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Dallas Cowboys Make Final Decision on Young Talent, Player Injured in 3 of 4 Seasons on $5 Million Contract

DeMarvion Overshown, one of the Dallas Cowboys’ most promising young talents, is facing the harshest reality of his young career. Selected in the third round of the 2023 NFL Draft (pick 90 overall), Overshown signed a four-year rookie contract worth approximately $5.39 million, including a signing bonus of around $920,000 and equivalent guaranteed money. The deal runs through the end of the 2026 season, meaning 2026 is his final year under contract with the Cowboys. Without a new agreement, Overshown will become an unrestricted free agent in 2027.

However, the Cowboys have made their stance clear and pragmatic: no early contract extension, no exercise of any fifth-year option (not applicable as he is a third-round pick), and no extension talks this offseason. Instead, the team is taking a strict “wait and see” approach - waiting to see if Overshown can finally play a full, healthy season. This is the Cowboys’ final decision regarding this young talent, driven by a brutal injury history that has derailed three out of the four years of his $5 million rookie deal.

Overshown’s unfortunate injury history:

  • 2023 (rookie year): Suffered a torn ACL (anterior cruciate ligament) in his left knee during the second preseason game (August 2023). Placed on injured reserve immediately and missed the entire regular season.
  • 2024: Returned strong, playing in 13 games (12 starts), recording 90 tackles, 8 TFLs, 5 sacks, 1 pick-six, and several explosive plays. But in Week 14, he tore his ACL, MCL, and PCL in his right knee - a devastating multi-ligament injury. Underwent surgery shortly after and missed the rest of the season.
  • 2025: Still recovering from the major 2024 knee surgery, he was placed on the PUP list during preseason. Missed the first 10-11 games (Weeks 1–10 or similar), returned around Week 11, and played in roughly 6 games with more modest production (around 28 tackles). Late in the season, he suffered a concussion and was ruled out for some final games.

In total, Overshown has appeared in only about 19 games across three seasons (out of a possible 51), undergoing major surgery on both knees and dealing with additional setbacks. When healthy, he is an explosive, versatile linebacker with star potential—strong in run defense, pass rushing, and coverage. Yet the repeated injuries have turned him into a classic “what-if” story for the Cowboys.

At the recent NFL Scouting Combine (February 2026), Cowboys COO Stephen Jones was blunt:

“The biggest thing is that, availability... Certainly, no one wants to play the game more than him... But, obviously, he needs to put together a full season, and if he does, I think it’s going to be a great season... The only question mark he has is his injury issues he’s had and getting through a full year.”

This decision reflects the Cowboys’ cold, business-like reality: they prioritize availability over potential. Even though Overshown enters the 2026 offseason fully healthy for the first time, and is expected to play a bigger role in the new base 3-4 defense under coordinator Christian Parker, 2026 will be his make-or-break year. If he stays healthy and performs at a high level throughout a full season, he could earn a big extension from Dallas or attract strong interest in free agency. If injuries persist, he may leave the Cowboys without being re-signed.

For the Cowboys, it’s a sensible move given limited cap space and the need to build a competitive roster. For fans, it’s a heartbreaking outcome for “Agent Zero”—a young talent who once promised to transform the defense but has been repeatedly sidelined by injury throughout his $5 million rookie contract. Overshown’s future now rests entirely on his ability to stay on the field in this pivotal 2026 season.

Broncos Legend John Elway Speaks Out On Alex Pretti Case: 'If A Nurse Trying To Help Can Be Killed, Who's Next?'
MINNEAPOLIS  In a powerful and emotional public statement that has captured national attention, Broncos legend and Pro Football Hall of Famer John Elway entered the public conversation surrounding the controversial killing of Alex Pretti — a 37-year-old intensive care nurse who was fatally shot by federal agents in Minneapolis earlier this year. Pretti, a registered ICU nurse at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center, was shot multiple times by United States Customs and Border Protection officers during a federal immigration enforcement operation on January 24, 2026. While official accounts initially described the incident as an armed confrontation, eyewitness videos and reports show Pretti holding a phone and attempting to assist others in the crowd before violence escalated. Elway — one of the most respected figures in NFL history — didn’t hold back in his remarks, echoing the profound fear and uncertainty gripping communities affected by the tragedy: “If a nurse who was trying to help can be killed, then who will be next?!” His words resonated deeply with both sports fans and ordinary citizens alike, cutting straight to the heart of broader concerns about public safety, authority, and accountability in the wake of the shooting. Pretti’s death has become far more than a local incident. For many, it has come to symbolize a fracture in the social contract — a moment when the line between everyday life and sudden tragedy feels uncomfortably thin. Public outrage has spread across the country, with protests, vigils, and calls for transparent investigations emerging not just in Minneapolis but in cities nationwide. Residents and advocates have expressed that the killing of someone dedicated to saving lives represents a breakdown in trust between communities and those meant to protect them. One of the most chilling aspects of the case, noted by civil rights groups and local leaders, is that Pretti had no significant criminal history — and bystander footage suggests he offered help, not hostility, before the incident escalated. Elway’s intervention adds a voice of moral weight to a conversation already filled with grief and frustration. His stance reflects a growing sentiment that justice in cases of state force must be more than procedural — it must restore confidence and community safety. As protests continue and investigations unfold, many see Pretti’s death as a somber reminder of how trust, once shattered, demands more than words to rebuild. What happened to Alex Pretti is no longer just about one life lost; it’s a moment that has ignited deeper questions about fear, power, and how society protects those who spend their days caring for others.