
Dallas Cowboys target under-the-radar cornerbacks in 2026 NFL Draft. Could Chris Johnson's elite speed and tackling make him a first-round steal for Dallas? Marcus Mosher and Landon McCool break down Johnson’s rapid rise up draft boards and why his physical style fits Christian Parker’s secondary vision. They compare Johnson's fluidity and discipline to other top prospects, weighing his fit against Power Five competition.
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Check in online@sport clips.com always need cornerbacks. Here are three under the radar prospects that you should know. Next. You are Locked on Cowboys, your daily Dallas Cowboys podcast, part of the Locked On Podcast network. Your team every day. Welcome back to the Lock on Cowboys podcast. I am your host, Marcus Moer. He is Lena McCool. And on today's show we're talking about three under the radar cornerback prospects that the Cowboys could target in the 2026 NFL Draft. We're going to talk about a Georgia cornerback that I'm sure Christian Parker is going to love. We'll talk about a local prospect in Malik Muhammad. But let's start with Chris Johnson. No, not that Chris Johnson. Chris Johnson from San Diego State who very quietly has started to rise up the boards a little bit. And again, you guys know that I do these consensus rankings. On January 1st he was being ranked just inside the top 100. As of this recording, he's now inside the top 40. And now I wonder if it's not, if it's not a lock that he ends up going in round one.
C
Landon. Yeah, that's crazy. I mean I listen, I got on to this guy early and I've been racking my brain trying to remember who told me about him. But yeah, I'm a big fan and, and I, I think it's wild that he's now being discussed as a first rounder, but I, I think, you know, he's, he's every bit of that kind of player. First of all, let's just get into he's 6 foot 193, he's got almost 10 inch hands. His Length is a little bit short. I mean if there's one knock on him, I think. And one thing that, but you know, when I started watching him made me really nervous. Was, is, is Will McClay gonna like this guy? But now that we're not, we're not dealing with, with arm length thresholds anymore. Meets back on the menu, boys. So he runs a, he ran a 4, 4, ran a 1, 5, 4, 10 yard split. Those are good numbers what you're looking for at that size 10, six broad jump, that could be a little bit better. He didn't do a vertical. That's fine. But I mean it probably does.
D
I got his Pro Day vertical 38 inches.
C
Oh, see, that's great. That's perfect. That's. That's what we're looking for. So typical boundary corner height weight with slightly shorter arms like you said, but almost 10 inch hands. He has long speed to burn and plays like it. I this is my favorite part about him is that he plays extremely patient at the line of scrimmage because he knows that he has the speed to catch up when he needs to. Waiting until the last second to flip his hips. He doesn't want to commit to a bunch of double moves. You know, again, he knows he can catch up. Physical striker. He's not afraid to come into the box as a run blitzer and strike back in the hole. He strikes midsection of the ball carrier and then lifts them off the ground if possible. I'd love his not. You know, we see so many corners nowadays strike these guys and then just dead weight, right? That's not what he's doing. He's striking these guys and then he's using his legs to try to lift the guys off the ground to decleat them literally. Maybe not quite in the term that everyone's thinking, but get him off the ground, right, so they can't go anywhere. He's smooth in all directions. You know, sometimes we talk about these corners and they're good silo players. They're kind of just good side saddling up the up the field. This guy I think can move well in all directions pretty well. He's got good bursts when it comes when it's time to close downhill. He's got an aggressive physical mindset. He loves mixing it up. He loves being physical. He's comfy and pressed and operating in the space of off coverage as well. He needs to fight to maintain position downfield. There were times when I felt like I wanted him to fight through a little bit more and it felt like he was hoping for an offensive pass interference call, which guess what, buddy, Those aren't coming in the NFL. Especially if we're getting, if we're getting replacement rest next year. So seems like a real annoying player to play against. Complimentary, you know, good awareness throughout his zone when he's in a silo. He has excellent eye discipline. I saw one snap that was really awesome where he was kind of playing in the short part of his of a quarter zone because he had a man in front of him and someone was running a deep over back into his zone and he was able to catch it. Last minute, turn, flip, go back there and make a play on the ball, knock it away. It was really awesome. Played 1700. This is crazy. He played 1732 snaps in college. Made almost 125 tackles. And Marcus, he only missed eight tackles that entire time. His college career. A 5.4 career. Missed tackle rate. It would make Sonny Stiles blush looking at this guy's missed tackle rate. He can flip his hips back downhill and attack quickly. Saw him get a 95 yard pick. 6 versus Cal by overcoming bad body positioning to cut the wide receiver off to the ball after it already been thrown. Was really impressive to watch. Where does he win? He's a physical, smart, reactive defender. Unanswered questions. And, and I understand I've been selling him like really high, but, but I, I understand his limitations. Is he more than just an extremely solid cornerback too? Because I don't think he's necessarily like, you know, certain or anything like that. No, I think what he could be is, man, you'd love having this guy as your second corner. You'd be, you'd feel rock solid about your secondary.
