Cowboys Remain Quiet in Offseason, Despite Jerry Jones’ ‘All-In’ Claim

Earlier this year, Dallas Cowboys owner and general manager Jerry Jones declared that the team would go “all-in” during the offseason. However, the offseason has been relatively uneventful so far, with the Cowboys making few significant moves. The team has not been particularly active in the free agent market, and the roster already features a number of players with sizable salary cap hits. The franchise is also weighing lucrative contract extensions for some of their key players. Jones recently seemed to place blame on the representatives for certain players who are extension eligible, saying, “If you’ve got trouble with when the timing is around here, it’s because I’m not ready to go.”

Quarterback Dak Prescott, star wide receiver CeeDee Lamb, and linebacker Micah Parsons are among the star players in line for big paydays. Prescott has been the starting quarterback for the past eight seasons, and his contract expires after the 2024 season. He recently hinted that negotiations with the Cowboys have yet to kick off, but he added that he and Jones were “aligned” about where things stood.

Meanwhile, Lamb is set to play in the upcoming season under his fifth-year option. He could receive the franchise tag designation next year. Parsons, a three-time All-Pro, remains under his rookie contract but is eligible for the franchise tag after the 2025 season.

Jones expressed interest in seeing “some more action” as it relates to the contracts. “You may be working on [contracts] and not moving anything but your eyebrows,” Jones said. “Who in the world would think that we’re not working on it? I work on it. It pops up at 2 in the morning sometimes. What you’re actually questioning is why don’t you have something done and negotiated and put in the drawer? Well, we’d like to see some more leaves fall. We’d like to see some more action.”

Lamb and his agent could be waiting to see the terms of a contract Justin Jefferson potentially ends up getting from the Minnesota Vikings.

“You don’t think the representatives of Jefferson and CeeDee and [Cincinnati’s Ja’Marr Chase] aren’t talking? You don’t think they got their eye on something really big? Please,” Stephen Jones, the Cowboys executive vice president, said. “They’re not ready to come in here. Same thing with Micah. Same thing with Dak. It’s a little cat and mouse. And total respect for them.”

The Cowboys watched star offensive lineman Tyron Smith, running back Tony Pollard, and center Tyler Biadasz sign with other teams this offseason.

Jerry cited the salary cap restraints that exist within the NFL when he discussed the inevitable departures of star players over the years. “Dak has enjoyed, in his career that we’re proud of, some of the best supporting casts that you could put around him,” Jerry Jones said. “To move forward, we will have to diminish that. That’s a fact. That’s the rules. That’s our challenge and to make it work out: Dak as the quarterback of the Cowboys. I don’t even have a blink on that one.”

The Cowboys’ relatively quiet offseason so far stands in contrast to Jones’ earlier declarations of an “all-in” approach. The team faces challenges in balancing its salary cap constraints with the need to retain its star players. Negotiations over contract extensions for Prescott, Lamb, and Parsons will be key developments to watch in the coming months.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top