While the railroading of the #21along with the following ancillary character damage is an undeniable fact,,, the rest of your post is nothing more than that of a speculative opinionated view,in how or what were to possibly happen to him& his career in Dallas,along with "x" amount of projected financial loss,,, if Stephen Jones floated it out on the airwaves that Zeke was gonna get his money, dude should've considered that relayed general message directed to him as to being "good as gold" & just footballed on thru till it happened.
Would you agree that Zeke is a commodity if his character wasn't questionable?
If so, then this is an article about Dak. Do you believe after Zeke jumped in the Salvation Army bucket his star would not be on the rise with endorsements? I guess people will believe anything. But it would be difficult for me to believe Zeke couldn't earn at least half of what Dak gets off field.
But he's not getting that is he? This comment of yours doesn't look so promising now, does it?
"the rest of your post is nothing more than that of a speculative opinionated view"
He supplements his salary with endorsement deals and licensing royalties
ESPN reported in September 2017 that “No NFL player
signed more endorsement dealsthis offseason than Dak Prescott.” The publication reported, “For his head, he has New Era caps and Beats by Dre headphones. For his appetite, he has Campbell’s Chunky Soup and Tostitos tortilla chips. For his thirst, he has Pepsi and 7-Eleven. For private travel, it’s Nicholas Air.” Additionally, he signed deals with AT&T, DirecTV, and card company Panini America.
At the time, ESPN noted, “Combine all Prescott’s deals together, industry insiders tell ESPN.com, he’ll make at least $2.5 million, nearly five times his on-field salary.” And as the publication added, “The money Prescott makes in endorsements doesn’t include the extra money he’ll make in licensing royalties.”
https://www.cheatsheet.com/entertainment/dak-prescott-net-worth.html/