Where CeeDee Lamb And George Pickens Belong In NFL WR Rankings

Can the dynamic combination of CeeDee Lamb and George Pickens propel the Cowboys' offense to new heights?

Year two of CeeDee Lamb and George Pickens together is shaping up as one of the Cowboys’ most intriguing offensive storylines, and the early read around the league is clear: this is not a normal receiver pairing.

DallasCowboys.com staffer Patrik put it bluntly when asked where the duo stacks up. He said, “‘Tis a great question, it is.

In looking around the league, in both conferences I’m hard-pressed to find a more potent duo at WR than CeeDee Lamb and George Pickens. This isn’t a biased take, but rather the science of the situation.

Lamb and Pickens are not WR1 and WR2. They are two true WR1s that are also led by an All-Pro quarterback who, if not for a historically-bad defense in 2025, might’ve been in the MVP conversation (again).”

That’s the case for Dallas being near the top of the league, and Patrik didn’t stop there. He pointed to what Lamb already is - one of the best receivers in football - and what Pickens became in Dallas last season: a 1,400-plus-yard breakout with nine touchdowns, his first Pro Bowl selection and a Second-team All-Pro honor. Patrik stopped short of calling them the No. 1 duo, saying the sample size for Pickens is still smaller than some of the other elite tandems, but he still slotted Lamb and Pickens at No. 2, ahead of Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins.

Mickey was just as bullish. He said there’s no way to place them outside the top five, and he backed that up with the numbers from 2025.

Lamb made the Pro Bowl despite playing only 14 games and still posted 1,077 receiving yards. Pickens stepped up in Lamb’s absence and finished with career highs in catches, yards and touchdowns: 93 receptions, 1,429 receiving yards and nine scores.

Mickey also noted that only two other teams had two 1,000-yard receivers in 2025 - Detroit with Amon-Ra St. Brown and Jameson Williams, and Philadelphia with Devonta Smith and A.J.

Brown, who is no longer with the Eagles.

On the defensive side, Jonathan Bullard is one of the quieter additions who could matter more than people realize. Shane Taylor of Inside The Star called the veteran defensive end a potential key piece in the line rotation, especially with Dallas shifting to a base 3-4 under new defensive coordinator Christian Parker.

Bullard signed a one-year deal with the Cowboys in March and brings a long NFL resume with stops in Chicago, Arizona, Seattle, Atlanta, Minnesota and New Orleans. He played 15 games for the Saints in 2025, starting six, and finished with 26 tackles, four tackles for loss and two pass breakups. He’ll also reunite with Marcus Dixon, his former defensive line coach from Minnesota, where Bullard started all 17 games in 2024 and put up 41 tackles, seven tackles for loss, three pass breakups and a sack.

Taylor’s point was simple: Bullard is depth, but depth matters, and training camp will decide whether he can be trusted if injuries hit.

That same theme runs through the linebacker room, where Brian Martin of Blogging The Boys says the Cowboys’ 2026 hopes could swing on the health of DeMarvion Overshown. Overshown has flashed special ability in his three seasons, but two season-ending knee injuries have cost him 32 games. He heads into camp in the final year of his rookie contract projected as the starting middle linebacker, and Dallas doesn’t have much proven depth behind him.

Martin also highlighted Donovan Ezeiruaku as an honorable mention. The rookie showed enough last season to hint at a second-year jump, but he’s currently working back from an offseason torn labrum that required surgery.

That opened the door for first-round pick Malachi Lawrence to get some first-team reps in OTAs. Both are expected to help a pass rush that was largely absent a season ago, though expectations are higher for Ezeiruaku with a year of experience now under his belt.

Then there’s the backfield, where Mauricio Rodriguez of A to Z Sports says the league’s view of Javonte Williams points to a bigger offensive adjustment Dallas needs to make. The concern isn’t about effort or efficiency in the traditional sense. It’s about explosiveness and what Williams brings as a receiver.

Williams ranked 43rd in explosive play rate per SIS, and while he avoided negative plays well, he wasn’t a big-play threat. Rodriguez described him as more of a singles hitter than a slugger. As a pass catcher, the numbers were even less encouraging: 35 catches, only seven that moved the chains, 137 receiving yards, and poor marks among 51 running backs with at least 20 targets in EPA per target, yards per route run and success rate.

Rodriguez’s conclusion is that the Cowboys need to move toward a running back by committee approach. Miles Sanders’ early season-ending injury forced Williams into a three-down role last season, and he ended up with the seventh-highest snap percentage among NFL running backs.

But doing that again in 2026, Rodriguez argued, would cost Dallas pass-catching and big-play upside. The hope is that second-year back Jaydon Blue can emerge as a change of pace option, with his speed and explosiveness part of the reason the Cowboys drafted him in the first place.

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