One thing the Dallas Cowboys aren’t afraid of doing is talking publicly about contract situations.
Cowboys owner Jerry Jones and executive vice president Stephen Jones both have spoken about the ongoing contract situation with star QB Dak Prescott to provide updates on where they are with it going forward.
Just recently, Stephen Jones spoke on the team trying their hardest to convince Dak Prescott to take a team-friendly deal that would allow them to remain competitive and have good teammates around them, which is why no contract has been announced for him yet as they continue to try and work through this.
“In my mind, he’s flawless,” Stephen Jones said Friday on 105.3 The Fan, per Pro Football Talk. “So the only thing we need him to do is work with us a little bit, and I understand because it’s his money and easy for someone else to say. But the only reason we’re having a negotiation is to talk him into all the reasons as to why it’s good to have a supporting cast around him. Other than that, it would be really easy to write the check. It’s not saving Jerry [Jones] and I any money. What we’re trying to do is keep this young football team together. We think it’s a really good one, and we think it’s only going to get better because it is young. Other than that, this negotiation would have been over with months ago. But I think he understands where we’re coming from. We understand where he’s coming from, and ultimately, we’ll figure this out.”
Prescott is expected to get something above the $32 million per year in new money the Eagles gave Carson Wentz, but nothing seems imminent with him nor Amari Cooper.
Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said on his radio show Friday.
“We are just where we were and where we’ve been, and that is we don’t have anything done, but how close we are to getting it done is really not identifiable because it takes two, and it takes the will of two looking at it from two different perspectives,” Jerry Jones said on 105.3 The Fan. “You never know what that is, and the other one never knows where that is until it’s actually done. And, so, we are continuing to operate with the — continuing, and I meant that, not as some type of complaint at all. But both parties are continuing to operate as though we’re going to get something done at some point.”