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George Pickens Sends Defiant Message: "Cowboys Won’t Collapse Without CeeDee Lamb"

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Frisco, TX – September 26, 2025

When a talent like the Dallas Cowboys’ CeeDee Lamb graces the roster, his presence naturally draws defensive attention at every level. But with Lamb sidelined—recovering from a high ankle sprain suffered in Week 3—the offense feels a noticeable void. Over his five-year career, Lamb has amassed 6,561 receiving yards (seventh in franchise history), 512 receptions (fourth), and holds the single-season records for catches (135) and yards (1,749)—an impressive legacy spanning seven decades of Cowboys football.

In Lamb’s absence, his wide receiver partner George Pickens acknowledges the gap. “You can tell a person that’s missing,” Pickens noted, highlighting the challenge ahead.

George Pickens Embraces New Responsibility with Dak Prescott

Pickens brings experience as a WR1 from his three seasons with the Pittsburgh Steelers, where he racked up 2,841 yards alongside quarterbacks like Kenny Pickett, Mitch Trubisky, Mason Rudolph, Justin Fields, and a fading Russell Wilson. Now, with Dak Prescott under center, Pickens feels a heightened sense of duty. He made a heartfelt promise to “show up” for his quarterback.

“We’ve always got to show up for Dak—along with all the other receivers. We’re just trying to stay on the same page, and hoping [Lamb’s] recovery goes well,” Pickens said.

This situation offers Pickens a chance to build on his early stats—13 catches for 166 yards—and prove his worth as he approaches free agency next offseason, potentially earning a top-end WR2 or mid-range WR1 contract.

“Oh, it’s a great opportunity,” Pickens added. “I’ve already kind of showcased myself, but I just want to show up for Dak, and for the team, and get a win. … I just have to make plays, run the right routes, and, you know, show up for Dak.”

Dak Prescott’s Confidence in Pickens

Prescott echoed that optimism when asked about Pickens. “I’m very comfortable, and very confident, in what he’s gonna do, where I expect him to be, and where he expects the ball. Those communications are continuously happening,” he said on Thursday.

“We just had a conversation out there today that was needed after a couple of incompletions on a certain ball—just getting back at it and us having the same mindset of how we’re gonna attack that route. He’s a great player. I told you all that from the time he showed up. These receivers, guys like George, CeeDee, they make it easy for that chemistry to grow. They go do their job, and I just talk to them a little bit about what I expect here, what I expect there, and they go make plays; and so I’m looking just to continue to build on what we’ve only started.”

Cowboys Maintain Pickens’ Role

Despite Lamb’s absence, head coach Brian Schottenheimer clarified that the offensive approach remains unchanged. The Cowboys have been leveraging Pickens to challenge defenses deep, and that strategy will persist starting with the Packers in Week 4.

“George is always going to be a focal part of what we’re doing, whether CeeDee is out there or not,” Schottenheimer said. “That doesn’t really change. I would say George’s role doesn’t really change. It’s more of some of the other guys around him that would change.”

Saints head coach Kellen Moore criticized referee Alan Eck after the game against the New York Giants, calling it a major turning point — and said that if the team hadn’t adjusted in time, their win could’ve been a lot tougher.
Saints head coach Kellen Moore criticized referee Alan Eck after the game against the New York Giants, calling it a major turning point — and said that if the team hadn’t adjusted in time, their win could’ve been a lot tougher. New Orleans, October 5, 2025 Though the New Orleans Saints defeated the New York Giants 26–14, head coach Kellen Moore didn’t hide his frustration when addressing what he called a “ridiculous and unacceptable” penalty call by the officiating crew during the game. The incident occurred in the third quarter when Carl Granderson beat Giants tackle Evan Neal clean off the edge and brought down rookie quarterback Jaxson Dart with a textbook sack — no helmet-to-helmet contact, no late hit, no unnecessary force.But to the disbelief of everyone inside Caesars Superdome, referee Alan Eck threw a flag and called it “roughing the passer.” The penalty erased a key defensive stop and cost the Saints 15 yards. When asked about the play in his postgame press conference, Moore responded sharply yet controlled: “I saw a sack.”“We coach our players to play fast, physical, and smart. Carl did everything right — perfect technique, perfect timing. And yet he gets punished for that? That’s not football anymore — that’s confusion for players, coaches, and fans alike.” Moore went on to stress the larger issue behind the call: “I’ve always respected player safety — we all do. But when clean defensive plays start getting flagged, it changes the spirit of the game. You can’t teach players to do the right thing and then penalize them for doing it.” Fans quickly voiced their outrage online. “That was one of the softest calls of the season,” one fan wrote. Another added, “Granderson did everything right, and the refs are just overprotecting the quarterback.” Had the sack stood, Granderson would currently lead the NFL with 5.5 sacks instead of sitting tied for third — a stat that could directly affect his contract incentives. The NFL has yet to issue a statement on the call, but Saints fans — and their head coach — are demanding answers. For Kellen Moore, this wasn’t about one play, but about fairness and integrity: “We’ll celebrate the win, sure — but I’ll always stand up for my guys when the game stops being fair. What Carl did tonight, that’s exactly how defensive football should be played.” ⚜️ Moore’s message was clear: the Saints may have won on the scoreboard, but fairness in football still matters most.