One week before the start of the regular season, the Cowboys and Packers completed a landscape-altering trade. Micah Parsons will play out his second contract in Green Bay after talks with Dallas did not produce a deal.
Further details on the process which ultimately resulted in Parsons landing a record-breaking investment for non-quarterbacks have emerged. The four-time Pro Bowler and his camp spent a lengthy period without negotiations taking place, with owner Jerry Jones attempting to stick to the terms spoke about during the spring. Agent David Mulugheta was not present for that conversation, something which proved to be a central talking point in this saga.
In the aftermath of the trade, Parsons told NFL Network’s Jane Slater he and his camp went to the team in a bid to reengage on contract talks once reports emerged about a trade being possible in recent days. The two-time All-Pro said Dallas’ response was for him to commit to playing on his fifth-year option or to “leave.” During Thursday’s press conference, Jones confirmed (via colleague Mike Garafolo) that was the team’s stance leading up to the trade being finalized.
“We do have players that come in, and we totally respect it, that say, ‘I don’t feel comfortable talking about my contract. I’d like you to go through my agent,'” COO Stephen Jones said during the presser (via Garafolo). “And we do that respectfully. I mean, you’re not required to come in and negotiate the contract yourself. All the ones we’ve done like that are those who request to come in and visit with Jerry or myself. That’s the only ones we’ve done that way.”
Among Jerry Jones’ many comments on the situation was the claim he offered to make Parsons the top earner for non-quarterbacks during the unofficial spring contract talks. A report from yesterday indicated the deal discussed was five years in length and averaged $40.5MM per season. The Athletic’s Jeff Howe confirms (subscription required) those were indeed the terms presented by Dallas. In the end, Parsons landed $47MM on average – along with massive guarantee figures – on a four-year Packers extension. Term length is often a point of contention regarding Cowboys contract talks, with the team preferring longer pacts.
As the Dak Prescott and CeeDee Lamb deals indicated last offseason, though, Jones and Co. have been willing to compromise with four-year accords. That did not prove to be the case with Parsons. As a result, the 26-year-old is on the move just before Week 1. The deteriorating relationship between team and player in this case included a trade request being issued on August 1, something which is commonplace during extension talks. Jerry and Stephen Jones added during the press conference (via NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport) they never felt as if Parsons genuinely wanted to leave, though.
Albert Breer of Sports Illustrated notes the length of Dallas’ offer appears to have been an issue. He adds the Penn State product’s behavior shifted over the course of the summer as this situation played out; Parsons attended walkthroughs and team meetings but did not take part in on-field drills during training camp. His decision to lay on medical table during Dallas’ final preseason contest became a talking point (and was immediately followed by a meeting with head coach Brian Schottenheimer). Jerry Jones noted that episode did not impact the decision to move forward with a trade.
“We’ve certainly got a new coaching staff and a third of all the players are new,” Jones said (via Calvin Watkins of the Dallas Morning News) when reflecting on the Parsons trade and the Cowboys’ 2025 prospects. “And obviously there is freshness, we’ll use the word new on that basis. We have the highest-paid player in the NFL at quarterback and we made that commitment last year and we’re proud we made it. It had everything to do with this decision. It gives us every opportunity with Dak Prescott, Lamb and the base that we got to win now.”
Observers are skeptical about Dallas’ defense improving in the short term without Parsons in the fold, although the inclusion of defensive tackle Kenny Clark in the package sent from Green Bay will help the Cowboys’ run defense. The fate of the two first-round picks Dallas also received will be key in telling the final story of this trade. For now, all parties are positioned to move forward after a last-minute effort to work out a Cowboys extension was shut down.
Jerry Jones is an idiot.
I’m completely shocked that the trade happened and I don’t like the Cowboys. I’m even more surprised it was too an NFC rival that’s more shocking. I guess it could have gotten worse if trade happened within the division.
This is the best possible outcome for my Cowboys…
Jerry was never gonna pay Parsons 47 mill per…and he shouldn’t.
He offered Parsons a deal that would’ve made him the highest paid Non-QB in the NFL…
That’s a Fact…Parsons took that to his agent and his agent said he could get more…
That’s not Jerry’s fault…go get more then…and they did…with another team…
For Dallas to get a run stopper and Two 1st rd picks this close to the s EA season starting is a win for Jerry and the Cowboys…
Parsons can go enjoy his 47 mill per and his podcast in GB now…👋
At least Cowboys got first round picks. Mavericks got zero for Luka, which is more insane
They got Cooper Flagg bc the league wanted Doncic in LA.
If you think the best case scenario is losing a pass rusher on a hall of fame trajectory going into his age 26 season for two presumably late first round picks and a good not great defensive tackle about to turn 30, I think maybe you need to dream bigger.
@oooof. It might be alright if they hit on the picks. Most of the problem was Dallas needed to spread the money out. They most likely will get picks in the 15 range. Packers will be later, but it’s manageable.
Go check out this “Hall of Famer” stats in the playoffs…in fact all big games…
Then get back to me and let me know if we let go a “Hall of Famer “
First DLaw now Parsons next Diggs…
All No Shows in Playoff games…
Good Riddance!!!!
