George Pickens Will Play 2026 on Franchise Tag as Cowboys Extension Deadline Passes
George Pickens is staying in Dallas for at least one more year — just not on the contract he wanted.
The 4 p.m. ET deadline for franchise-tagged players to sign multiyear extensions came and went Wednesday, and Pickens was the only tagged player left standing without one. He’ll play the 2026 season on his fully guaranteed $27.3 million franchise tender instead, locking in one more year in Dallas before the two sides revisit the George Pickens contract situation in 2027.
Nobody around the building sounded surprised.
Cowboys executive vice president Stephen Jones confirmed the decision directly to reporters Wednesday. “We’ve made a decision that we’re going to have George Pickens play under the franchise tag, which won’t be a first for us,” Jones said, according to NFL.com. “So there won’t be negotiations on a long-term deal.”
That’s about as plain as front-office language gets. The Cowboys have known this was coming since April, when they told reporters at the NFL Draft they had no intention of negotiating a long-term deal with Pickens this offseason. Wednesday just made it official.
Why Dallas Is Betting on One More Year
The math isn’t complicated. Pickens landed in Dallas last year via trade from Pittsburgh and delivered a career year — 93 catches, 1,429 yards, nine touchdowns, his first Pro Bowl and a second-team All-Pro nod. That’s WR1 production. It’s also, from the Cowboys’ side, one season of data on a player with a history of on-field volatility in Pittsburgh.
The front office isn’t saying it doesn’t believe in Pickens. It’s saying it wants a second look before it commits real money. That’s a defensible read on a receiver who was as talented as he was inconsistent for three years with the Steelers. If Pickens repeats his 2025 numbers, Dallas pays a steeper price to keep him — either on a second tag worth roughly $32.8 million, a 20% bump under NFL franchise tag rules, or on the open market. If he regresses, the Cowboys just saved themselves from a bad long-term bet. Former NFL executive Louis Riddick put the stakes bluntly, telling Yardbarker the setup “sounds like a situation that is setting up for 2026 to be George’s last season in Dallas.”
There’s recent precedent for how this plays out in Dallas. Dak Prescott played on a tag before landing his extension. Same with edge rusher DeMarcus Lawrence. Tight end Dalton Schultz and running back Tony Pollard weren’t as lucky — both played on the tag and then left in free agency the following year. Pickens’ camp knows both outcomes are on the table.
Pickens has said all the right things publicly. He signed his tender back in April and told reporters last month he had no plans to hold out of minicamp or training camp. He kept that promise, showing up for mandatory minicamp and staying on the practice field without incident. NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport captured Pickens downplaying the whole situation at minicamp: “I’m here to definitely help the team. (Not thinking about) the tag and all that. It’s football first.” Rapoport shared the quote on X on July 15, though a verifiable direct link to that specific post could not be confirmed in this session and is omitted per sourcing policy.
That’s a notably calmer posture than the one he arrived in Dallas with, and it’s shifted the tone of the offseason coverage. Instead of contract drama, the story around Pickens has mostly been about scheme fit — head coach Brian Schottenheimer has talked about moving him into the slot more often in 2026, a wrinkle the Cowboys barely used with him last season.
How the Other Franchise-Tagged Players Fared
Pickens wasn’t the only player working against Wednesday’s deadline. Four players carried a tag into this offseason, and he was the only one who didn’t get a long-term deal done.
| Player | Team | Tag Type | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Daniel Jones | Colts | Transition | Signed 2-year, $88M extension |
| Breece Hall | Jets | Franchise | Signed 3-year, $43.5M extension |
| Kyle Pitts | Falcons | Franchise | Signed 3-year, $54M extension |
| George Pickens | Cowboys | Franchise | Plays 2026 on 1-year, $27.3M tag |
Jones inked his deal while still coming off Achilles surgery. Hall and Pitts both got multiyear security from their teams before the deadline. Pickens is the outlier — and per NFL rules, once the deadline passes, a tagged player without an extension is locked into a one-year tender for the season. Extension talks can’t resume until after the team’s final regular-season game, which for Dallas means Pickens’ situation stays frozen until after a Week 18 matchup with Washington in January 2027.
What Happens Next
Nothing, for now — and that’s by design. Pickens is under contract, he’s shown up to every mandatory offseason event, and both sides have said this isn’t a fight. Owner Jerry Jones and Schottenheimer reportedly walked Pickens through the plan personally before camp, according to Yardbarker, citing DallasCowboys.com’s Tommy Yarrish.
The real test starts when pads come on. Every catch, drop and big play this season will double as a contract negotiation for 2027 — whether Pickens wants to frame it that way or not.