Dallas Cowboys Seven‑Round Mock Draft — Post Week One of Free Agency

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The first wave of free agency had wrapped. It was time to dive into Pro Football Network’s mock simulator. The goal was to reshape the Cowboys’ roster. I kept things disciplined: only first‑round trades, and only if the simulator offered them.

Then Seattle dropped a blockbuster on the table.

Dallas shipped picks 12 and 152 (359 points) to the Seahawks and walked away with a king’s ransom:

  • Pick 32 (Round 1)
  • Pick 64 (Round 2)
  • Pick 96 (Round 3)
  • 2027 2nd‑round pick
  • 2027 3rd‑round pick  
  • Total value: 398 points — a clear win for Dallas.

I had extra ammo and a clear mission. I searched for players who could fortify the defense. They also needed to elevate an already top‑five offense. What followed was a draft class built on toughness, upside, and immediate impact.

🏈 The Picks

20. Akheem Mesidor — EDGE, Miami (FL)

A grown‑man pass rusher with NFL‑ready strength and technique. Mesidor steps into the rotation on Day One and gives Dallas the juice it needs off the edge.

32. Jacob Rodriguez — LB, Texas Tech

This is the type of player Cowboys fans fall in love with instantly. Rodriguez flies around the field, diagnoses quickly, and pairs beautifully with Overshown to form a fast, aggressive linebacker duo.

64. Will Lee III — CB, Texas A&M

Long, physical, and competitive. Lee adds real heat to the cornerback room and should push for a starting job sooner rather than later.

92. Bud Clark — S, TCU

A young, rangy safety with natural ball skills. Clark enters a strong safety room and gets groomed as a long‑term starter on the back end.

96. Kaytron Allen — RB, Penn State

A downhill hammer who brings back the physical identity the run game has been missing. Allen and Javonte Williams form a punishing one‑two punch.

112. Markel Bell — OT, Miami (FL)

A raw but freakishly gifted tackle prospect. With coaching and patience, Bell has the tools to become Dallas’ left tackle for the next decade.

177. Jeff Caldwell — WR, Cincinnati

A big‑bodied target who replaces Tolbert and brings a physical element that Lamb and Pickens don’t. Red‑zone weapon, chain‑mover, matchup problem.

180. Red Murdock — LB, Buffalo

A violent, downhill linebacker who hits like he’s trying to split the turf. Depth, special teams, and tone‑setting energy.

218. Thaddeus Dixon — CB, North Carolina

Young, talented, and fresh off an “internship” under Bill Belichick. Dixon brings smart, disciplined corner play and developmental upside.

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