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The Dallas Cowboys selected safety Caleb Downs with the 11th overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft and added wide receiver Anthony Smith in the seventh round. The team focused on improving their defense, addressing several key positions during the draft.
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Hereâs how the Cowboys did during the the draft.
**Round 1, No. 11 overall:Â Caleb Downs, S, Ohio State**
**My take:** Some personnel people considered Downs, 21, the best player in the draft, even though he does not play one of the pivotal positions. He was a great player at Alabama and Ohio State. Last season for the Buckeyes, he played for coordinator Matt Patricia, who oversaw some of the Patriotsâ Super Bowl defenses. Downs was able to understand Patriciaâs defense quickly and excelled. The Cowboys added safeties  and  in free agency, but Downs can fill a different role as a slot player. He is more than willing to be physical. He can stay with running backs and tight ends. He knows how to communicate to bridge the differences between the front seven and back end. He was one of the 12 players the Cowboys had a first-round grade on entering the draft.
The Dallas Cowboys drafted Caleb Downs, a safety from Ohio State, with the 11th overall pick.
The Cowboys focused on bolstering their defense, selecting a safety, three edge rushers, and a cornerback among their first six picks.
Caleb Downs is known for his instinctive play, physicality, and ability to communicate effectively on the field.
Anthony Smith is expected to bring elite speed and explosiveness to the Cowboys, following a standout college career at East Carolina.

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**Will he start as a rookie?:** It depends on the definition of starter but remember coach Brian Schottenheimer listed nickel defender as the Cowboysâ biggest need when asked at the recent NFL league meeting. New coordinator Christian Parker will use a sub package more than a base defense, so there will be plenty of snaps for Downs as a rookie. With Thompson and Malik Hooker, Downs doesnât need to âstartâ at safety, but there will be plenty of snaps for him to play in 2026 regardless of where he lines up on the field.
**What weâre hearing about Downs:**Â Speaking on âThe Pat McAfee Showâ this week, Nick Saban, who was Downsâ coach at Alabama, said, âThe guy is so instinctive, heâs got really good ability. Heâs a phenomenal person, and he is a football junkie.â In 2023, as a freshman, Downs led Alabamaâs defense in tackles (107).
With their final pick of the draft, the Cowboys added a high upside talent with terrific speed.
The Cowboys ticked off a majority of of their most-frequently-cited needs with their first six picks in the 2026 NFL draft using five of those selections to bolster the much-aligned defense.
Safety? They got the best one in the class. Edge rusher? Dallas picked three of them, though one projects to be used more like a linebacker and another should play more on the interior. High-potential cornerback? Got one of those, too.
Linebacker was the only Cowboys roster slot not addressed through the first six rounds. But with the teamâs final pick being a seventh-rounder, it was always going to be a dart throw at best. (Even more so when LSUâs Harold Perkins Jr., the best âbacker left on the board, was taken by the Falcons just three spots before Dallas came on the clock.)
Sometimes a pick in the seventh lands a player who goes on to make a meaningful contribution. Current swing tackle Nathan Thomas was a seventh-rounder in 2024; Noah Brown, Jay Ratliff, Patrick Crayton, Brock Marion, and Leon Lett have all been taken there during the Jerry Jones era. Heck, Hall of Famers Bob Hayes and Rayfield Wright were both seventh-round selections once upon a time.
Time will tell if East Carolina wide receiver Anthony Smith, the Cowboysâ pick at No. 218, will follow in their footsteps.
Official pre-draft scouting reports on Smith are few and far between, but a check of his resume shows that after four sparsely-used seasons at North Carolina State, Smith broke out in 2024 and 2025 for the Pirates. He ended his six-year college career with 118 catches for 2,095 yards and 16 touchdowns.
Smith really showed out for East Carolina in their Military Bowl win in December, hauling in four passes for 156 yards and two scores, earning the gameâs MVP honors.
His speed is graded as elite- having been clocked with a 4.40 40- and he has shown good explosiveness and agility, tools that the Cowboys will surely put to use as he begins his NFL career.