D
He had elite, elite production in 2025. And usually when you get these. San Diego State's not a small school per se, but it's a smaller school. It's not a Power 5 or Power 4 school.
C
Right. Every once in a while they produce a guy like this. It feels like. Right. But that's it.
D
Four interceptions last year, five past deflections, didn't allow a touchdown, gave up two completions of 20 yards. Those mirror what Monsour Delaine gave up at LSU. One penalty. And in his career you mentioned all the snaps. 1700 snaps, three career penalties. So think about what we're saying, right?
C
He's clean.
D
Yeah, he, he, he doesn't miss tackles. He takes the ball away. He will. He doesn't get penalized. He also plays on special teams. Like he was an awesome gunner for, for San Diego State. He's got good size. It's not, not great size. It's good size, but it kind of checks all the boxes. 6 foot, 193. His wingspan is actually above average, which matters a little bit to me.
C
That does.
D
I'm about to get a little reckless here. To me, I have, I have Delaney as the best cornerback in the class. I think Terrell is the next best one. And I'm kind of removing McCoy because of the injury stuff. We'll get a better idea once it's pro day. Of the healthy corners, he's the third one I like the best in this class.
E
Wow.
D
I like him better than Colton Hood. I just think he's so much more fluid than what Colton Hood is. He doesn't grab the way Colton Hood does. I like him better than Brandon C. Say. I think he's a really good player.
C
You know, honestly, I hadn't actually sat down and thought about stacking him in this in that order, but you're not wrong. I, I like him more than Colton Hood, too. C. Say. Yeah, I definitely like him more than C. Say. Man, you might be right. Is he cornerback three?
A
Really?
D
Yeah. Well, it depends on what you do with McCoy, but I don't know if 20 is a reach or not, but if you told me today the Cowboys picked him at 20, I would not be upset because I think he is an awesome player who's got four years of experience. He's not, he's never played poorly. It seems like this is the perfect kind of guy for Christian Parker. Like, hey, he's going to stay in phase. He's not going to grab. He's going to tackle. But that's a, to me, that's like the definition of a winning football player.
C
Yeah. Smart, aggressive, physical, doesn't make mistakes, is. Doesn't miss tackles.
D
He's also incredibly young. He's only 21, which is rare for a guy that played four years now in college.
C
Like, jeez, yeah, we're talking about a first round. You know, it's cruddy. It's funny to talk it out, like, with somebody. Right. And like, and honestly, to read my own notes and it's like, because I, I, I, I evaluate the player with, with traits, but when, when I don't really think about, like, draft position and Stu and, and yeah, I mean, as you talk it out, like, he, he checks all the boxes. He may not be necessarily exceptional at any one particular thing, except maybe you could say he's had pretty, pretty darn good production, so. But he's just extremely, extremely good at every other thing. Right?
D
Well, and I just think like there after the last couple years of the Cowboys corners, it's just like guys that don't, the guys that tackle and guys that don't get penalized, like, just sign me up for that. I can live with you in breaking routes. I can live with you beating, you know, getting beat at the catch point. I can't handle guys that don't tackle, that get penalized a bunch because those guys, even if they're getting three, four interceptions a year, it's not worth the trade off down in and down out. I love Chris Johnson. I think he would be an awesome fit in this defense. Whether that's a 20 or a little bit later.
C
Sign me up, buddy. Let's do it. Let's, let's get him.
