Report: Cowboys tried at ‘last minute’ to do long-term Prescott deal

The team and their QB apparently had eleventh-hour discussions on a new contract, but ran out of time before Wednesday’s deadline.

It apparently came right down to the wire. But in the end, the Cowboys front office simply ran out of time in trying to finalize a new long-term contract with quarterback Dak Prescott, despite a reported Hail Mary as the clock wound down.

Cowboys ownership- specifically, Jerry and Stephen Jones- have a history of doing dramatic last-minute deals. But with the franchise-tagged Prescott, the fourth-round draft pick who was unexpectedly thrust into the starting role as a rookie and has delivered nothing less than two Pro Bowl campaigns and two playoff berths in four seasons while never missing a start and playing for mere peanuts, there was no celebratory press release. One NFL insider, though, says an attempt was made.

NFL Network’s Jane Slater reported just minutes after the Wednesday afternoon signing deadline that the Cowboys and Prescott were engaged in talks right up until the end.

According to ESPN’s Ed Werder via Twitter, Prescott and Stephen Jones “had a very brief conversation that the team requested and Todd France- the QB’s agent- helped to facilitate.”

Slater shared some pertinent numbers that were supposedly tossed around during that call, and even indicates that Prescott himself was ready to give the green light before the deadline ultimately passed.

Given that Prescott and the team have tiptoed around each other regarding a new deal dating back to the 2019 offseason, running out of time on the final afternoon of the negotiating window seems like an especially disingenuous “oops” of an excuse.

Slater later amended her reported figures, but emphasized that Prescott seems to harbor no ill will toward the team as he prepares to go under center for 2020.

Prescott, after all, will still be the starting quarterback for what most believe to be a playoff-caliber Cowboys team. He’ll still pocket $31.4 million for the season, an astounding 7.7 times his total earnings from the club over his first four seasons combined. And he’ll enter into negotiations with ownership all over again next year, when the market price for an NFL starting quarterback will almost assuredly be even higher.

What transpires on the field over the 2020 season- in whatever form that season ends up taking- will determine a lot. By pushing off their commitment to the player and flubbing a last-gasp attempt to lock him up, the Cowboys have effectively pushed all their chips to the middle of the table. Prescott is betting on himself for yet another year. And everything for both sides now rides on the upcoming season.

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