The Dallas Cowboys have pulled off one of the most aggressive moves of the 2026 NFL Draft, acquiring four-time Pro Bowl cornerback and two-time All-Pro Marlon Humphrey from the Baltimore Ravens in exchange for the team’s fourth-round pick (No. 118 overall) and fifth-round selection (No. 180 overall).

The deal, which was finalized during the draft, immediately reshapes Dallas’ secondary and addresses the most glaring question mark on the roster heading into the season.
With Trevon Diggs and Kaiir Elam no longer on the team, DaRon Bland still rehabbing from a second foot surgery, and the recent addition of Cobie Durant providing only partial relief, the cornerback room lacked proven, high-level depth.
Neither Shavon Revel nor Reddy Steward projected as immediate difference-makers capable of locking down NFL receivers week in and week out.
At 6-foot, 210 pounds, the veteran defensive back brings 131 career games and 113 starts to Dallas, along with elite versatility that fits the new defensive vision under coordinator Christian Parker.
Humphrey has spent significant time in the nickel package — logging more than 660 of 1,000 defensive snaps there in 2024 — yet he remains equally comfortable erasing boundary receivers when asked. That dual-threat profile is exactly what the Cowboys needed: a “slot demon” who can also dominate on the outside.
The analytical case for the move is compelling. Humphrey earned first-team All-Pro honors in both 2019 and 2024. His 2024 season was arguably the finest of his career: 67 total tackles (50 solo), 0.5 sack, five tackles for loss, four quarterback hits, a career-high six interceptions, and the first defensive touchdown of his career.
Even in 2025, when his coverage numbers showed some regression — he allowed 920 yards (second-worst among cornerbacks) and 64 completions on 99 targets — he still posted 68 tackles, 13 pass breakups, two forced fumbles, and four interceptions that led the Ravens.
At age 30 entering the season, he is in the final year of his contract ($15.25 million cap hit in 2026), but the structure includes three void years. A simple extension could drop his 2026 cap number to roughly $4 million, making the financial commitment manageable for Dallas.
From Baltimore’s perspective, the trade makes sense under new head coach Jesse Minter. The Ravens appear willing to listen to offers
For the Cowboys, the addition is more than a patch — it is a strategic bridge. Humphrey’s proven zone ability aligns far better with Parker’s scheme than the press-man tendencies of some of the current options.
He can slide into the slot on certain packages, giving Dallas the flexibility to mix and match while Bland works his way back. If the team also drafts a young corner or two in the coming rounds, Humphrey becomes the veteran stabilizer who can mentor the next generation while still producing at a high level himself.
Critics may point to the slight dip in coverage efficiency in 2025 and the fact that Dallas surrendered two draft picks for a 30-year-old in the final year of his deal. Yet the price — a fourth and a fifth — is reasonable for a player of Humphrey’s pedigree and immediate impact potential. In a secondary that was suddenly thin on proven talent, paying the ransom for a four-time Pro Bowler who can dominate both the slot and the boundary was not just logical; it was necessary.