He’s absolutely on a hall of fame trajectory through four seasons. Lots of elite pass rushers don’t put up big sack totals in big games because they’re being schemed against and double teamed. Chris Jones only has 3.5 sacks in 22 playoff games. It’s not like it’s because he’s been letting down the Chiefs. He sure opened up room for Frank Clark.
Parsons is worth way more than Prescott. Dead-Money Prescott’s deal was always going to cripple the franchise. You don’t pay the 13th best QB the most money in league history then field super bowl winning teams. You’d have to hit all-pros on a bunch of low round draft picks. It just doesn’t happen with the kind of frequency required to overcome that level of a cap albatross. Cowboys did this to themselves with years of cap mismanagement. But since the NFL rewards incompetence with high draft picks, they’ll be able to compete again in 5 years when Jones is dead and they have a new franchise QB they drafted at the top of the draft. Enjoy the flaming wreckage until then.
Yeah, Arch will be ready to take over for Prescott by then….
Jerry effed this up bc of his good ole boy ego, often an issue with old oil money billionaires.
Parsons got exactly what her wanted, traded to a contender from a maybe playoff team, highest paid contract for a non QB and a huge win in the media.
His agent looks like a genius and good ole Jerry now has to deal with him with Pickens which will not go well for Jerry.
Meanwhile, the Eagles are going to clobber the Cowboys on Thursday, nobody will forget this terrible deal and the Packers look like contenders for a while.
Yeah Jerry did a great job. Just like our President is a stable genius, spin it any way you want, but Jerry ole country boy routine got worked by two more sophisticated and competent people, Parsons and his agent.
But let me be the first to congratulate the Cowboys….How bout them Cowboy!!!
Parsons wanted a record breaking contract. He got it. He requested a trade. And he got it. I think he didn’t believe Jerry would ever trade him though. But Parsons got all he asked for. Hope he enjoys the frozen tundra.
Trading your money for a scratch-off ticket is not the same as trading money for money. Both of those picks will be in the mid- 20s. I don’t mind them trading whomever, but had they done this trade in March, then they could have drafted a player that can impact the roster this season. The Cowboys chose to pay the QB and WR instead of the defensive player. Time will tell.
The fans have to hope Clark will play better than last year though. He will get the double teams Parsons got and Ezeiruaku and Fowler have to step up. Kneeland as well.
I’m not a Dallas fan, but I just can’t see how alienating your franchise’s best player, to the point you had to trade him, is the best possible outcome for your Cowboys.
Yes, Jerry made an offer to Micah- but it wasn’t a valid offer because he tried to circumvent dealing with Micah’s agent. You cannot do that. The simple, easy fix at that point would be to call the agent, apologize, and work to get a deal done. Again, Jerry didn’t do that.
It isn’t Micah’s job to take deals to his agent. The whole reason you pay an agent is so you don’t have to deal with negotiations, and they bring the deals to you. It’s a system that every single team in professional sports, sans the Cowboys, seems to understand.
As for the trade itself, Dallas took a huge L. Clark is a good player, but he’s not Micah- he doesn’t generate pass rush. I’d argue Dallas’s defense went from below average to potentially in the discussion as the worst in the league. Due to that defense, I think they’ll finish last in the NFC East.
Sure, they got the picks, but those will be near the end of the round. With Micah, Green Bay is in the Superbowl favorite conversation. You need to scout well, develop well, and hope for a bit of luck to draft a player that produces half as much as Micah at that point in the draft.
I’m not sure why the season even needs to be played. Give the Packers the trophy! It’s already named for their former coach. Just a shame this couldn’t have been done back in April while the draft was in Green Bay. We could have had an explosive amount of births by the end of January in the state of Wisconsin. Now let’s enjoy the Packers going 17 wins in a row.
If Love can stay healthy, they will be difficult to deal with. Lots of young talented players on the Packers.
20 wins in a row.
Hopefully, the Cowboys learn from this. If its a special talent, lock him up as soon as he is eligible for his second contract. Players will put the pressure on to avoid the franchise tag.
They didn’t learn from Dak or CeeDee prior to this, so I doubt it.
You’d hope the most valuable franchise in sports would have some idea of contract strategy and business.
I genuinely would love to know what it would take for a segment of NFL fans to just say, ‘yeah my team messed up.’ Between the insistence that the Bengals weren’t terrible, and now the claims that it was somehow good for the Cowboys to get rid of maybe the best defensive player in football, I wonder how bad a team’s decisions could be and their fans would still defend them. This summer has felt like an alternate dimension at times with what fans are seemingly cool with, and I genuinely don’t understand.
“We do have players that come in, and we totally respect it, that say, ‘I don’t feel comfortable talking about my contract. I’d like you to go through my agent,’” COO Stephen Jones said during the presser (via Garafolo). “And we do that respectfully.”
From most of the accounts I read, I thought Parsons had made it very clear he wanted his agent to negotiate the contract.