The Dallas Cowboys’ trade for Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver George Pickens addresses their most glaring need of the offseason—adding a true outside playmaker to complement CeeDee Lamb. Pickens brings a rare blend of size, speed, and dawg to a receiver room that’s been lacking juice behind its All-Pro WR1.
Why The Dallas Cowboys’ Trade For George Pickens Is A Win
What Is The Trade Package?
According to Adam Schefter and multiple other sources, the Cowboys are reportedly sending a 2026 third-round pick and a 2027 fifth-rounder to Pittsburgh in exchange for George Pickens and a 2027 sixth-round pick.
It’s a relatively modest price to pay for a 24-year-old playmaker with game-breaking ability. However, Pickens is heading into the final year of his contract and will be looking to land a new deal.
How He Fits And Why This Will Work

Pickens isn’t coming in to be WR1—Dallas has that already in Lamb. What he does bring is a field-stretching, contested catch-threat that this offense hasn’t had in years. He is a true X who can win vertically, high-point the ball, and punish corners in one-on-one matchups. He also brings an edge and a downfield presence that simply hasn’t existed in this offense since prime Dez Bryant.
Those traits and abilities make Pickens the ideal complement to Lamb. While CeeDee is a highly capable outside threat, he is most dangerous from the slot—creating mismatches, working underneath, and turning short gains into chunk plays with elite run-after-the-catch ability. But because Dallas lacked a legitimate outside threat in 2024, Lamb was forced to play outside more than the team would prefer. Pickens changes that. His vertical presence forces defenses to respect the sideline and the deep third, opening up the underneath areas for Lamb and secondary receivers.
This also feels like a receiver Dak Prescott will trust early. It was evident last year that beyond Lamb—and maybe Jake Ferguson—Dak didn’t trust his options. He was hesitant to let it rip if receivers didn’t separate cleanly, and he took sacks because of it. Pickens doesn’t need much space—he just needs a shot. Having a guy who wins 50-50 balls more often than not gives Dallas a much-needed edge.
The George Pickens Cowboys trade could prove to be one of the most impactful moves of the offseason. It’s a pick-your-poison dilemma that forces opposing teams to play honest, and for an offense that felt claustrophobic last year, this move should open things up. Pickens and Lamb are a perfect stylistic pairing.
What Concerns May Dallas Have?
Pickens was a first-round talent coming out of Georgia, but fell due to behavioral concerns and questions about maturity. His tenure in Pittsburgh was turbulent at times—multiple unsportsmanlike conduct penalties, inconsistent effort, and reports of tardiness. Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin publicly challenged Pickens to “grow up,” and the team’s willingness to move on from a guy with WR1 upside says something.
Dallas isn’t exactly known for shying away from personalities—they once signed Terrell Owens, after all—but managing Pickens’ competitive edge will be key. The leadership in the locker room will play a major role in making this acquisition work. Pickens brings fire, which isn’t a bad thing. As long as it doesn’t burn the locker room down.
Then there’s the contract. Pickens is entering the final year of his rookie deal and is represented by David Mulugheta—the same agent representing Micah Parsons. The Cowboys don’t need to make a decision immediately, but an extension—or lack thereof—will be a storyline to watch. Big money is already committed to Lamb and Prescott, and Parsons’ payday is looming. Where will Pickens’ contract fit in?
This Trade Is A Win For Dallas
Shout out to Jerry Jones. He’s been talking about making a move, and he did. This move is aggressive, and aggressive is fun. The Cowboys didn’t just fill a need—they added a real playmaker. Pickens brings physicality, vertical juice, and a much-needed edge to this offense. He’s not without risk, but Dallas is giving up manageable draft capital to land a high-upside receiver who fits perfectly opposite their WR1.
If Pickens clicks in this offense—and stays locked in mentally—he could be the spark that re-energizes the entire unit. For a front office that’s taken heat for playing it too safe, this move shows a willingness to swing big. More importantly, it shows the Cowboys are serious about winning right now. And that’s exactly what they should be doing.
Main Image: Tommy Gilligan – USA Today Sports
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