
Jane Slater breaks down Cowboys' offseason moves so far 'The Insiders'

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USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
Former star Alabama cornerback reportedly signs with NFL team
According to a report Saturday from NFL Network's Ian Rapoport, former Alabama Crimson Tide cornerback Levi Wallace is signing with the Jacksonville Jaguars as a free agent. Wallace, a seven-year NFL veteran, had yet to sign with a team this offseason, and was among the list of former Alabama players still remaining in free agency. The former Alabama cornerback most recently played with the Denver Broncos during the 2024 season, starting 2-of-13 games played. During that span, Wallace had 28 tackles, which was the lowest total of his career, along with two passes defensed. Over his seven previous seasons in the league, Wallace has compiled 333 career tackles with seven TFL and 12 interceptions across 96 career games, 72 of which he started. Undrafted out of Alabama back in 2018, Jacksonville will also be Wallace's fourth NFL team, joining the Buffalo Bills, Pittsburgh Steelers, and Broncos. Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes and opinion.


USA Today
3 hours ago
- USA Today
Nepo baby or late bloomer? Former 6th rounder has front office, Cowboys coaching connect
The football world wipe a falling tear from their collective eye when Deuce Vaughn became a National Football Leaguer. Late into Day 3 of the 2023 NFL draft, the yet-to-be selected diminutive backfield threat received a call from his dad. Only this wasn't a call to tell him to keep his head up. Chris Vaughn works in the front office of the Dallas Cowboys and was calling to tell his son he was being selected and brought back to North Texas. The Cowboys are a family owned and operated franchise, so nepotism is hardly looked at as a negative experience. But following that emotional moment that was shared far and wide across the football universe, things haven't gone that well for Vaughn. He didn't mesh well with the run game that head coach Mike McCarthy was running. He appeared in just seven games as a rookie, with a woeful 1.7 yards per carry. Appearing in seven games again his second year, his average blossomed to a respectable 4.1 yards a carry, but his impact was still minimal. With Brian Schottenheimer moving up to the head coach role, he brought in changes to the staff. Klayton Adams was brought in from Arizona to be the new OC, and Vaughn's former college OC Conor Riley was hired as the new OL coach. The changes seem to have suited Vaughn, as he was the teams most impressive back through the first few days of training camp. A hamstring injury halted that though, and potentially threatens Vaughn's chances to make the 53-man roster. Rundown Position: Running Back Age: 24 Height: 5-foot-5 Weight: 179 pounds Hometown: Fayetteville, AR High School: Cedar Ridge (TX) College: Kansas State (College Highlights) Draft: 2023 Sixth Round (No. 212 Overall) Acquired: 2023 draft Contract: Four-year contract (2023), $4 million 2025 Base Salary: $1 million, no guarantees Career Earnings: $1.8 million (per Over The Cap) Profile Vaughn backed up several players last year and though Ezekiel Elliott and Rico Dowdle are no longer in town, the team signed Javonte Williams and Miles Sanders, as well as drafted Jaydon Blue in the fifth round. Along with an apparent renewed commitment to fullback Hunter Luepke, it makes for a difficult proposition for Vaughn to remain with the team on the 53-man roster. He'd need an extraordinary training camp, and that's what he was having until the injury sidelined him. His void was filled by Blue, who began to excel as the pads came on, leaving Vaughn's role a question mark, made more murky by the staff's usage of WR Kavontae Turpin out of the backfield. Vaughn will really need to impress in the preseason to keep his dream of being a meaningful contributor to the Cowboys alive. Follow Cowboys Wire on Facebook to join in on the conversation with fellow fans!
