How an all-offense draft for the Cowboys might look
We presented Cowboys Nation with an all-defense mock draft previously in this series, and have now returned to flip everything over and see what an all-offense draft would look like, even if it really wouldn't make sense. But look at things this way, the offensive questions are there for Dallas. There's real uncertainty at left tackle with fan frustration at right tackle, the club has acknowledged it needs more wide receiver depth along questions on the future of George Pickens. And only Jake Ferguson is signed beyond 2026 among the top tight ends, with bags of uncertainty on Luke Schoonmaker playing for Dallas this season. That's one way to justify an offense-only swing in the draft. So let's get to it.
Pick 12:Spencer Fano, OT, UtahFano measured 6-foot-5 and 311 pounds, then ran a 4.91s forty yard time with a 1.72s 10-yard split, a 32-inch vertical, a 9-foot-3 broad jump, a 7.34s three-cone, and a 4.67s shuttle. On the consensus he's ranked 12th overall, and he was one of the combine's top offensive line movers, which is exactly why he makes sense here. Dallas still needs a long-term answer on Dak Prescott's blindside, and Fano gives them a player with legitimate tackle experience plus inside flexibility if that is where his NFL future ultimately lands.
Pick 20: Chris Brazzell II, WR, TennesseeBrazzell checked in at 6-foot-4 and 198 pounds and ripped off a 4.37s forty time with a 1.52s 10-yard split. Brazzell has pushed himself into the first-round conversation, and expect more buzz with his name as we head closer to draft day. The Cowboys clearly like Pickens, but after Seattle made a blockbuster signing with their rookie receiver, it makes things extremely tough to expect Pickens to be around long term in Dallas. The Cowboys coaches have also said the room needs more than just Lamb and Flournoy to throw to, and Brazzell would give them another size-speed weapon on a cost-controlled deal in what is becoming one of the league's most expensive positions.
Pick 92: Emmett Johnson, RB, NebraskaJohnson measured 5-foot-10 and 202 pounds, then posted a 4.56s forty, 1.59s split, 35.5-inch vertical, 10-foot broad jump, 7.32s three-cone, 4.29s shuttle, and 16 bench reps. Johnson is a back whose vision, cutting ability and explosive-play upside would pair well with the Cowboys' scheme, and that makes him a clean third-round answer for a backfield that still needs more long-term certainty. He is not a luxury pick here, he is the kind of depth and future starter bet that makes sense behind Javonte Williams.
Pick 112: Tanner Koziol, TE, HoustonKoziol blew the combine apart earning an elite 9.77 RAS (Relative Athletic Score). This is definitely a Day 3 tight end worth watching because of his size, toughness and receiving profile, and that lines up with the team's roster reality. The Cowboys top three tight ends are under contract for 2026, but only Ferguson is secured beyond that. Koziol feels like the right kind of developmental pass-game piece to stash now before the room gets more expensive.
Pick 152: Gennings Dunker, OT, IowaDunker is set to go somewhere around the third round, so getting him here was strong value. In an all-offense build, doubling down on the line is easy to defend, especially for a team still trying to settle its tackle picture and protect Prescott from the kind of attrition that wrecked his rhythm at crucial moments last season.
Pick 177: DJ Campbell, OG, TexasCampbell measured 6-foot-3 and 313 pounds, with a 5.01s forty, 1.76s split, 26.5-inch vertical, and 8-foot-8 broad jump. This one is less about panic and more about smart roster construction. Dallas likes where it stands at starting guard and center, and the team has made it clear it believes the future of both guard spots and center is already in the building, which means this is the exact range where you can afford to add another powerful developmental blocker and keep the pipeline healthy. Campbell is the kind of mid Day 3 trench pick good offenses keep making.
Pick 180: CJ Daniels, WR, MiamiDaniels is a big target receiver who can stretch the field, has contested-catch ability, and comes with enough experience to be more league-ready than the typical late Day 3 receiver. If the Cowboys are serious about insulating themselves from future contract decisions at receiver, this is exactly the kind of double-dip that makes sense.
Pick 218: Matt Gulbin, OC, Michigan StateThis late-round offensive line pick makes complete sense for Dallas. Cooper Beebe is set to return as the starting center in 2026, so the Cowboys do not need to force an immediate starter here, they just need to replace the loss of Brock Hoffman. What they need here is a smart, physical interior depth piece, and Gulbin gives them exactly that because he has starting experience at left guard, right guard, and center. For a seventh-round pick in an offense-heavy mock, that is a clean Cowboys fit.