Dallas Cowboys

Cowboys cornerback room 2026: Can the young players develop fast enough?

The Cowboys secondary was their biggest weakness in 2025, allowing 243.1 passing yards per game (7th-most in the NFL per Pro Football Reference). The 2026 roster is banking on young players taking a leap.

The current depth chart:

CB1: The 2024 second-round pick enters year 3. His PFF coverage grade improved from 52.1 as a rookie to 64.7 in year 2. Progress, but still below average. He has the physical tools (6-1, 4.38 forty) but needs to improve his transition speed in man coverage.

CB2: The 2025 first-round pick showed flashes but also allowed 6 touchdowns in coverage per PFF, tied for most among starting corners. The talent is obvious but the consistency is not there yet.

Slot CB: The one bright spot. A veteran free agent signing who graded at 74.2 per PFF, 12th among slot corners. Reliable and smart.

Safety help: The 2026 second-round safety pick should help the corners significantly. A true centerfield safety allows corners to play more aggressively in press coverage without worrying about getting beaten deep.

The development timeline: History suggests cornerbacks typically break out in year 3. Sauce Gardner, Jaire Alexander, Marlon Humphrey — all had their best seasons in year 3. If the Cowboys young corners follow that trajectory, the secondary could go from weakness to strength by mid-2026.

The risk: If the young corners do not develop, this defense is in serious trouble. There is no cap space to add a veteran starter and the draft pick is a safety, not a corner.

Sources:

  • Pro Football Reference — passing defense stats
  • PFF — individual coverage grades
  • NFL combine results — athletic profiles
Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 4, 2026, 8:02 PM

4 Comments

The safety pick in round 2 is going to help the corners more than people realize. Having a reliable safety over the top changes how aggressively you can play at the line of scrimmage.

The slot corner signing was underrated. 74.2 PFF grade for $5M per year is excellent value. Smart, steady, and frees the young outside guys to take chances.

Year 3 breakout is a real trend at cornerback. The position has the steepest learning curve in the NFL. I am cautiously optimistic about our young guys.

Six touchdowns allowed in coverage is brutal. Even with the excuse of being a young player, that number has to drop significantly or we are looking at another bottom-10 pass defense.