Dak is a good dude. Good QB, just like Romo. The problem has been statistical probability, a terrible call in 2016, bad play-calling/game prep vs San Fran and positional match up issues recently.This contract was the straw that broke the camel's back.
Dak is a decent personality, no trouble, no drama, it's just that he can't deliver, and maybe some of that is because he plays for the Dallas carnival act.
I don't have a problem with Dak the person, in fact i think Dak is a better person to play QB for Dallas than Romo was, but what good is any of that without a SB victory.
This contract was the straw that broke the camel's back because the signing was vanity, futility. Add in a no trade clause and the contract became harmful.
The FO just rinses and repeats, and that won't bring home the SB trophy.
Yes, finding a franchise quarterback is hard—every NFL fan knows that. But what's often overlooked is the cost of holding on too long to the wrong one.So lastly you wanting to get rid of Prescott because you don't like his ceiling well I hope you like 5 to 10 years of being worse you must love really high draft picks and think that you could just rebuild the team overnight no sometimes that can happen where you get lucky but most of the time you're looking for a quarterback like The Jets and the Browns and other teams have for decades and they turn around and do what they trade for guys like Prescott overpay for Wilson and overpay for Deshaun Watson both in draft picks and money I mean at least we homegrown paid Prescott we didn't have to give up any draft picks you guys are just really not understanding how this works.
They have plenty of cap money so his contract is irrelevant.I can’t help but keep thinking about the alternate position we’d be in if the Cowboys had simply chosen not to re-sign Dak to that long-term deal in 2024.
In that scenario, Dak is likely gone—no shortage of QB-needy teams would have picked him up, no doubt. We’re left with a $40 million dead cap hit and maybe a 3rd-round compensatory pick. It’s possible we lost a few more games, but that only improves our draft position.
We enter the 2025 Draft with Will Grier and Joe Milton in the QB room—hardly inspiring, but Milton is at least a prospect. We’d have had a legitimate shot at drafting Shedeur Sanders (or virtually anyone not named Cam Ward), and there were also a handful of cheaper veteran free agents we could’ve signed to bridge the gap.
The cap situation wouldn’t be drastically better in 2025, but looking ahead? Much more flexibility. Sure, you’re gambling on the uncertainty of upgrading the QB spot—but you're also opening the door to a true fresh start.
So ask yourself: which position would you rather be in? If you believe in Dak, maybe letting a “franchise QB” walk is unthinkable. But if you’re like me—jaded by the ceiling of his play—then maybe this timeline isn’t the crazy one.
Maybe this is the alternate reality.
The fact is you can't win in this league without a QB. That's why mediocre guys like Dak still get paid top dollar. You can still win with a mediocre QB, you just need a great GM to build a good team around them. Either way, the fans lose, because Jerry in incapable of building a winning team.I can’t help but keep thinking about the alternate position we’d be in if the Cowboys had simply chosen not to re-sign Dak to that long-term deal in 2024.
In that scenario, Dak is likely gone—no shortage of QB-needy teams would have picked him up, no doubt. We’re left with a $40 million dead cap hit and maybe a 3rd-round compensatory pick. It’s possible we lost a few more games, but that only improves our draft position.
We enter the 2025 Draft with Will Grier and Joe Milton in the QB room—hardly inspiring, but Milton is at least a prospect. We’d have had a legitimate shot at drafting Shedeur Sanders (or virtually anyone not named Cam Ward), and there were also a handful of cheaper veteran free agents we could’ve signed to bridge the gap.
The cap situation wouldn’t be drastically better in 2025, but looking ahead? Much more flexibility. Sure, you’re gambling on the uncertainty of upgrading the QB spot—but you're also opening the door to a true fresh start.
So ask yourself: which position would you rather be in? If you believe in Dak, maybe letting a “franchise QB” walk is unthinkable. But if you’re like me—jaded by the ceiling of his play—then maybe this timeline isn’t the crazy one.
Maybe this is the alternate reality.
I think if they didnt resign Dak they would have done something last year at the position and your whole equation above would be alteredI can’t help but keep thinking about the alternate position we’d be in if the Cowboys had simply chosen not to re-sign Dak to that long-term deal in 2024.
In that scenario, Dak is likely gone—no shortage of QB-needy teams would have picked him up, no doubt. We’re left with a $40 million dead cap hit and maybe a 3rd-round compensatory pick. It’s possible we lost a few more games, but that only improves our draft position.
We enter the 2025 Draft with Will Grier and Joe Milton in the QB room—hardly inspiring, but Milton is at least a prospect. We’d have had a legitimate shot at drafting Shedeur Sanders (or virtually anyone not named Cam Ward), and there were also a handful of cheaper veteran free agents we could’ve signed to bridge the gap.
The cap situation wouldn’t be drastically better in 2025, but looking ahead? Much more flexibility. Sure, you’re gambling on the uncertainty of upgrading the QB spot—but you're also opening the door to a true fresh start.
So ask yourself: which position would you rather be in? If you believe in Dak, maybe letting a “franchise QB” walk is unthinkable. But if you’re like me—jaded by the ceiling of his play—then maybe this timeline isn’t the crazy one.
Maybe this is the alternate reality.
Someday maybe we will do what winners do and take a chance on a highly drafted QB.I can’t help but keep thinking about the alternate position we’d be in if the Cowboys had simply chosen not to re-sign Dak to that long-term deal in 2024.
