Can the Dallas Cowboys and New York Giants actually be friends for a day? In a move that sent alarm bells through the NFC East, the Giants have officially traded away their defensive anchor, Dexter Lawrence, to the Cincinnati Bengals for the rights to the 10th overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft. This massive shakeup has altered the script for the draft, and it could end up having a butterfly effect that is felt by the Cowboys when pick 12 rolls around.
The ripple effect starts immediately. Before this trade, draft experts almost universally pegged the Bengals to grab a defensive disruptor to bolster their front. Now that the layout has shifted, the Giants hold that pick, and they could find themselves staring at one of the top offensive stars. If the Giants decide to pivot toward offense, it could set a domino effect that could leave a defensive star sliding further down the board and right into the arms of the Cowboys.
This is favorable news for the Cowboys’ front office. For Dallas to land one of the elite defensive studs they have been eyeing, they essentially need a handful of offensive players to come off the board. Every time an offensive tackle, Jeremiyah Love, or now even a wide receiver gets called to the podium before the Cowboys are on the clock, the chances of a blue-chip defensive stud falling into their lap increase. The Giants’ trading Lawrence has created a window of opportunity for another offensive talent to be overvalued early, which could be exactly what the Cowboys need to snag their defensive game-changer.
Here's how I think the top-10 might play out on Thursday: pic.twitter.com/WmGkuZCvxI
If things play out as suggested above, that still leaves Caleb Downs in play with only Miami to worry about, who are largely projected to take an offensive player.
The drama does not stop there because teams like the Los Angeles Rams and Baltimore Ravens are also on the hunt for offensive help. With the Giants now occupying a spot once believed allocated for a defender, the Rams and Ravens must now wonder if it becomes necessary to jump ahead of the Giants to secure their offensive star, who might otherwise be available later if Cincy still owns the pick. This could force the Rams or Ravens to get aggressive and trade up even higher to jump ahead of the Giants, further clearing the path for defensive players to slide right toward the star in Arlington.
Ultimately, this trade is a rare win-win for the entertainment value of the draft and the specific needs of the Cowboys. Not to mention, Sexy Dexy is out of the NFC East, so the Cowboys’ interior offensive linemen are already draft day winners, and the draft hasn’t even arrived yet.
While seeing a rival gain draft assets is never fun, the way those assets will likely be used could play perfectly into the hands of the Dallas scouting department. If the chips fall correctly, the Giants’ rebuild might just be the very thing that delivers a generational defensive talent to their biggest rival. It is going to be a wild night, and for Cowboys fans, the excitement is just getting started.
The Dexter Lawrence trade actually helps the Cowboys in terms of defensive player availability. Before the trade, pick 10 was a definite DEFENSE player from Cincy. Now, it moves to the EITHER category, meaning one of the Giants' picks stands a chance to be an offensive player. pic.twitter.com/EHVlKG0HPT