D
Okay, so we obviously, you can tell we love Chris Johnson. Let's talk about another cornerback that we know the Cowboys have some interest in, and that is Malik Muhammad from Texas. We'll get to that next. This episode is brought to you by Robin Hood what if sports were traded like markets? Now you can put your sports IQ to work in real time with Robinhood Prediction Markets. It's not you against the house. It's you participating in a live market. You can buy or sell your positions live all game long. Use your sports knowledge in the moments that matter. Robin Hood Prediction Markets changes the game. It's people moving the action so when the momentum shifts, you can move with it. I've always known the game, but never had a dynamic way to apply that knowledge. Now I can actually take part live in a market powered by the people. You're no longer just a spectator. Play by play, you decide. Trade every play with Robin Hood. Now available across the U.S. download the Robinhood app now to begin Futures and cleared swap trading involves significant risk and is not appropriate for everyone. Event contracts are offered by Robin Hood Derivatives, llc, a registered future commission merchant and swap firm.
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D
Welcome back to the Lockdown Cowboys podcast. We'd like to thank you for making us your first listen every single day. Don't forget to check out the Everyday Club for ad free episodes and access to a group chat with Landon and I and other listeners of the show. Tap the link in the show notes or go to Locked on Cowboys to learn more. All right, let's talk about Malik Muhammad, a cornerback from Texas that I know a lot of people like the Cowboys were at his pro day. What did you think of him when you turned on the tape?
C
Yeah, local boy, right? South Oak Cliff, class of 2023. He was a four star player, a 7 74th overall in the 2023 class. He's 6 foot, he's 182, the 185, 186. It depends on who you're asking. But he's got really big hands. What do you have for his weight?
D
Well, I mean he was 180. He was 182 at combine and I'm wondering if that was like I'm gonna fill him up with five pounds of water before the combine starts and then peed all out is skinny.
C
We'll talk about in a sec. He's got big hands, 9, 9 and 78 inch hands, 32 and 38 arms. That's pretty good. The 40 time was good. It was a 442. The the 10 yard split is good. It was 1 5. He had a 39 inch vertical on a 1011 broad jump. Those are both great numbers. And you know, look he looks and plays like what we just described in those numbers, right? Like he is tall, long but he is rail thin. I I described his coverage as sticky and bursty because I think you know he especially in short zone areas and short man coverage situations, he is very, very good at staying close to the receiver. It feels like the further away he gets downfield, the more difficulty he has. He is smaller but he's willing to play with with a high level of physicality. But the problem is is that his size creates limitations. Right? Like you can throw yourself all you want at a 220 pound running back. Doesn't mean that you're going to necessarily be able to get him on the ground. Having said that, he is a solid form tackler. It's not like a a technique problem. Even verse bodies that are much bigger than him. I've seen him kind of take guys down so like it he does. He has good effort. He's got good technique. He's a boundary guy for the most part. You know, even though he is kind of a, you know, smaller guy, you thought that maybe he'd play a little bit inside.
D
But I got the breakdown on snaps for you.
C
Yeah.
D
For his career, 1800 snaps as a wide corner, outside corner, 48 in slot. So I mean he's got 150 box snaps, but he's primarily an outside cornerback. Or at least he was at Texas.
C
Yeah, absolutely. And, and you know, he reminds me a lot of, he has that kind of chidobi awusier thing where you know, he could be really sticky in coverage, but then the ball goes down the field, it's up in the air and it, and he, he just can't make the play on the ball. Right. Like, it's like. And, and I think he's, it's, it's very hit and miss at times, but like you would think that a guy that has a 39 inch vertical who's got 32 and 38 arms and almost 10 inch hands would be better at playing the ball in the air. And it just feels like he struggles to kind of time his jump. It's all the things we saw with him with Uzi, it's like, it's not one thing, it's like all of it. It's he time. He struggles to time the jump. He, he doesn't get his hands where it needs to be. He does.
D
And that's why I was going to say I think he's so much better in zone than he is in man. Like, because I think when he's looking at the quarterback and watching the ball, it kind of eliminates a lot of those problems. But I think when you see him turn his back and have to run, that's where things can get a little wonky for him.
C
Yeah, yeah, absolutely. Because I, I think he's a very reactive. He's, he's a lot like the next Dayton Everett that we're talking about, Dalen Everett that we're going to talk about next in the sense that he's a very reactive player. Right. Like he's, he's good at that. But yeah, you're right in man coverage, especially as he gets down the field. Like my next note honestly is can struggle to stay on receivers the further they go downfield, can tend to be a bit handsy at the top of routes. And that's the other problem I see is that you can see him grabbing. He's got such big hands, it's hard to miss him grabbing guys, right? Where does he win? Short area coverage like we talked about, in short zones areas, top down coverages where he's able to get eyes on the quarterback and take it all in and, and be reactive. I think that's a better situation for him. Unanswered questions. I mean, can he hold up physically with that body composition? I can't imagine him getting above 195 pounds at any point, you know, or even 190 pounds at this point. I don't know. Like, he's very, very thin and so you worry. We've seen this before with guys like Emmanuel Forbes and other guys that have come into the league that are very similar to this kind of guy and have struggled to stay healthy and have struggled to develop in the NFL. So that is a concern for me.
