The Dallas Cowboys escaped with a crucial Thanksgiving win over the Kansas City Chiefs, but George Pickens left AT&T Stadium with a different kind of frustration, one that had nothing to do with the opponent.
The Dallas receiver, in the middle of a breakout season, found himself blinded by the afternoon sun cutting across the field, reigniting a long-running complaint about the stadium’s design and directing fresh attention toward owner Jerry Jones.
Pickens had one of the strangest moments of the game when a well-placed Dak Prescott pass dropped at his feet, untouched. The issue wasn’t miscommunication or a mistimed route.
It was the sun, blasting straight through the west-facing glass panels that have caused problems since AT&T Stadium opened. And Pickens didn’t sugarcoat it.
“Yeah, I mean, definitely. But that’s up to Jerry,” he said when asked if curtains or shading should be added. “I really couldn’t see the ball. It was the sun.”
A recurring problem in one of the NFL’s flashiest venues
The glare issue has plagued players for years. AT&T Stadium runs east-to-west rather than the traditional north-to-south alignment, meaning late-afternoon games are guaranteed to have pockets of blinding light streaking onto the field.
Fans have mocked the flaw. Opponents have complained. Broadcasters point it out every season.
Yet Jones has repeatedly dismissed the idea of adding curtains, insisting the design should remain untouched.
Pickens, who still finished with 88 yards in the Cowboys‘ 31-28 win, wasn’t looking to stir controversy, just stating what every player in the building experienced.
“All you can do is just one foot forward, keep getting better,” he said. “I always bounce back.”
Still, the visual evidence was impossible to ignore, and it came in a nationally televised game Dallas desperately needed.
Big performances and a looming decision
While the glare took over the conversation, Pickens‘ season continues to raise a more pressing storyline: his future.
Now sitting at 1,142 yards through 12 games, the 23-year-old has become one of the NFL’s most productive receivers and a central piece of Prescott‘s offense. But that doesn’t mean a long-term extension is coming.
According to multiple reports, the Cowboys are preparing to consider the franchise tag as a way to retain Pickens for 2026 without committing to a massive contract.
His talent isn’t in question… his consistency and maturity, however, will be part of the evaluation. Earlier this season, he and CeeDee Lamb were briefly benched after missing curfew.
Tagging a star player is nothing new for Dallas. Jones has used it on Tony Pollard, Dalton Schultz and even Dak Prescott.
With Pickens emerging as a legitimate No.1 option, the franchise appears comfortable delaying a long-term decision.
For now, Pickens just wants to keep producing, and maybe see the football a little more clearly the next time the Cowboys play a late-afternoon home game.
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