In the aftermath of the Micah Parsons trade, a number of details have emerged with respect to other potential partners for a swap. Discussions took place between the Cowboys and Jets, but it quickly became clear no agreement would be feasible. 
[RELATED: Eagles Made Top Parsons Offer Amidst AFC Interest]
During an appearance on ESPN 880 AM in New York, Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said (via ESPN’s Rich Cimini) he contacted the Jets about Parsons. His asking price as part of a package from New York general manager Darren Mougey would have included defensive tackle Quinnen Williams. That comes as little surprise since Dallas specifically targeted an addition at that position in the event Parsons were to be dealt.
As one would expect, Mougey and the Jets let it be known in short order no trade would be taking place. Williams, 27, has three Pro Bowls and one first-team All-Pro nod to his name. The former No. 3 pick is well established as a focal point of the team’s defense, and his contract runs through 2027. With $64MM in outstanding compensation, Williams would have been considerably more expensive for the Cowboys than their eventual acquisition (Kenny Clark).
A major reason why the Packers ultimately swung the Parsons trade, of course, was their willingness to make a record-breaking commitment via an extension. The All-Pro edge rusher landed $47MM in AAV on a four-year pact, the highest figure ever for a non-quarterback. Parsons secured over $123MM in full guarantees, as detailed by Cimini’s colleague Rob Demovsky. The 26-year-old will also see $12.09MM – most of his 2028 salary – shift to a full guarantee early in the 2027 league year. Per-game roster bonuses worth up to $200K annually along with $250K workout bonuses are present from 2026-29, with three void years included in the accord.
SNY’s Connor Hughes notes the Jets were never going to match an extension with those terms, nor a pact in line with the informal agreement Parsons and Jones reached early this offseason. New York’s regime led by Mougey and first-year head coach Aaron Glenn made a number of lucrative commitments but prioritized in-house players in the process. Cornerback Sauce Gardner reset the cornerback market while fellow 2022 first-rounder Garrett Wilson also secured a monster second contract. Fitting in Parsons would have substantially altered the Jets’ financial planning for years to come.
Green Bay will instead look to translate the Parsons acquisition into success in 2025 and beyond. The Jets, meanwhile, will aim to end their playoff drought in Year 1 of the Mougey-Glenn era. Williams will be a critical factor in that effort, and he will no doubt be counted on well beyond 2025 as well.
Jerry Jones is a idiot plain and simple. The Packers will be competing for the SB and the Cowboys will be getting basically a second round pick were the Jets will be in the top ten bracket. When I think of Jones he reminds me of Biden , clueless in what he doing
Yeah… I don’t disagree, but what were the Cowboys supposed to do here?
The Jets didn’t want to pay Parsons that type of money and they weren’t getting 2 1sts+Williams for Parsons.
I actually think the smartest thing would have been trading him to the Eagles. The Eagles offered him a couple of 1sts, a 3rd, a 5th, plus players and were told they wouldn’t consider it.
Cowboys should have asked for the 1sts+Carter or Davis in return. That’d be like 3 1sts.
I am really confused why they took the Packers… pretty meager offer, but I’m certainly happy they did it. They’re pretty much just an elite edge away from being a really good team right now…
But maybe the 2 1sts they get will… help them do something.