- FRISCO, TEXAS — The Dallas Cowboys do not pay for future production. They pay for past memories. The front office handed out a combined $189 million in Dallas Cowboys contracts to cornerbacks Trevon Diggs and DaRon Bland over the last three years, betting the house on two flashy ballhawks. Instead of securing a shutdown secondary for the 2026 season, Jerry Jones bought the most expensive cautionary tale in modern NFL history. The Cowboys handed Diggs a five-year, $97 million extension in 2023, only to cut him in late 2025 after he missed 31 games. Now, the four-year, $92 million extension given to DaRon Bland just last August looks like a carbon copy of that exact mistake.
The Trevon Diggs Ghost Town
When Diggs inked his blockbuster deal in July 2023, the ink barely dried before disaster struck. A torn ACL in practice sidelined him, and subsequent cartilage issues destroyed his availability. Over his final three seasons under that contract, he suited up for just 21 of a possible 50 games. The front office finally swallowed their pride and released him right after Christmas in 2025. He managed just 25 tackles and three interceptions in his final stint before the Cowboys ate a massive dead cap hit.
Walking through the facility in Frisco, you can still feel the lingering shock of the Diggs departure. The chilly Texas winter didn’t deter the fans outside the gates, who openly questioned the team’s medical evaluations. The tape did not lie. The explosive speed vanished. Quarterbacks stopped fearing his side of the field. Green Bay scooped him up on a flyer, only to cut him weeks later. The rest of the NFL watched, learned, and kept their wallets shut in the 2026 free agency cycle.
Lightning Strikes Twice with DaRon Bland
You would expect a multibillion-dollar organization to learn from a massive financial misfire. Instead, they doubled down. In August 2025, Dallas handed Bland $50 million in guaranteed money. They paid him for his historic 2023 campaign—a season where he recorded nine interceptions and took five back to the house. But the Bland of 2026 looks nothing like the record-breaker of 2023.
Bleacher Report recently crowned Bland the NFL’s most overpaid player entering the 2026 season. The math hurts to look at. Since his breakout year, he has hauled in exactly one interception. Injuries restricted him to just seven games in 2024 and 12 last season. Wide receivers are consistently beating him off the line of scrimmage. The Cowboys paid a premium for a turnover machine, but the machine broke. Beyond the stats, you can see the visible frustration on the sideline. Bland’s personal journey from a fifth-round steal to a mega-contract earner was a phenomenal underdog story, but the pressure of that price tag is currently weighing him down.
“We expect a player paid like Trevon to be here all the time. We expect him to be leading, but that’s not new.”— Jerry Jones, Cowboys Owner/GM (pre-release)
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The Dallas defense is bleeding cap space and giving up passing yards in bunches. New defensive coordinator Christian Parker inherits a secondary anchored by a $23-million-a-year corner who cannot stay on the field. Opposing offensive coordinators already know the scouting report. They will test Bland early and often in the 2026 campaign.
If Bland cannot rediscover his footwork and timing, the Cowboys will face another brutal cap casualty. They cannot afford to tie up nearly $20 million annually in a defensive back who gets burned on double moves. Dallas needs immediate impact from their upcoming draft picks to patch the holes left by this contract mismanagement. The front office must stop paying for highlight reels and start paying for durability.