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
As Cowboys negotiations drag on, Jerry Jones won't let Micah Parsons beat him at his own game
Micah Parsons had tried to play the game. The two-time All-Pro Dallas Cowboys edge rusher had tried Friday to prove he's not only one of the best defenders and players in the NFL right not but also arguably the best in recent Cowboys history at controlling the narrative around his contract negotiations. Forget timeline, structure or total guarantees. Parsons entered another competitive sphere Friday when he posted a three-page statement of grievances to social media, detailing what he believed to be at best misinterpreted and at worst bad-faith negotiations. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] Parsons went where Cowboys stars in recent history had not gone: He requested a trade. 'Unfortunately, I no longer want to be here,' Parsons wrote 'Up to today the team has not had a single conversation with my agent about a contract ... I stayed quiet but again after repeated shots at myself and all the narratives I have made a tough decision I longer want to play for the Dallas Cowboys. 'My trade request has been submitted to Stephen Jones personally.' Predictably, the NFL world was shocked. The Cowboys had dragged negotiations recently with players near-annually, from running back Ezekiel Elliott to edge rusher DeMarcus Lawrence to wide receiver CeeDee Lamb and on more than one extension quarterback Dak Prescott. None had so publicly and so vehemently voiced their frustration with the Cowboys' negotiating tactics. Already Parsons' extension had seemed deeply personal and emotional to team owner and general manager Jerry Jones, whose belief he and Parsons had struck a deal in March was the top barrier to further negotiations, multiple sources with knowledge of the conversation told Yahoo Sports on Friday. So it seemed reasonable and proportional Friday to wonder: Would this uppercut at Jones and to his precious Cowboys brand, be the straw that broke the camel's back? Would Parsons' refusal to worship the Cowboys open the door for real conversation about his trade value? Jones dispelled that notion in remarks to reporters Saturday. 'I wouldn't be standing here with you if I didn't think we potentially had a great future with Micah,' he said. 'This is a negotiation. Does it blow me up for somebody to say, 'Look, trade me'? 'That's just not a flare sign for me at all.' Jones' remarks were surprisingly measured. Sure, he noted that 'life has to go on if something happens to me or anybody else ... this thing called the NFL, it's not about one person.' And Jones smiled knowingly as he compared the legitimacy of Parsons' trade request to the legitimacy of the back tightness sidelining Parsons from training camp practice. (Parsons and Washington Commanders receiver Terry McLaurin are among recent players to land on the physically unable to perform list while negotiating a contract, allowing them to minimize injury as well as holdout fines in negotiations.) [Get more Cowboys news: Dallas team feed] But rather than rail on about why Parsons should be grateful to the Cowboys for drafting him in 2021 or grateful to Jones and the brand for how they've helped lift his platform, Jones spoke admirably about Parsons' savvy. Did the trade request surprise Jones? 'I've heard that so many times in my 30 years in the NFL, from not just players but agents,' Jones said. 'That is old stuff, 30 years of old stuff, some of these issues we're hearing about: trading, hurt backs, all that kind of stuff.' Perhaps the brush-off irritated Parsons, who still appeared on the sideline of Dallas' Saturday practice after his trade assertion. Or perhaps it assuaged Parsons that his words were heard but his risk not unduly calculated in what may have just been an attempt to ignite negotiations that had been latent since March, multiple sources confirmed to Yahoo Sports. The Cowboys and Parsons' lag entering the fifth-year option of his rookie deal is not about whether to pay one of the league's best players a certain annual value or certain set of guarantees. Expect any negotiation Parsons signs to outpace Pittsburgh Steelers edge rusher T.J. Watt's recent $41 million per year average annual value and Cleveland Browns edge rusher Myles Garrett's $123.3 million in guarantees. The lag is also not about production. Parsons has yet to reach the Defensive Player of the Year pinnacle Watt and Garrett summited, but his first four career years have featured more sacks (52.5), tackles (256), pressures (177) and quarterback hits (112) than either Watt or Garrett amassed in his first four NFL seasons. Each won their Defensive Player of the Year awards during their second contract. Instead, the lag centers on a personal and emotional sticking point for Jones: his closed-door March meeting with Parsons. Jones believed he and Parsons had negotiated an extension with Jones agreeing to a number that, 'make no mistake about it, I reached.' Parsons' decision to subsequently tell the Cowboys no deal will get done without Parsons' agent, David Mulugheta, irked the organization (read: Jones) sufficiently to quiet any offers or attempts at offers for the more than four months that had followed. On Friday, Parsons seemed to violate an unstated but consistent dynamic star players have followed: Let Jerry win the media battle and you'll win the money battle. Let Jerry control the narrative and he's likely to pay you enough to control the market at your position. Parsons risked distancing Jones as he sought to wrestle control of the narrative and demand a trade ... until Jones made himself available to media Saturday to wrestle that control right back. The regaining of the public upper hand, which Jones values at least as much and in some ways more than winning the financial negotiations, paves the way for eventual discussions that seemed too fractured to mend Friday. Jones made clear he wasn't worrying — and encouraged others to follow suit. 'I enjoy Micah,' Jones said.'But as always, in any relationships or different moods at different times of your relationship, that's what it is. Don't lose any sleep over it. 'That's one thing I would say to our fans: Don't lose any sleep over it.'