
Cowboys star Micah Parsons announces he's requested trade: 'I no longer want to be here'
Parsons had been with the team during training camp, though he was not participating in team sessions as he waited for a contract extension, one that was expected to make the four-time Pro Bowler the highest-paid non-quarterback in league history.
But the Cowboys have not made those negotiations a priority, and in fact have expressed no urgency in the matter at all: doing deals for other players in the interim, reiterating that the 26-year-old is technically under contract already (albeit well below his market value), and ignoring pleas from Parsons to start talks with his agent.
And now the former first-round draft pick says he has had enough.
In a long post on X, Parsons lays it all out for fans. The full text of his bombshell post is as follows:
Things have obviously taken a sudden and nasty turn in Dallas, with much more sure to come now that the gauntlet has been dropped.
The Cowboys are not practicing Friday. They are scheduled to assemble for their next practice on Saturday, with a joint practice with the Rams coming on Tuesday.
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(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.'