The Dallas Cowboys have refuted rumors that they are interested in trading for Najee Harris.
The rumor began on social media and made it's way to a Pittsburgh radio host.
Harris is in the last year of his contract with the Pittsburgh Steelers.
The Dallas Cowboys have refuted rumors that they are interested in trading for Najee Harris.
The rumor began on social media and made it's way to a Pittsburgh radio host.
Harris is in the last year of his contract with the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Dallas police will not pursue sexual assault charges against Dak Prescott, with a police spokesperson saying that detectives determined there was insufficient evidence an offense was committed.
The case stemmed from an alleged incident that occurred in 2017 in which a woman said Prescott assaulted her in the back of an SUV in a strip club parking lot.
Ezekiel Elliott signed a one-year deal this week to return to the Dallas Cowboys.
"It was just important to me just to get back here and finish what I started," Elliott said at the team's annual Reliant Energy Home Run Derby fundraiser.
The running back spent the first seven years of his career with the Cowboys. In 103 games, Elliott ran for 8,262 yards on 1,881 carries with 68 touchdowns. He caught 305 passes for 2,336 yards with 12 touchdowns.
"Got unfinished business," he said. "Here to chase the ring."
Ezekiel Elliott has agreed to a one-year, $3 million contract with the Dallas Cowboys, according to a report.
The running back will earn $2 million in guaranteed money as part of the agreement.
Elliott made $70 million during his seven previous season with the Cowboys.
The Dallas Cowboys have yet to fill their running back need, but the return of Ezekiel Elliott looks more and more likely.
Owner and general manager Jerry Jones would not say the Cowboys have an agreement in place with Elliott, who played for Dallas from 2016 to 2022, but he has acknowledged interest in Elliott.
The Chicago Bears led off the 2024 NFL Draft by selecting Caleb Williams out of USC as expected with the Washington Commanders taking Jayden Daniels at No. 2 and the New England Patriots also taking a quarterback at No. 3 in Drake Maye.
There were a NFL draft record 23 offensive players selected in the first round:
• Six Quarterbacks
• Seven Wide Receivers
• Nine Offensive Linemen
• One Tight End
2024 NFL Draft Results (First Round)
1. Chicago Bears: Caleb Williams, QB, USC
2. Washington Commanders: Jayden Daniels, QB, LSU
3. New England Patriots: Drake Maye, QB, North Carolina
4. Arizona Cardinals: Marvin Harrison Jr., WR, Ohio State
5. Los Angeles Chargers: Joe Alt, OT, Notre Dame
6. New York Giants: Malik Nabers, WR, LSU
7. Tennessee Titans: JC Latham, OT, Alabama
8. Atlanta Falcons: Michael Penix Jr., QB, Washington
9. Chicago Bears: Rome Odense, WR, Washington
10. Minnesota Vikings: J.J. McCarthy, QB, Michigan
11. New York Jets: Olu Fashanu, OT, Penn State
12. Denver Broncos: Bo Nix, QB, Oregon
13. Las Vegas Raiders: Brock Browers, TE, Georgia
14. New Orleans Saints: Taliese Fuaga, OT, Oregon State
15. Indianapolis Colts: Laiatu Latu, Edge, UCLA
16. Seattle Seahawks: Byron Murphy II, DT, Texas
17. Minnesota Vikings: Dallas Turner, Edge, Alabama
18. Cincinnati Bengals: Amarius Mims, OT, Georgia
19. Los Angeles Rams: Jared Verse, Edge, Florida State
20. Pittsburgh Steelers: Troy Fautanu, OG, Washington
21. Miami Dolphins: Chop Robinson, Edge, Penn State
22. Philadelphia Eagles: Quinyon Mitchell, CB, Toledo
23. Jacksonville Jaguars: Brian Thomas Jr., WR, LSU
24. Detroit Lions: Terrion Arnold, CB, Alabama
25. Green Bay Packers: Jordan Morgan, OT, Arizona
26. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Graham Barton, C, Duke
27. Arizona Cardinals: Darius Robinson, Edge, Missouri
28. Kansas City Chiefs: Xavier Worthy, WR, Texas
29. Dallas Cowboys: Tyler Guyton, OT, Oklahoma
30. Baltimore Ravens: Nate Wiggins, CB, Clemson
31. San Francisco 49ers: Ricky Pearsall, WR, Florida
32. Carolina Panthers: Xavier Legette, WR, South Carolina
The Dallas Cowboys are meeting with Ezekiel Elliott's representative, according to a report.
ESPN previously reported that there is mutual interest in a potential reunion. The Cowboys lost Tony Pollard to the Tennessee Titans in free agency.
The Cowboys drafted Elliott with the fourth overall pick in 2016.
Jerry Jones is preaching patience as the Dallas Cowboys still don't have long-term deals in place for Dak Prescott, CeeDee Lamb and Micah Parsons.
"If you've got trouble with when the timing is around here," the owner said, "it's because I'm not ready to go."
Prescott's contract runs out after the 2024 season and the quarterback said last week that negotiations have not really started. Lamb is set to make $17.99 million this year on the fifth-year option and is eligible for the franchise tag next offseason. Parsons is under contractual control through 2025 and then eligible for the franchise tag.
"You may be working on [contracts] and not moving anything but your eyebrows," Jones said. "Who in the world would think that we're not working on it? I work on it. It pops up at 2 in the morning sometimes. What you're actually questioning is why don't you have something done and negotiated and put in the drawer? Well, we'd like to see some more leaves fall. We'd like to see some more action."
Dak Prescott is comfortable with the Dallas Cowboys' slow approach to contract talks. Prescott is entering the final season of a four-year, $160 million deal he signed with the Cowboys in 2021. Prescott is set to count $55.4 million against the cap. The Cowboys cannot use the franchise tag on him after this year, and he has a no-trade clause.
Prescott said negotiations have not really begun with the Cowboys on a new deal, although he had what he termed a "great conversation" with owner and general manager Jerry Jones about a month ago.
"I'm focused on here, right now where I am," Prescott said Friday as he prepared to take part in the Children's Cancer Fund's "A Knight to Remember" gala, where he serves as a co-chair with Hall of Fame quarterback Troy Aikman. "That's how I've always been. Anytime y'all have asked me, it's always been about right now, getting better tomorrow. And I've been in this situation before, so it's OK. I'm fine in any situation at that point betting on myself or playing this year out."
Stephen Jones said the Dallas Cowboys spend as much as possible to keep their core players on their roster.
"We spend max, max money year in and year out. All 32 can only spend the same amount of money over a five-year stretch," executive vice president Stephen Jones told 105.3 The Fan in Dallas. "When we're all said and done, we max out our salary cap every year. We will have done that and what comes with having a good roster, which we do, we also are looking towards signing our own guys. It doesn't mean it happens overnight. But when you're wanting to sign players like Dak [Prescott] and Micah [Parsons] and CeeDee [Lamb], then certainly you have to hold money back if you want to have a realistic chance of signing those guys."