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Cowboys By Far Lowest Team on NFL Offseason Spending Rankings; Lions No. 1 at $626M

Tyler Conway@@jtylerconwayX.com LogoFeatured Columnist IVJune 5, 2024

ARLINGTON, TEXAS - FEBRUARY 4: Owner and general manager of the Dallas Cowboys Jerry Jones speaks during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Match Schedule Announcement at AT&T Stadium on February 4, 2024 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Omar Vega/Getty Images)
Omar Vega/Getty Images

Maybe when Jerry Jones said the Dallas Cowboys were "all in" on the 2024 season, he meant all in his pocket.

The Cowboys owner reached inside and came up with lint during this offseason, as Dallas was the NFL's lowest-spending team by more than $50 million. Jones cut checks totaling only $93.4 million, making the Cowboys the lone team not to reach the nine-figure mark.

By contrast, the Detroit Lions led all teams in spending, committing nearly $626.5 million in future spending.

Here's how the entire NFL stacked up:

  1. Detroit Lions: $626.5 million
  2. Philadelphia Eagles: $558.1 million
  3. Carolina Panthers: $456.9 million
  4. New England Patriots: $418.3 million
  5. Jacksonville Jaguars: $413.2 million
  6. Tennessee Titans: $404.1 million
  7. Minnesota Vikings: $383.7 million
  8. Houston Texans: $377.6 million
  9. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: $350.6 million
  10. Kansas City Chiefs: $342.2 million
  11. Indianapolis Colts: $337.1 million
  12. New York Giants: $322.0 million
  13. Atlanta Falcons: $317.7 million 
  14. Los Angeles Rams: $284.9 million
  15. Las Vegas Raiders: $281.1 million
  16. Baltimore Ravens: $278.8 million
  17. Buffalo Bills: $272.3 million
  18. Seattle Seahawks: $271.3 million
  19. Miami Dolphins: $265.4 million
  20. Arizona Cardinals: $257.8 million
  21. Washington Commanders: $230.6 million
  22. Green Bay Packers: $221.5 million
  23. San Francisco 49ers: $205.1 million
  24. Chicago Bears: $200.4 million
  25. New York Jets: $195.3 million
  26. Denver Broncos: $173.7 million
  27. Cleveland Browns: $172.4 million
  28. New Orleans Saints: $163.1 million
  29. Cincinnati Bengals: $153.0 million
  30. Los Angeles Chargers: $150.7 million 
  31. Pittsburgh Steelers: $146.9 million
  32. Dallas Cowboys: $93.4 million

The Cowboys' paltry spending has been a major surprise, particularly as Dak Prescott, CeeDee Lamb and Micah Parsons await new extensions this offseason. Jones was also adamant about 2024 being an "all-in" season as far back as February.

Instead, none of the stars have received a dollar as Jones sat on his hands, seemingly alienating his stars in the process. Parsons and Lamb have been absent throughout the team's offseason program as Jones has repeated his public stance about being all in despite evidence to the contrary.

"Your definition of what is all in and mine might not be the same thing, but I'm trying to win the games this year with my decision," Jones told reporters in March. "So I'm all in to this year."

The Cowboys spent an NFL-low $16.5 million in free agency, with a reunion with running back Ezekiel Elliott being their only signing that could be considered a splash.

Suffice it to say Jones will have an angry fanbase to answer to if the Cowboys fail to make a deep run in the playoffs.