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Adam Schefter says Dallas Cowboys could try to replace George Pickens with their pick in NFL draft

Photo by Alika Jenner/Getty Images
Photo by Alika Jenner/Getty Images
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The Dallas Cowboys could enter the 2026 NFL Draft already planning for life beyond George Pickens, and that possibility is being driven by one clear reality.

Pickens is still one of the most productive receivers on the roster, but his contract situation has created uncertainty that teams rarely ignore at this stage of the cycle.

That is why the draft is now being viewed as more than just roster building for Dallas. It could also be about contingency planning.

Dallas Cowboys wide receiver George Pickens (3) does an interview after the game between the Dallas Cowboys and the Philadelphia Eagles on November 23, 2025 at AT&T Stadium.
Photo by Matthew Pearce/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Adam Schefter highlights George Pickens uncertainty

The situation was laid out bluntly during ESPN’s Get Up, where Adam Schefter explained just how far apart both sides currently are.

“They’re nowhere with George Pickens right now, Nowhere with George Pickens. They are not really talking about an extension, they’re not close to an extension, they’re not getting a deal done at this point in time,” Schefter said.

“He’s on the franchise tag. That situation is just sitting out there,” he added.

Dallas has already made it clear internally that Pickens will play 2026 on the franchise tag, with no urgency to complete a long-term deal.

The gap is not just financial, but structural, with the Cowboys already committed to paying CeeDee Lamb at the top of the market.

That creates a familiar NFL scenario. When a top receiver is tagged without progress on an extension, teams often start preparing for the next step, whether that is a future departure or a potential trade.

Dallas Cowboys draft strategy could target WR replacement

That is where the draft becomes directly connected to the Pickens situation, particularly with how Dallas is evaluating wide receiver options early.

“The Cowboys are said to really like Jordyn Tyson, so it is just one more subplot in a draft filled with them entering Thursday night,” Schefter stated.

Tyson fits the profile of what Dallas might need, a polished route runner with the versatility to operate across multiple alignments and eventually step into a larger role.

Teams regularly use the draft as a bridge when dealing with franchise-tag situations, bringing in a cost-controlled replacement before a contract decision is forced. With Pickens’ long-term future unclear, that model becomes relevant here.

It does not guarantee Dallas will move on immediately. But it does mean the Cowboys are likely thinking beyond 2026, and the draft gives them a chance to control what happens next rather than react to it.