
For years, the Dallas Cowboys have built their identity around stability at the quarterback position.
And that stability has a name: Dak Prescott.
Heading into the 2026 season, Prescott remains the unquestioned leader of the offense. He’s coming off a strong 2025 campaign, throwing for over 4,500 yards with 30 touchdowns and just 10 interceptions—numbers that reaffirm his status as a top-tier NFL quarterback.
But here’s where the conversation shifts.
Because while Prescott is still performing at a high level, the room behind him is anything but settled.
And that’s where the panic begins.
⚠️ The Backup Situation: Talent vs. Trust
The Cowboys’ current QB room includes names like Joe Milton, Sam Howell, and previously Will Grier—a group defined more by uncertainty than reliability.
- Joe Milton brings elite arm strength and athletic upside—but struggles with accuracy and consistency.
- Sam Howell offers experience, including a near 4,000-yard season in 2023—but has battled turnovers and inconsistency.
- Depth options like Grier have familiarity but lack meaningful regular-season success.
Even recent reports confirm that the QB2 role is still an open competition, not a locked-in solution.
That’s not ideal for a team with Super Bowl ambitions.
Because in today’s NFL, backup quarterbacks don’t just fill space—they win games.
🧠 The Bigger Concern: Prescott’s History
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This issue becomes even more serious when you consider Prescott’s injury track record.
Over the past several seasons, he has missed time due to significant injuries—including a major hamstring issue that ended a season early.
There’s even a pattern emerging: injuries impacting multiple seasons across recent years.
That doesn’t mean Prescott isn’t durable—it means the risk is real.
And when that risk exists, your backup situation becomes critical.
Right now, Dallas doesn’t have a proven safety net.
🔍 No Clear Future QB
Another layer to this issue is long-term planning.
Prescott is entering his mid-30s, and while still productive, the Cowboys have no clear successor on the roster.
Milton is a project.
Howell is a short-term option.
Neither is viewed as “the future.”
That puts Dallas in a dangerous middle ground:
- Too committed to Prescott to rebuild
- Too uncertain behind him to feel secure
And in the NFL, that’s one of the toughest positions to be in.
🏈 Why This Matters More in 2026

The timing makes this even more urgent.
The Cowboys are not rebuilding—they are trying to win now.
After missing the playoffs in 2025 despite solid quarterback play, the pressure is mounting.
Every position matters.
Every weakness is magnified.
And quarterback depth? That’s not just a weakness—it’s a potential season-defining flaw.
Because if Prescott misses even a few games, the entire trajectory of the season could shift.
🔥 Panic or Just Reality?
So—is this panic justified?
Yes… and no.
No, because Prescott is still a high-level QB capable of carrying the team.
Yes, because the margin for error is razor thin—and the Cowboys are one injury away from relying on unproven talent.
In today’s NFL, that’s a dangerous gamble.
Teams like the Chiefs, Eagles, and 49ers have shown the importance of depth, adaptability, and contingency plans.
Right now, Dallas feels like it’s betting everything on one outcome:
That Prescott stays healthy.
💭 Final Thought
The quarterback room isn’t just about who starts.
It’s about what happens when things go wrong.
And for the Dallas Cowboys in 2026, that question doesn’t have a reassuring answer—yet.
So here’s the real debate heating up among fans:
Are the Dallas Cowboys dangerously overlooking their QB depth behind Dak Prescott—or is this just offseason panic that will disappear once the season begins?