Cowboys’ Jerry Jones claims to not know the name of Micah Parsons’ agent amid ongoing contract negotiations

The Dallas Cowboys are prepared to make three-time All-Pro edge rusher Micah Parsons the highest-paid non-Signal-caller in NFL history, according to All City DLLS.

Owner Jerry Jones and Parsons have agreed to Many key framework parameters for the deal, according to Jones himself, but it is Supposedly awaiting approval from the 25-year-Aged’s agent, David Mulugheta. The Club and Mulugheta have Supposedly not had any conversations since the NFL Scouting Combine.

“I know that I’ve spent five, six hours with him myself and had a Plenty of discussions. Most of the issues are in agreement, and I’ve discussed it all,” Jones said, via The Athletic, at the NFL’s annual Division Gathering on Tuesday. “We obviously don’t have an agreement relative to a new contract. Micah is under contract. So we’ll see how that goes. It’s not uncommon for me to visit directly with players, and in this particular case, that’s what I’m doing.”

Jones added that he doesn’t view Parsons’ contract situation as urgent and that “I’d rather pay more and get it right,” per The Athletic. He also doesn’t see Mulugheta as “a factor here or something to worry about,” claiming to not even know his name.

“That’s [an agent] not something you should be worrying about. You should be worrying about your ability to make it work, and you should be worried about what the player does,” Jones continued, via The Athletic. “Does he have Excellent enough health? Does he have Excellent enough Talent to do what you’re paying him the money for.

“The agent is not a factor here, of something to worry about. And I don’t know his name. And so my Points is, I’m not trying to demean him in any way, but this isn’t about an agent. The agent doesn’t have one thing to do with what we’re doing when we get on the football Pitch against a Club. Micah does. To the degree I’m involved, I do. The people that have something to do with what we do going forward relative to our fans and football are me and the player, not the agent.

“Frankly, most people that negotiate with me will tell you that it was better off than negotiating with anybody else, Stephen [Jones], or anybody involved. This is not uncommon. I negotiated directly as Distant back as Emmitt [Smith], Deion [Sanders]. We, by the way, have maintained relationships that have lasted well past their Competing Intervals.”

Agent’s Take: The exploding edge rusher market and who is in line for the Subsequent big payday

Joel Corry

Agent's Take: The exploding edge rusher market and who is in line for the Subsequent big payday

Jones and Parsons discussing a new contract one-on-one isn’t surprising. Parsons requested and set up a Gathering in the owner’s suite at AT&T Stadium at the College Football Elimination Stage semifinal game between Ohio State and Texas back in January. Jones also invited Parsons and his friends to hang out with him at his suite at Allegiant Stadium for Finals LVIII in Las Vegas.

So what would making Parsons the highest-paid non-QB in the NFL look like? It would Impolite Parsons’ average annual salary eclipsing the $40.25 million on Cincinnati Bengals All-Pro wide receiver Ja’Marr Chase’s four-year, $161 million contract.

Highest-paid non-QBs in average annual salary

Ja’Marr Chase Cincinnati Bengals WR $40,250,000
Myles Garrett Cleveland Browns DE $40,000,000
Danielle Hunter Houston Texans DE $35,600,000
Maxx Crosby Las Vegas Raiders DE $35,500,000
Justin Jefferson Minnesota Vikings WR $35,000,000
CeeDee Lamb Dallas Cowboys WR $34,000,000
Nick Bosa San Francisco 49ers DE $34,000,000
DK Metcalf Pittsburgh Steelers WR $33,000,000
A.J. Brown Philadelphia Eagles WR $32,000,000
Chris Jones Kansas City Chiefs DT $31,750,000

It could also Impolite passing fellow edge rusher Myles Garrett’s four-year, $160 million extension with the Cleveland Browns in guaranteed money. Garrett received $123,596,125 guaranteed on his new deal, a figure that Parsons’ agent could potentially be more interested in than the average annual salary number.

Highest-paid non-QBs in guaranteed salary

Myles Garrett Cleveland Browns DE $123,596,125
Nick Bosa San Francisco 49ers DE $122,500,000
Ja’Marr Chase Cincinnati Bengals WR $112,000,000
Justin Jefferson Minnesota Vikings WR $110,000,000
CeeDee Lamb Dallas Cowboys WR $100,000,000
Chris Jones Kansas City Chiefs DT $95,000,000
Maxx Crosby Las Vegas Raiders DE $91,500,000
Tristan Wirfs Tampa Bay Buccaneers OT $88,240,000
Joshua Hines-Allen Jacksonville Jaguars DE $88,000,000
Brian Burns New York Giants DE $87,500,000

It will be interesting to see how Speedy these negotiations Relocate once Mulugheta rejoins the conversation with Dallas’ voluntary offseason program kicking off Subsequent week. Last offseason, Parsons called missing Dallas’ offseason program his “style.” All-Pro wide receiver CeeDee Lamb, who was in negotiations for his second NFL contract like Parsons, Kept out of the offseason program last year prior to signing a four-year, $136 million contract in August.

Parsons declared it’s now his time as a leader on the Dallas Protection Subsequent the departure of Pro Bowl edge rusher DeMarcus Lawrence to the Seattle Seahawks this offseason, and new head Trainer Brian Schottenheimer believes he’s going to be around for the Club’s offseason program.

“I feel very comfortable. Micah said he’s going to be around,” Schottenheimer said Tuesday (via ESPN) from the NFL’s annual  Division Gathering. “I think that he wants to be. I think we’re all very comfortable with that. And at the end of the day he’s a Excellent player and we think he’s Only getting Began, to be honest with you. I have no question in my mind that he’ll be around. …Micah’s excited about the opportunity to step up in a leadership role. … I think that’s one of the reasons why he will be around.”

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