The latest buzz around the Dallas Cowboys all in one place.
Myles Garrett recently requested a trade from the Browns and Micah Parsons would be ecstatic to play along side him in Dallas.
Parsons, 25, would “100%” take less money on his new contract in order for Dallas to trade and extend Garrett, who is 29. That would give the Cowboys the NFL’s sacks leader (Garrett with 60.0 sacks) and the league’s fifth-ranked player in sacks (Parsons with 52.5) since Parsons entered the NFL as the 12th overall pick in the 2021 NFL Draft.
Dallas owner and general manager Jerry Jones would need to promptly extend Garrett shortly after acquiring him via trade because the four-time First Team All-Pro doesn’t have any guaranteed salary remaining on the final two seasons, 2025 and 2026, of his current five-year, $125 million contract. Parsons is willing to take a smaller amount of money on his first non-rookie deal contract in the NFL to play alongside Garrett along the Dallas defensive line with one catch: he needs to be making slightly more than Garrett.
“Oh, 100%. Yeah, 100%” Parsons said when asked if he would take pay cut for the Cowboys to acquire Garrett. “Will he take less too?... We would definitely have to make that happen. ... As long as he [Jerry Jones] let me be a little higher [paid] than him [Garrett]. ... I’m younger. ... He [Garrett] want to be with us too. ... I do alright [off the field as a Cowboy]. I do [want to win].”
Boise State RB Ashton Jeanty talked to the media about the possibility of being drafted by the Dallas Cowboys.
“I think it would be dope, a lot of great people there, a lot of talented players,” Jeanty said about what it would mean to be a Cowboy. “Potentially to be a part of that, I think that would be a great opportunity.”
Jeanty’s football journey has taken him all over the world, from learning the game at a field on a military base in Italy to finishing as the runner up for the Heisman Trophy after an electric season in Boise, Idaho after running for 2,601 yards and 29 touchdowns in 2024.
In between that time, Jeanty was a standout player at Frisco Lone Star high school, a 15-minute drive from the Cowboys’ headquarters. Simply put, having a chance to return home and play for the Cowboys would be an opportunity that Jeanty would relish the entire time.
“It would be special, growing up in Frisco, spending a lot of time out there, I think it would be cool to have the star on my helmet again,” Jeanty said. “Playing for Lone...