Jaydon Blue Just Made The Cowboys RB2 Battle More Complicated

Jaydon Blue is determined to prove his growth and skill set in the competitive race for the Dallas Cowboys' second running back spot.

Jaydon Blue has already learned the hard way that nothing is guaranteed in the Cowboys’ backfield.

Dallas got a major boost from Javonte Williams last season, and with Williams now locked in on a three-year deal, the bigger question is who settles into the RB2 role. Blue was supposed to be the easy answer.

The 2025 fifth-round pick out of Texas came in with plenty of buzz, especially as a local name with a chance to make an immediate imprint. Instead, his rookie season turned into a struggle.

Blue didn’t hide from that reality when he spoke to The Athletic.

“I didn’t start off like I should have. Maybe if it was not practicing the right way or just on a maturity level, I think I wasn’t really there, Blue said. “But just learning from all the vets, having the offseason that I’ve had, I think I’m ready to go."

The numbers back up how uneven things were. Blue appeared in only five games and finished with 129 rushing yards and one touchdown.

More than half of that yardage - 64 yards - came in the season finale against the New York Giants. He was active in four straight games beginning with his Week 5 debut, but that stretch still produced only 22 carries and one catch for five yards.

By the Cowboys’ own view, and by Blue’s admission, the rookie year was a development year whether anyone wanted it to be or not. That makes this offseason a key one.

Blue has had time to reset, and the team believes he’s made real progress. He also said he had honest talks with head coach Brian Schottenheimer, and a full offseason should only help him settle in.

At 5-foot-9 and 196 pounds, Blue brings speed - he ran a 4.38 40-yard dash - and the kind of burst that can flip a drive in a hurry. The path to RB2, though, won’t be simple. He’s competing with Malik Davis and Phil Mafah for that spot.

What could give Blue an edge is his passing-game upside. In his junior year at Texas, he posted 368 receiving yards and six touchdowns on 42 catches, and that part of his game still hasn’t been fully tapped by the Cowboys. If that ability starts showing up in Dallas, it would fit nicely behind Williams.

For now, Blue’s challenge is straightforward: carry the confidence from the offseason into real games. If he does, the Cowboys’ backfield could look very different.

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