The Micah Parsons contract drama has cast a shadow over the Dallas Cowboys‘ preseason, with the All-Pro linebacker requesting a trade and removing team references from his social media.
But according to former Buffalo Bills general manager Doug Whaley, the noise is more likely a negotiating tactic than the beginning of the end for Dallas’ defensive centerpiece.
Speaking with TMZ Sports, Whaley said he doesn’t believe Jerry Jones will let Parsons go under any circumstance.
“Guess what gets everybody on the same page? The dollars,” said Whaley, now the Senior VP of Player Personnel for the UFL.
Whaley pointed to similar contract standoffs between elite defenders and their franchises, citing Myles Garrett in Cleveland and T.J. Watt in Pittsburgh.
Both negotiations at one point looked rocky, but in the end, the teams secured their stars with record-setting deals. Whaley expects Dallas will follow the same script.
Jerry Jones’ offer and Parsons’ leverage
Jones has already claimed publicly that he put an offer on the table that “would’ve made him the highest-paid guaranteed player other than a quarterback in the NFL.” If that’s true, Whaley said, then a resolution is almost inevitable.
“If Jerry is saying what he said, I cannot see them going to a divorce,” Whaley added.
Parsons is due to earn about $24 million this season on the final year of his rookie contract. After that, Dallas has the option to apply the franchise tag in both 2026 and 2027, effectively keeping him under team control while negotiations drag out. That uncertainty appears to be what pushed Parsons to escalate the feud, requesting a trade and scrubbing his X profile of Cowboys references last week.
Still, Whaley believes Parsons‘ long-term future in Dallas isn’t in doubt. “When it comes down to it, great players get paid,” he said.
Parsons has already established himself as one of the NFL’s premier defenders, recording 40.5 sacks in his first three seasons and anchoring one of the league’s most feared defenses. Letting him walk would be a move that could reset the Cowboys’ entire trajectory.
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