PHOENIX — The Dallas Cowboys are playing a high-stakes game of “will he or won’t he” with star wideout George Pickens. As NFL owners and coaches gathered in the Arizona heat this week, Head Coach Brian Schottenheimer confirmed the team has no guarantees Pickens will show up for voluntary offseason programs. The star receiver remains anchored to a $27.3 million non-exclusive franchise tag, a massive figure that highlights his value but leaves his long-term future in a cloud of dust.
Pickens didn’t just play well in 2025; he exploded. He racked up career highs with 93 catches and 1,429 receiving yards, effectively carrying the offense when the roster thinned out. Now, that production has created a financial stalemate. While the Cowboys hold his rights, the non-exclusive tag allows other teams to negotiate with Pickens, provided they are willing to cough up two first-round picks. It is a steep price, but for a 25-year-old playmaker in his prime, the phone in Jerry Jones’ office might not stay quiet for long.
The Versatility Factor
Schottenheimer isn’t sweating the business side yet, at least not publicly. He spent the morning at the Arizona Biltmore discussing how the Cowboys plan to evolve their scheme. The goal is simple: make Pickens impossible to shadow. During a stretch in 2025 when CeeDee Lamb was sidelined, the staff moved Pickens all over the formation. He thrived in the slot, beat press coverage on the boundary, and looked like a mismatch nightmare for every defensive coordinator in the NFC East.
The tension in the air was thick as reporters pressed for a timeline. The Cowboys have a history of dragging out these negotiations into the summer heat of Oxnard. If Pickens chooses to stay away from the facility in April, the chemistry between him and the quarterback room could take a hit. Yet, the team seems content to let the process play out naturally, trusting that the $27.3 million placeholder will eventually turn into a long-term security blanket for both sides.
“Hey, look, GP loves it here. We love GP. We have plans for GP to be here for a long time, so we’ll let the business side of this thing play out and see where it goes. I haven’t pushed that on him. I mean, again, we’re all going through the process. It’s almost April. We’re still a couple weeks away. It’s going to play out the way it plays out.”
— Brian Schottenheimer, Dallas Cowboys Head Coach
Draft Capital and Trade Rumors
While the Cowboys want Pickens in the building, the “non-exclusive” label is a blinking neon light for teams with cap space. Rumors are already swirling around the New York Jets and other aggressive suitors. Dallas finished a disappointing 7-9-1 last season, and while the offense hummed, the defense leaked yards like a broken faucet. If a team offers a king’s ransom of picks, Jerry Jones might have to decide if one elite receiver is worth more than a total defensive rebuild.
For now, Pickens is a Cowboy. But until that pen hits the paper on a five-year extension, every missed workout will be scrutinized. The fans are restless, the coach is “playing it cool,” and the star receiver is waiting for the respect—and the paycheck—that matches his 1,400-yard reality. The next move belongs to the front office.