D
So just to be clear, I like him now. I don't like him as much as I like Chris Johnson. I think he is to me, he's one of the guys that I'm like, I've got like a little spreadsheet of like names that I would like to see the Cowboys target with that third round pick at 92. Yeah, he's in that range for me. Like if the Cowboys go edge rusher safety with their first, you know, the two first round picks, this is a guy that on late day two, I would be interested in. My issue with him is if he's going to play on the outside, I worry what it's going to look like against bigger, more physical receivers.
C
Right?
D
Like use AJ Brown. Like, is he just going to get so beat up on the outside that he's kind of useless? But I also Wonder because he's 180 pounds, if moving to the slot is going to be even worse for him because there's going to be a lot more action and there's going to be tight ends that are going to be bumping him and in the run game it's going to be hard for him to get off blocks. I, I kind of look at him as like the ideal fourth cornerback that can maybe play a little bit inside, outside. Maybe he's your third guy that you, you know, your second starter on the outside. I like him, but I don't think, I don't think the ceiling is super high here either.
C
Yeah, I mean, again, because I just don't know how much bigger he's going to be able to get and it's always going to be a limitation issue with him. I worry about his ability in the run game. You know, what happens if you start running onto the outside just to kind of make, make your cornerbacks tackle, which is a thing that, you know, teams are going to do. And it's not that he's like, yeah, and he's. And he's good at tackling. Like, he's, he doesn't have a tackling technique, program problem at all, but he's still ultimately less than 190 pounds. And you know, some of these running backs are going to outweigh him by £50 sometimes.
D
I mean, it's, that's the concern is like there's zero stopping power, right? So he's going to try to trip up guys, he's going to throw his body around. You just get even.
C
Even. Even. Like, like when they throw screens and stuff. Like, he's even able to kind of deal with that. Like he can even with physical bigger blockers trying to stop him from getting like in, like in a tunnel screen or something like that when he's trying to fight through a block to get to the guy, he can handle that. But I just, absolutely, I worry about these bigger guys that he has to bring down on his own on a consistent basis. Not only because, not so much because I'm worried he's going to miss tackles necessarily, but I just think it's going to wear and tear on his body and then what does that do to his ability to cover after that.
D
So going to assume that you're in agreement with me. Like, you're looking at like late day two, early day three for Muhammad.
C
Yeah, I, I would say day three. I mean, not day three, but day round three is what I would say.
D
Yeah, a good player. This is typically the kind of Kai that goes in the third round. We should mention he's also young. He's 21. He doesn't turn 22 until the start of the season. And I know there's a lot of Texas Longhorn fans out there that feel like he, he's going to be even better in the NFL. And I hope that's the case because, yeah, I watched a couple interviews of him talking and he just seems like an awesome kid. So I'm really rooting for him. Would not be surprised at all. The Cowboys did end up drafting him at some point in the 2026 NFL Draft. Let's talk about a Georgia corner because we know that Christian Parker likes Georgia defenders. Could Dylen Everett, the cornerback from Georgia, be a steal in this year's class? We'll get to that next.
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Welcome back to the Laton Cowboys Podcast. We're talking about some under the radar cornerbacks that the Cowboys could target in the NFL draft. And let's talk about Dalen Everett. And this is a guy that you actually turned me on to a while ago because the athletic testing numbers were insane. And because he's a Georgia defender. We just have to watch him because we know how much the well, I don't know what the Cowboys do, but Christian Parker loves Georgia defenders. What did you see from the tape?
