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Cowboys Don’t Chase Big Free Agents (5-Year Data)
Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Come March, I see the same reaction from Cowboys fans, and it is frustration. Big names come off the free agent board, money starts to fly, and Dallas looks like it’s sitting on its hands.

I’ve complained about this too, but once I went back and looked at five full years of free-agency spending by position, my perspective changed slightly.

The Dallas Cowboys don’t approach free agency like a fan base does. They approach it like an accountant.

And whether we like it or not, the numbers prove it.

Quarterback: Why They Never Spent Money

Over the last five seasons, Dallas spent roughly #3 million total on free-agent quarterbacks. Almost all of that came from Andy Dalton’s one-year deal in 2020.

That’s it.

Dak Prescott has been the quarterback and no money needed to be spent, and once Dallas committed to him, free agency stopped being part of the equation.

No veteran competition, no insurance policies, no panic moves.

As fans, some may not like Dak, but from a front office point of view, the position is resolved.

When this front office believes something is resolved, they don’t spend.

Skill Positions: Cheap by Design

Running back is where people might think Dallas spends, but as true fans, we know better.

Over five years, the Cowboys spent about $13 million at the position, and that includes returns, depth backs, and one-year flyers.

Ezekiel Elliot, Ronald Jones, Corey Clement, Rico Dowdle, and Javonte Williams. None of these deals were meant to define the offense, they were meant to fill touches.

Wide receiver and tight end make the philosophy even cleaner. Combined, Dallas spent around $10 million total on those two positions across five years. James Washington, T.Y. Hilton, Noah Brown, and Jeremy Sprinkle.

No long-term commitments, no premium guarantees. If Dallas thinks a position can be drafted, they refuse to overpay for it in March.

The Trenches Are Where the Checkbook Comes Out

This is where things start to get expensive.

Over five seasons, Dallas spent about $28 million on free-agent offensive linemen. These were not stars, but depth. Guys who keep the season from falling apart when injuries hit.

Defensively, the spending jumps.

Interior defensive linemen total roughly $35 million, while edge rushers cost another $30 million.

Guys like Dorance Armstrong, Dante Fowler Jr., Gerald McCoy, Everson Griffen, Carl Lawson, and Solomon Thomas.

I understand these are not jersey-selling signings, but Dallas clearly believes veteran defensive line play is where free agency works.

Defense Gets Help, Not Headlines

Linebacker spending sits around $16 million over five years. Eric Kendricks, Leighton Vander Esch, Anthony Barr, and Jack Sanborn were all leadership moves, not splash moves.

The secondary quietly adds up to about $33 million. Jourdan Lewis, Jayron Kearse, Malik Hooker, Keanu Neal are defenders they felt they could trust. The Cowboys won’t chase the top of the market players.

Even special teams matter. Roughly $17 million went to punters, kickers, and long snappers. Bryan Anger and Trent Sieg aren’t exciting, but Dallas never let that unit collapse.

Why the NFL Draft Is Always the Point

Once you step back and look at the whole picture. The free agency participation of the Dallas Cowboys puts into perspective how they use free agency to get ready for the NFL Draft.

Free agency isn’t where the Cowboys try to win, it is where they make sure they don’t lose flexibility. They avoid long-term contracts, hedge their risks, and walk into the draft without desperation.

Free agency is the calculator. The draft is the investment.

We can argue about the results all day and night, we can argue about execution, but the philosophy is clear and five years of data back it up.

The Cowboys don’t chase big-name free agents because they don’t believe March wins and January.

And love it or hate it, the numbers prove that’s exactly who they are.

This article first appeared on Inside The Star and was syndicated with permission.

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