04/25/2026
The Dallas Cowboys further bolstered their defensive rebuild during Day 2 by acquiring San Francisco 49ers linebacker Dee Winters in a mid-draft trade that cost Dallas only their fifth-round pick at No. 152 overall — a minimal price for a player who started all 17 games for San Francisco in 2025 before the Niners' signing of Dre Greenlaw this offseason made Winters expendable. The move reflects new Cowboys defensive coordinator Christian Parker's aggressive approach to assembling a defensive unit capable of reversing the franchise's 2025 performance that saw Dallas rank last in points allowed per game a historically poor defensive showing that underscored the urgency of the Cowboys' offseason defensive investment. Winters' starting experience and familiarity with coverage-heavy linebacker concepts from Robert Saleh's defensive background in San Francisco provides Dallas with immediate depth at a position where the Cowboys lacked proven contributors behind their starters.
The Winters trade adds a third significant defensive addition to a Cowboys weekend that featured Caleb Downs' selection at No. 11 overall in the first round and Malachi Lawrence's edge rusher pick at No. 23. The combination of a centerfield safety, a pass rush contributor, and a starting-caliber linebacker — all added across a single draft weekend at relatively modest capital cost — represents the kind of comprehensive defensive reconstruction that Jerry Jones and head coach Brian Schottenheimer identified as the organizational priority before competitive improvement in the NFC is achievable. With George Pickens secured on the franchise tag for offensive continuity and Dak Prescott locked in at quarterback, the Cowboys' 2026 season now hinges on whether Parker's defensive rebuild delivers the unit improvement that the talent additions suggest is possible.