Cowboys star edge rusher Micah 
		Parsons requests trade and says team won't negotiate
			
			[August 02, 2025]  
			 
			 
			OXNARD, Calif. (AP) — Micah Parsons requested a trade from the 
			Dallas Cowboys on Friday while suggesting the club has refused to 
			negotiate a new contract for the star edge rusher. 
			 
			Parsons reported to training camp in California with the Cowboys 
			last week and tried to stay upbeat in a meeting with reporters. His 
			tone changed dramatically in a message posted on X. 
			 
			“I did everything I could to show that I wanted to be a Cowboy and 
			wear the star on my helmet,” Parsons wrote in an attachment to a 
			post that said, “Thank you Dallas.” “Unfortunately, I no longer want 
			to be here. I no longer want to be held to close door negotiations 
			without my agent present.” 
			 
			Parsons finished the lengthy note by saying he had told executive 
			vice president of personnel Stephen Jones he wanted to be traded. 
			The Cowboys declined to comment on Parsons' request. 
			 
			The 26-year-old is entering the final year of his five-year rookie 
			contract with a salary of $24 million but wants a long-term deal 
			that almost certainly would exceed $40 million in average annual 
			value. 
  
		
			  
		
			 
			Since sacks became an official stat in 1982, Parsons and Pro 
			Football Hall of Famer Reggie White are the only players to record 
			at least 12 in each of their first four seasons. The 2021 
			first-round draft pick has 52 1/2 for his career. 
			 
			Parsons and Cowboys owner Jerry Jones had a lengthy chat on the 
			field while the team was practicing during mandatory minicamp in 
			June. 
			 
			About three months before that, according to Parsons, Jerry Jones 
			turned another conversation about leadership into what amounted to a 
			negotiation. 
			 
			“Yes, I engaged in a back and forth in regards to what I wanted from 
			my contract, but at no point did I believe this was supposed to be a 
			formal negotiation and I informed Mr. Jones my agent would reach out 
			thinking this would get things done,” Parsons wrote. 
			 
			Instead, Parsons said, a representative of the Cowboys told agent 
			David Mulugheta that a deal had already been reached. Parsons said 
			the Cowboys then stonewalled his agent and that “up to today,” the 
			team and Mulugheta haven't discussed a new contract. 
			 
			“Not one demand has been made by my agent about money, years or 
			anything else,” Parsons wrote. “Still, I stayed quiet but again 
			after repeated shots at myself and all the narratives, I have made 
			the tough decision I no longer want to play for the Dallas Cowboys.” 
			 
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            Dallas Cowboys defensive end Micah Parsons, left, talks with wide 
			receiver CeeDee Lamb during training camp Thursday, July 31, 2025, 
			in Oxnard, Calif. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill) 
              
 
			 A year ago, 2023 All-Pro receiver CeeDee Lamb was 
			in the same situation entering the final year of his rookie contract 
			and stayed away from the Cowboys the entire offseason and training 
			camp. The sides agreed on a $136 million, four-year extension about 
			two weeks before the season. 
			 
			The request from Parsons comes two days after Cincinnati edge rusher 
			Trey Hendrickson ended a holdout by reporting to training camp 
			despite no progress on a new contract. 
			 
			In his meeting with reporters when camp started, Parsons expressed 
			frustration over other pass-rushing stars getting deals done. Two 
			weeks ago, Pittsburgh made T.J. Watt the highest-paid defender with 
			a $123 million, three-year extension for an annual average of $41 
			million. Maxx Crosby of Las Vegas signed a $106.5 million, 
			three-year deal in March. 
			 
			Jerry Jones rarely has let star players get away amid stalled 
			contract talks, and it's been equally as rare for one of them to go 
			public with a trade request. 
			 
			Parsons took issue with Jerry Jones suggesting in his camp-opening 
			news conference that there was no guarantee Parsons would be 
			available if they did get a deal done. Jones inflated the number of 
			games Parsons missed last season, saying it was six when the 
			two-time All-Pro was sidelined for four games because of a sprained 
			ankle. 
			 
			In the same comment, Jerry Jones also took a swipe at quarterback 
			Dak Prescott, who missed the last nine games last season with a torn 
			hamstring. 
			 
			“I no longer want shots taken at me for getting injured while laying 
			it on the line for the organization, our fans and my teammates,” 
			Parsons wrote. “I no longer want narratives created and spread to 
			the media about me. I had purposely stayed quiet in hopes of getting 
			something done.” 
			
			
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