Following a season in which the Dallas Cowboys‘ defensive unit bottomed out as one of the least effective groups in the league, the front office has entered the mid-March landscape with an aggressive, albeit risky, rebuilding strategy.
The departure of cornerback L’Jarius Sneed from the Tennessee Titans this week has provided a sudden, high-ceiling option for a secondary that remains one of the team’s most significant liabilities.
For owner Jerry Jones, the objective is clear, as any movement is progress when starting from the basement of NFL defensive rankings. As Jones put it earlier this offseason, there was nowhere to go but up.
The current roster architecture leaves the Cowboys in a precarious position. While the team has successfully cleared cap space and moved on from certain veteran contracts, the remaining voids are substantial.
The release of Sneed, who played just 12 games over the last two seasons while navigating a four-year, $76 million contract, represents the exact type of “low-cost, high-reward” move the franchise often covets during the second wave of free agency.
A crossroads of draft capital and veteran experience
Success in the upcoming NFL Draft will likely depend on how the front office handles its unique possession of two first-round picks.
Dallas currently holds the No. 12 and No. 20 selections, giving them the rare ability to secure two “Day 1” starters.
However, the absence of a second-round pick complicates the middle of their draft board, placing a premium on finding veteran stopgaps who can prevent the team from reaching for rookies out of pure desperation.
Both Jerry Jones and Stephen Jones, the team’s personnel VP, have publicly entertained the idea of leveraging that early capital for immediate veteran help.
The possibility of adding a player like Sneed, despite his recent quad injury, hinges on medical optimism.
Sneed’s tenure in Tennessee ended prematurely as the Titans opted to save $11 million by cutting ties with the two-time Super Bowl champion.
Titans GM Mike Borgonzi recently characterized the cornerback’s ongoing recovery as, “Frustrating for him. But he’s continued to work and get himself healthy.”
If the Cowboys’ medical staff believes Sneed can return to the form he displayed in Kansas City, he could serve as the bargain veteran needed to allow Dallas more flexibility with their pair of first-round selections.
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