The Dallas Cowboys have already upgraded their backfield this offseason, but they may not be done yet. After signing Javonte Williams to a 3-year, $24 million contract, reports indicate the Cowboys could emerge as a serious suitor for New Orleans Saints star Alvin Kamara once the post-June 1 trading window opens.
Bleacher Reportโs Kristopher Knox recently highlighted Dallas as a potential landing spot for the two-time NFL All-Pro, noting that a trade after June 1 would save the Saints approximately $456,741 in cap space. Trading him before that date would carry a much steeper $7.6 million hit in 2026, making a post-June 1 deal far more palatable for New Orleans. While the Saints are unlikely to command a massive return for the 31-year-old veteran, Kamaraโs proven dual-threat ability should still generate legitimate interest from running back-needy contenders.A Decade of Excellence Meets a Rebuilt Cowboys Backfield
Kamara has been one of the NFLโs most dynamic playmakers since entering the league, spending his entire career with the Saints. He signed a 5-year, $75 million extension in 2020 and added a 2-year, $24.5 million extension in 2024. His combination of vision, burst, and receiving skills out of the backfield remains elite, even as he enters the later stages of his career.
For the Cowboys, adding Kamara would represent a significant statement. While Javonte Williams delivered a career-best season in 2025 โ rushing for 1,201 yards and 11 touchdowns on his one-year prove-it deal โ Dallas lacks proven depth behind him. The current group features Malik Davis and a pair of 2025 draft picks, Jaydon Blue and Phil Mafah, neither of whom showed they were ready for consistent NFL contributions last season.
Kamaraโs versatility would immediately address that weakness. His ability to contribute both as a rusher and a receiver would complement Williams perfectly, creating one of the more dangerous backfield tandems in the NFC.
Trade Realities and Alternative Scenarios
Of course, acquiring Kamara wouldnโt come without cost. Even at this stage of his career, itโs difficult to envision a team surrendering more than a mid-round pick โ likely a fifth-rounder โ given his age and contract. Yet for a Cowboys team looking to bolster its playoff push, the upside could far outweigh the investment.That said, other suitors remain in play. A reunion with former head coach Sean Payton in Denver has long been viewed as the most natural fit. Payton knows Kamara better than any coach in the league after five years together in New Orleans. However, the Broncosโ backfield has grown increasingly crowded. After selecting RJ Harvey in the second round of the 2025 draft and re-signing J.K. Dobbins, Denver added Washingtonโs Jonah Coleman in the third round of the 2026 draft. A Kamara addition there would create significant overlap, potentially complicating that reunion.

The NFCโs New Headache
Should the deal materialize in Dallas, the ripple effects across the conference would be immediate. A backfield featuring both Williamsโ power and Kamaraโs elusive, receiving prowess would force defensive coordinators to game-plan for multiple threats on every snap. The $75 million man, still operating like a cheat code in space, paired with a 1,200-yard, 11-touchdown rusher creates problems that few defenses are built to solve.
While nothing is finalized, the pieces are aligning. Post-June 1, the Cowboys will have both the cap flexibility and the roster need to make a move. For a franchise always hunting Super Bowl contention, adding a proven difference-maker like Alvin Kamara could be the exact jolt the offense needs.
The NFC has officially been put on notice.