In that scenario, Dak is likely gone—no shortage of QB-needy teams would have picked him up, no doubt. We’re left with a $40 million dead cap hit and maybe a 3rd-round compensatory pick. It’s possible we lost a few more games, but that only improves our draft position.
We enter the 2025 Draft with Will Grier and Joe Milton in the QB room—hardly inspiring, but Milton is at least a prospect. We’d have had a legitimate shot at drafting Shedeur Sanders (or virtually anyone not named Cam Ward), and there were also a handful of cheaper veteran free agents we could’ve signed to bridge the gap.
The cap situation wouldn’t be drastically better in 2025, but looking ahead? Much more flexibility. Sure, you’re gambling on the uncertainty of upgrading the QB spot—but you're also opening the door to a true fresh start.
So ask yourself: which position would you rather be in? If you believe in Dak, maybe letting a “franchise QB” walk is unthinkable. But if you’re like me—jaded by the ceiling of his play—then maybe this timeline isn’t the crazy one.
Maybe this is the alternate reality.
I cannot explain my mild discount with Dak but it's there.It's not the losses or injuries. After season one the expectations were too high and each year disappointments snowed. I defended him for Embarrassingly long. he will not take us the promiseland. That is all.I can’t help but keep thinking about the alternate position we’d be in if the Cowboys had simply chosen not to re-sign Dak to that long-term deal in 2024.
In that scenario, Dak is likely gone—no shortage of QB-needy teams would have picked him up, no doubt. We’re left with a $40 million dead cap hit and maybe a 3rd-round compensatory pick. It’s possible we lost a few more games, but that only improves our draft position.
We enter the 2025 Draft with Will Grier and Joe Milton in the QB room—hardly inspiring, but Milton is at least a prospect. We’d have had a legitimate shot at drafting Shedeur Sanders (or virtually anyone not named Cam Ward), and there were also a handful of cheaper veteran free agents we could’ve signed to bridge the gap.
The cap situation wouldn’t be drastically better in 2025, but looking ahead? Much more flexibility. Sure, you’re gambling on the uncertainty of upgrading the QB spot—but you're also opening the door to a true fresh start.
So ask yourself: which position would you rather be in? If you believe in Dak, maybe letting a “franchise QB” walk is unthinkable. But if you’re like me—jaded by the ceiling of his play—then maybe this timeline isn’t the crazy one.
Maybe this is the alternate reality.
TOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Late Let me break it to you in the OP this is not an alternate reality there is no time machine so can we stop harping on it and that is not a trap there's more teams than just the Browns and the Jets Denver did it too, denver overpaid because they couldn't find a young guy so they used expensive draft picks and then hand Russell Wilson a huge contract and then EAT $89,000,000, finally after decades of doing that trying to recreate the Manning trade, they finally may have a quarterback? maybe Nix is if. We shall see.Yes, finding a franchise quarterback is hard—every NFL fan knows that. But what's often overlooked is the cost of holding on too long to the wrong one.
Look at the teams that had the guts to move on:
You often hear about teams like the Browns or Jets always looking for a QB. But there’s another trap: teams that refuse to admit it's time to pivot. The result? Years of mediocrity. Quarterback purgatory.
- Philadelphia moved on from Carson Wentz despite his MVP-caliber season in 2017. Two years later, they’re back in the Super Bowl with Jalen Hurts.
- Kansas City had a winning record and playoff appearances with Alex Smith—but they made the bold call to hand the reins to Patrick Mahomes. Now they’re a dynasty.
- Detroit traded Matthew Stafford after 12 seasons. He immediately won a Super Bowl with the Rams, and the Lions also got better by rebuilding around Jared Goff and new talent.
Obviously we cannot turn back the clock and we're at where we're at, but I don't buy the argument that you're definitely going to have 5-10 years of being worse. You could be better the next year.
Great post. I've been in the same place as you. Wondering if we weren't hogtied by that horrible contract. Truth is, we've already seen the ceiling of this team. We should have been dismantling it but our FO is too worried about ticket sales, not building a championI can’t help but keep thinking about the alternate position we’d be in if the Cowboys had simply chosen not to re-sign Dak to that long-term deal in 2024.
In that scenario, Dak is likely gone—no shortage of QB-needy teams would have picked him up, no doubt. We’re left with a $40 million dead cap hit and maybe a 3rd-round compensatory pick. It’s possible we lost a few more games, but that only improves our draft position.
We enter the 2025 Draft with Will Grier and Joe Milton in the QB room—hardly inspiring, but Milton is at least a prospect. We’d have had a legitimate shot at drafting Shedeur Sanders (or virtually anyone not named Cam Ward), and there were also a handful of cheaper veteran free agents we could’ve signed to bridge the gap.
The cap situation wouldn’t be drastically better in 2025, but looking ahead? Much more flexibility. Sure, you’re gambling on the uncertainty of upgrading the QB spot—but you're also opening the door to a true fresh start.
So ask yourself: which position would you rather be in? If you believe in Dak, maybe letting a “franchise QB” walk is unthinkable. But if you’re like me—jaded by the ceiling of his play—then maybe this timeline isn’t the crazy one.
Maybe this is the alternate reality.
I mean, I don't know why you couldn't. Not a lot of teams do full blow ups now.You can't have it both ways you can't just get rid of Prescott and then keep lamb and keep digs and resign Parsons resign Tyler Smith blah blah blah