a team that has spent the last two offseasons dealing with contract drama, limited free-agent activity, a Mike McCarthy contract year, and a Brian Schottenheimer setup that came with a defensive coordinator the front office already knew well.
Compared with that stretch, this year was clearly more intentional. ESPN just didn’t buy that it went far enough.
The biggest headline for Dallas was keeping wide receiver George Pickens on the franchise tag, and only the franchise tag. ESPN listed that as both the biggest move and the move it liked.
The logic was simple: Pickens is coming off an exceptional 2025 season, and locking him in now would mean paying him at the peak of his value. The concern, though, is the same one that followed him out of Pittsburgh - the idea that he could wear out his welcome again, even with Mike Tomlin there at the time.
The move ESPN disliked most was the Cowboys trading defensive tackle Osa Odighizuwa. That deal, in ESPN’s view, was the wrong call among Dallas’ interior linemen.
The Cowboys had already used some of the extra draft capital from the Micah Parsons trade to bring in Quinnen Williams during the season, which created a surplus with Kenny Clark and Odighizuwa. Dallas sent Odighizuwa to San Francisco for a third-round pick, but ESPN argued that Odighizuwa was the better fit to keep because he is younger, cheaper, and arguably better than Clark at this stage.
It also suggested Dallas may have avoided moving Clark because of the optics after he was part of the Parsons deal.
That Parsons trade kept showing up in the Cowboys’ offseason because the effects were still rolling forward. It showed up in their pursuit of Maxx Crosby, who stayed in Las Vegas. It also showed up in the decision to trade a fourth-round pick for edge rusher Rashan Gary, which ESPN called an overpay given Gary’s current level relative to his pre-torn-ACL form and his $16 million per year salary.
Dallas also tried to reshape the defense after finishing last in defensive EPA per play last season. The team replaced Matt Eberflus with Christian Parker, who had been the Eagles’ defensive passing game coordinator and secondary coach. The front office then added safety Caleb Downs and edge rusher Malachi Lawrence in the first round of the draft, signed safety Jalen Thompson, and traded for linebacker Dee Winters.
That collection of moves is why not everyone sees this offseason the same way ESPN does. The argument for Dallas is that the team was finally acting with purpose, even if some of the damage was self-inflicted by earlier decisions.
Trading Odighizuwa, for example, also helped the Cowboys get Jaishawn Barham, since they didn’t have a third-round pick when the offseason began. That missing pick traced back to last year’s George Pickens trade with Pittsburgh, which is exactly the kind of move that can create a chain reaction months later.
There’s also the matter of Thompson, which ESPN brushed past in a way that didn’t sit right with everyone. His deal was the largest free-agent contract Dallas has handed out since Brandon Carr in 2012, so it was hardly a minor addition.
The bigger picture is pretty straightforward. Nobody is pretending the Cowboys suddenly look flawless, or that a Super Bowl run is sitting there waiting in plain sight.
But after years of messy decision-making, this offseason looked more deliberate. A C+ suggests Dallas was merely adequate.
The more convincing read is that the Cowboys finally started climbing out of the hole.
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What makes Flournoy worth watching now is how much room there still seems to be for the growth to continue. He has looked sharper in spring practices, with more confidence in the offense and a better grasp of the playbook, and the numbers from his target profile suggest there is substance behind the rise. He was productive when the ball came his way and showed a knack for turning catches into extra yards, which is the sort of skill set that can earn a bigger role if the momentum carries into camp. [Read more 🡒]
Cowboys Camp Clues Already Point To Two Huge Answers
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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 🡒]
