Emerging as one of the league’s most prolific receivers, Lamb is coming off a stellar 2023 campaign in which he caught 135 passes for a career-high 1,749 yards with 12 receiving touchdowns.
According to Fowler, though, Lamb has to get in line behind Prescott before any deal gets done.
“My sense is they need to figure out the [Dak Prescott] situation first,” Fowler said, of any potential Lamb negotiations.
CeeDee Lamb Expected to ‘Reset the Market’
As Prescott and the Cowboys sit in a holding pattern, Lamb is sitting out Dallas’ offseason program.
Meanwhile, the cost of premier wide receivers continues to rise across the NFL.
In the aftermath of the Detroit Lions [briefly] making Amon-Ra St. Brown the highest-paid wide receiver in the league, by AAV, with a four-year contract worth $120 million, the Philadelphia Eagles upped the ante by inking A.J. Brown to a three-year contract worth $86 million.
According to one prominent agent familiar with the wide receiver market, St. Brown and Brown’s contracts will serve as the guideposts for Lamb when any negotiations get underway with the Cowboys.
“Those two deals will only help CeeDee,” the agent told Heavy, on the condition of anonymity to speak freely about a player he doesn’t represent. “They push the No. 1 wide receiver market above $30 million annually. CeeDee will probably reset the market based on how Dallas does deals.”
If the Cowboys stay true to form and plan on making Lamb the NFL’s highest-paid receiver, it may require lowering Prescott’s cap number to make that kind of deal possible.
What is The Cowboys’ Cap Situation in the Coming Years?
The Cowboys’ cap constraints have been well documented this offseason, with Prescott’s cap number a driving force behind limiting Dallas’ flexibility.
According to Spotrac, only four teams have less cap space than the Cowboys’ $4.49 million in spending flexibility this offseason.
However, with Prescott’s deal off the books in 2025, the Cowboys will have approximately $83.1 million in cap space, representing the ninth-most in the NFL. Then, in 2026, the Cowboys are projected to have approximately $283.06 million in cap space, the sixth-most in the league.
Those projections are bound to change once the Cowboys reach some sort of eventual resolution with Prescott, Lamb, and Parsons. But, as things stand it seems that deciding what to do with Prescott is taking precedent for Jerry Jones and the Cowboys.