C
I saw very much the kind of player that it feels like you're gonna see playing in our defense. Right? The the kind of the type of cornerback maybe not necessarily. Maybe we'll see if it's this guy. But as far as how he was playing the position, it looked a lot like what I'm expecting to see Christian Parker to run. All right, let's talk about it. He he big guy, he's six one and a quarter, 196 pounds and he looks every little every bit of that nine and five eight inch hand. So not as big as as Muhammad, but still big hand. Still pretty good sized hands. 31 and 78 inch arms. That's not like overly oppressive, but it's solid. Right? You're almost 32 inch arms. That's fine. And again, we don't have those thresholds anymore. We're safe. 4, 3, 8 and the 40 at 196 pounds and 61 even have one 5, 4, 10 yard split that'll play, that's good. 37 and a half inch vertical jump which is fine, not great. 104 broad jump, fine, not great. Very solid height and weight with good length and large hands like we talked about. Experienced heady player plays with good technique. And you watch that right? Again we talked about top down coverage. We saw a lot of that with him where he's able to play with his eyes, watch the quarterback, watch the, watch the wide receiver. They play like I said, very similar, kind of lots of match concept stuff. So it's a lot of reading wide receiver two and then seeing where those guys are going and, and then making an appropriate move and then knowing what your assignment was. He did all that very quickly. I, I think, you know, again it's very similar. He could turn upfield and run for his run up. He could turn his hips and run up field fine for his size. But he's not elite. He's, he's not, he's more than good enough flipping at his, his hips and running. But that's not where he's going to make his money. Where he's going to make his money is clicking, closing, coming downhill, playing with vision. He is fluid when he's side saddling up the field in a silo. He's a solid tackler even in the run game. Like he's, he's, he actually may be one of the better run defenders that we've seen. I, I think you know, Keante Scott's in a whole class of his own. Yes, but, but I think as far as outside guys, part of it is because he's bigger, right. But he is, has no problem fighting through blocks in pursuit. He makes good tackles. He's average change of direction player. Like that's not necessarily where he's going to be making his money. He's better in a silo versus chasing folks across formations necessarily. And man, everywhere he goes kind of coverage, you don't necessarily want to do him there do that to him. Not as fluid running across the field and crossing routes, frequent use as a blitzer and he's good at it, right. Like he didn't have a ton of necessarily production but you can see him effect having an effect. So especially in this, you know, sim pressure defense that they kind of run. It was effective ball production. To me what from what I saw was a lot more opportunistic than, than him making plays on the ball. Right.
D
I, he just doesn't I don't think have great instincts like he's gonna be, he's not Deron Bland or Trayvon Diggs, like, he's my biggest problem with him is he gave up so many, like just underneath completions where guys pitch and catch and that's okay, like, it's, it's whatever. He does a good job of tackling on those. But I don't think he's got like a plus plus football instincts either.
C
I, I, this is not a guy that you are going to expect to be like, contesting a lot of passes or, you know, like getting a lot of passes defended. And I know that that sounds like, oh, well, is he just bad? But no, he's not. Like, these guys are valuable too because, because he's, he doesn't give up a ton of big plays. He makes solid tackles underneath. And if you think about the kind of defenses that like, delay, you know, it make the offenses work the whole length of the field, he's great at that because he's going to make the tackle, he's not going to let you get him beat deep and he's going to be smart and not make a stupid penalty. Again, physical, heady boundary corner, that's where he wins. Unanswered questions. Can he improve versus in breaking and crossing routes? I don't know that he can because I think he's athletically limited in that way. But he's certainly, certainly, certainly more than athletic enough to operate in a silo versus cover one, cover three, or any one of, or quarters or something like that. Any, any, any coverage that allows him to play in his zone with his eyes and not have him, you know, have to chase somebody around with his back turn to the quarterback.
D
So I was talking to a Steelers podcaster the other day because their team also likes Everett and they think he might be a nickel in the NFL because he's got good size, he can tackle, he needs a willing tackler. And maybe you have, you know, you can minimize some of the lack of instincts a little bit. Just let him use his athleticism. And I do wonder, I mean, he, he's got very few snaps as a slot corner, like over 2, 000 as an outside player at Georgia. But I do wonder if this is somebody that Christian Parker might be targeting later in the draft as like, hey, this is a guy that we can develop into a slot player because, you know, he's over six one, we can get him over 200 pounds. He's running in the four, three, eight or the four threes. I would not be surprised if he's going to be a better slot corner than an Outside corner at the next level.
C
I, I, I agree. I think with his size and his strengths and weaknesses, I think they could be his weaknesses could be minimized a little bit with the move to the slot, especially in this defense. And if this, I think his strengths can be accentuated. I do want to, I do want to kind of double click into something you did say though is where do you think you he, this is what's his draft range for you?