On day 2 of the draft, the Cowboys were able to acquire a very productive linebacker from the 49ers for cheap. Still, why would the 49ers trade him away?
The San Francisco 49ers decided to trade Dee Winters to the Dallas Cowboys for a fifth-round pick. Naturally, ahead of and during the NFL Draft, there are always difficult decisions when it comes to trading players for additional picks. San Francisco was no exception. Backup quarterback Mac Jones was frequently mentioned in trade speculation, but no deal ultimately materialized. However, the team parted ways with Winters as they continue to reshape their roster heading into the new season.
**John Lynch explains why the 49ers moved on from Dee Winters**
Winters joined the franchise in 2023 after being selected in the sixth round, so trading him away for a fifth-round pick would indicate a return on investment. Across his time in the City by the Bay, Winters contributed primarily on special teams and as a rotational defender, recording solid tackle numbers while showing flashes of brilliance. âWe made that trade today [Friday], and thatâs tough because Deeâs a guy whoâs done a lot for us here,â Lynch shared to reporters when discussing their Day 2 additions.
âSixth-round pick out of TCU, but Dee is one of the favorite guys in that locker room amongst his teammates. Heâs done a lot for us on the field. âWe just felt like we were in a good position at linebacker, and Dallas has been really interested in him for a long time. And Iâd say the talks probably started with myself and [Cowboys co-owner, EVP] Stephen Jones, when we were talking about Osa [Odighizuwa].
Theyâve stayed on that. We kind of held it off for a while, and as we got there today, we just felt like it was the right thing to do for our team. âItâs a good opportunity for Dee. I think thereâs a lot of opportunity for him to shine, and just very grateful for Deeâs time here and all his contributions he made to our squad.â
After adding Dee Winters and Jaishawn Barham, hereâs why Dallas should think their chances of adding another veteran linebacker is look really good.
By trading for Dee Winters and selecting Michigan hybrid Jaishawn Barham in the third round, the Dallas Cowboys have remade their linebacker room during the NFL Draft. While improved, it still lacks a field general to don the green dot. Unless the Cowboys plan to give that to first-round pick Caleb Downs, they should kick the tires on another trade for a veteran. Why not revisit their interest in Miami Dolphins star Jordyn Brooks? He still hasnât signed an extension, and Miami has now drafted multiple linebackers this weekend after selecting Pittsburgh standout Kyle Louis in the fourth round. This comes after the Dolphins selected Texas Tech phenom Jacob Rodriguez, widely viewed as the second-best LB in the class and a possible like-for-like replacement for Brooks, on Day 2.
Jerry Jones and friends should be blowing up the Dolphinsâ phone line, if they arenât already.
**The Dallas Cowboys may have hope of trading for Jordyn Brooks after all**
The Dolphinsâ Rodriguez pick has Shayne Kubas of *Phin Phanatic*wondering if Brooks has played his last snap in South Florida. ***As much as I love the selection, itâs hard not to immediately wonder about the future of All-Pro linebacker Jordyn Brooks. Brooks is in the final year of the three-year contract he signed with Miami back in 2024, and the new front office has no ties to him.â***
That, ladies and gentlemen, is Jerry Jonesâ music. The newfound confidence in Dallasâ linebacker corps is warranted, but if the season started tomorrow, Barham would be asked to play a lot of snaps. Not only is that a tall ask for a third-round pick, but the former Wolverine has the versatility to rush the passer off the edge. He can be a chess piece for Christian Parker and shouldnât be pigeon-holed into one role. He wasnât drafted to just play off-ball linebacker.
Furthermore, relying on DeMarvion Overshown to play a full season is risky. Two devastating knee injuries have limited Overshown to 19 games in three seasons since he was drafted No. 90 overall in 2023. Heâs shown All-Pro potential when healthy, but availability has been a massive issue. Even with the additions Dallas made on Day 2, trading for Brooks makes a lot of sense. He was arguably the best off-ball linebacker in football last season, ranking third among all LBs with a 92.0 run-defense grade and 11th with a 75.0 pass-rush grade, per Pro Football Focus. ***Daily Discussion Question:* How are you feeling about the Cowboys roster after the draft?**