BOOM! The Dallas Cowboys are about to drop a nuclear franchise tag on star wideout George Pickens, locking him in for a whopping $28 million in 2026. But with ZERO long-term talks and the same agent who torched the Micah Parsons deal, is America’s Team staring down another explosive breakup?
The Trade That Shook the NFL
Last May, Jerry Jones pulled off a heist: snatching Pickens from the Pittsburgh Steelers for a 2026 third-rounder and a 2027 fifth. The doubters laughed. Then Pickens erupted — 93 catches, 1,429 yards, 9 touchdowns, his first Pro Bowl, and second-team All-Pro honors. Suddenly, the kid with maturity questions in Pittsburgh looked like Dallas’ next superstar alongside CeeDee Lamb.
Tag Looms as Contract Talks Stall
Despite Jerry and Stephen Jones swearing they want Pickens forever — and Dak Prescott and Lamb begging him to stay — no extension talks have even started. That leaves one brutal option: the franchise tag. Fully guaranteed $28 million, but zero job security beyond 2026. Players HATE it. And for Dallas, that massive one-year cap hit cripples their ability to fix a roster full of holes.
History Screams Trouble
- Dez Bryant got his deal in 2015 at the absolute last second.
- Dalton Schultz and Tony Pollard played on the tag… then walked in free agency.
- Micah Parsons? Same agent (David Mulugheta), fractured talks, hold-in, and eventually traded to Green Bay.
Pickens hasn’t been in Dallas long enough for Jerry’s famous player-to-owner chats to kick in. If he skips camp without signing the tender, no fines — but massive risk to his next payday.
Could Pickens Force His Way Out?
Absolutely. Sign the tag and demand a trade (remember Joey Galloway?). Or watch the Cowboys rescind it like Carolina did with Josh Norman. A long-term deal would start around $30M+ per year — maybe even topping Lamb’s $34M average. But will Jerry pay his No. 2 receiver like a No. 1 when Lamb is already the highest-paid Cowboy ever?
The Heart of the Storm
Pickens finally found stability and exploded with Dak Prescott throwing him the ball. In Pittsburgh he battled quarterback chaos; in Dallas he became a star. Now that dream hangs by a thread. One wrong move and the Cowboys lose another homegrown (well, acquired) legend.
July 15 is the deadline. Will Jerry open the vault, or are we watching the next superstar walk — or get shipped — out of Dallas? The drama is just getting started.









