In a move that blends veteran experience with familiar risk, the Cowboys have signed free-agent wide receiver Marquez Valdes-Scantling (MVS) to a one-year contract. NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero first reported the signing on Monday, adding another chapter to Dallas’ wide receiver room that already carries its share of drama.
At 31 years old, the 6-foot-4, 206-pound Valdes-Scantling brings proven big-play ability and championship pedigree. He won back-to-back Super Bowls with the Kansas City Chiefs after the 2022 and 2023 seasons and earlier made his mark with the Green Bay Packers alongside Aaron Rodgers. Over his first six NFL seasons, he suited up for just two teams. Since 2023, however, he has bounced between three clubs in 2025 alone — the Seattle Seahawks, San Francisco 49ers, and Pittsburgh Steelers — making the Cowboys his sixth team in the last three years.
Career Production and Playoff Pedigree
Through eight NFL seasons, Valdes-Scantling has recorded 219 receptions for 3,686 yards and 21 touchdowns in 116 regular-season games. His per-catch average of 16.8 yards highlights the deep-threat dimension he has long provided. Yet his true spotlight moments have come in the postseason: 27 catches for 432 yards and 4 touchdowns across 12 playoff games, including key contributions to those two Lombardi Trophy runs in Kansas City.
His peak regular-season performance came in 2020 with the Packers, when he hauled in 33 passes for 690 yards and 6 scores while leading the league with a gaudy 20.9 yards per reception. That combination of size, 4.37 speed in the 40-yard dash, and occasional explosiveness is exactly what made him an intriguing low-cost addition for a Cowboys offense still searching for reliable depth behind its top options.
The Persistent Question: Can the Hands Hold Up?
The reason for Valdes-Scantling’s recent journeyman status is no secret. While his physical tools and big-play history are undeniable, he has developed a reputation for costly mistakes in critical situations — dropped passes, fumbles, and mental lapses that have occasionally cost teams dearly in high-leverage moments.
That inconsistency explains why a player who once thrived in championship environments has spent recent years ping-ponging across practice squads and depth charts. For the Cowboys, who made no major splashes at wide receiver in free agency or the 2026 NFL Draft (selecting only Anthony Smith in the seventh round), MVS represents a calculated gamble on veteran upside rather than a guaranteed roster lock.
Roster Reality: An Uphill Battle for the Fifth Spot
If George Pickens returns (more on that below), the Cowboys’ top wide receiver hierarchy looks formidable: NFL All-Pro CeeDee Lamb and Pickens as the clear 1A/1B options, followed by proven contributors Kavontae Turpin and Ryan Flournoy. Valdes-Scantling enters camp fighting primarily for the fifth receiver spot — most likely battling undrafted rookie Anthony Smith and any other camp standouts for that final roster spot.
In short, MVS is not walking into a featured role. He is competing for a depth job on a team that values his experience but cannot afford repeated clutch-time miscues.
Looming Drama: The George Pickens Situation
Adding to the intrigue at wide receiver is the ongoing contract situation with George Pickens. As of Monday, Pickens had not yet signed his 2026 franchise tag, which would pay him approximately $28 million for the upcoming season. Once he does sign the tender, the Cowboys would gain the ability to trade him at any time.
Pickens delivered career-high numbers in 2025 after arriving from the Pittsburgh Steelers via trade — 93 receptions for 1,249 yards and 9 touchdowns — but his future in Dallas remains fluid. Extension talks or a potential trade cannot officially progress until the tag is signed. As The 33rd Team’s Ari Meirov noted, signing the tag opens the door for a deal “as early as tonight,” though no move is guaranteed.
A Low-Risk, High-Variance Addition
With roughly $29.4 million in career earnings already banked, Valdes-Scantling is a seasoned veteran chasing one more opportunity to prove he can deliver the explosive plays without the costly mistakes. For the Cowboys, it’s a classic depth signing: minimal financial commitment, potential for big-play sparks, but very real risk if the “ticking time bomb” in his hands goes off at the wrong moment.
Training camp will tell whether MVS can recapture the lightning he once provided for Rodgers and Mahomes — or whether his stay in Dallas becomes another short chapter in a wandering veteran’s journey. One thing is certain: in a wide receiver room already simmering with drama, the Cowboys have just turned up the heat a little more.