D
So right now he is like in the early one hundreds. So that would be like late day three or sorry, late day two, early day three.
C
Okay.
D
And honestly, that, that makes sense to me. Like, okay, it was a keely Ringo went in like fourth round a couple years from Georgia. He reminds me a little bit of that.
C
Yeah. Okay, that's, that's kind of where I see him too. I thought you were implying like late day three.
D
No, no, no. Because I mean, it's an sec guy that has a bunch of snaps with good athleticism. They're not gonna fall that far.
C
Yeah, absolutely. And I see it the same way. I think he's a, he'd be a Solid pick at 94 if you liked him particularly, but I don't take it him earlier than that.
D
Really quickly, Chris Johnson, massive gap. Muhammad Everett for you.
C
Yeah, I think Everett and Muhammad are touching tags, even though they're probably different types of players.
B
Okay.
D
All right, that is it for today's show. We'd like to thank you for making Lockdown Cowboys your first listen every single day. Make sure you subscribe and follow the podcast so you get all of the latest episodes. And if you never miss an episode, the everyday club is built for you. Get locked on Cowboys ad free members only, discord access and so much more. Head over to lockdown cowboys.supercast.com to join the club. And for those of you on video, we can send you the first ever 24. 7 national NBA YouTube channel. And on audio, make your second listen the Locked on NFL Draft podcast. Follow Landon on Twitter @McCool BCB. I'm @Marcus Underscore Moser and we will see you right back here tomorrow.
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There's a reason Chevy trucks are known for their dependability. It's because they show up no matter the weather, push forward no matter the terrain and deliver. That's why Chevrolet has earned more dependability awards for trucks than any other brand in 2025, according to J.D. power, because in every Chevy truck, like every Chevy driver, dependability comes standard. Visit Chevy.com to learn more. Chevrolet received the highest total number of awards among all trucks in the J.D. power 202025 U.S. vehicle Dependability Study awards based on 2022 models. Newer models may be shown. Visit jdpower.com awards for more details. Chevrolet Together, let's drive.
This episode dives deep into three lesser-known cornerback prospects from the upcoming 2026 NFL Draft, all of whom are potential fits for the Dallas Cowboys. Marcus and Landon provide thorough scouting reports, discuss skill sets, draft projections, and how each prospect could fit within the Cowboys’ defensive scheme under new defensive coordinator Christian Parker. The episode focuses on:
The hosts weigh each player's strengths, weaknesses, and value relative to draft position, all while maintaining a conversational, analytic tone laced with humor and nuanced football insights.
[01:25–10:26]
[12:18–20:45]
[21:55–28:47]
On Chris Johnson’s upside and reliability:
On Malik Muhammad’s physical limitations:
Everett’s fit/profile:
Draft “big board” clarity:
| Segment | Timestamp | |------------------------------------------|:-----------:| | Chris Johnson Deep Dive | 01:08–10:26 | | Malik Muhammad Scouting Report | 12:18–20:45 | | Dalen Everett Analysis | 21:55–28:47 | | Comparing/Stacking the Corners | 28:47–29:10 |
| Player | Size/Testing | Strengths | Weaknesses | Draft Range | Cowboys Fit | |------------------|-----------------------------|-------------------------------|--------------------------------------|--------------------|--------------------------| | Chris Johnson | 6'0"/193 lbs, 4.40 40, 38" V| Physical, smart, tackler, STs | Arm length, not a “CB1” ceiling | Late 1st/Early 2nd | Ideal CB2, steady, safe | | Malik Muhammad | 6'0"/182, 4.42 40, 39" V | Sticky, bursty, effort, young | Thin frame, limited downfield, grabby| Late 3rd/Early 4th | CB4/flex, traits, local | | Dalen Everett | 6'1"/196, 4.38 40, 37.5" V | Physical, zone, run support | Ordinary instincts, average COD | Early Day 3 | CB3/4, zone/nickel SAF |
Marcus and Landon agree that Chris Johnson stands out clearly, and would be an excellent, culture-setting addition to the Cowboys’ secondary. Malik Muhammad and Dalen Everett, while talented, project as value picks later in the draft due to distinct limitations—but both have starter/rotation upside in the right system.
“Guys that tackle and don’t get penalized… just sign me up for that.” — Marcus (09:49)
[The summary above omits advertisements and show intros/outros as instructed.]