Could the Cowboys Wide Receivers Join Historic Yardage Club in 2026?

Close-up of Ryan Flournoy in Dallas Cowboys uniform wearing a white headband before kickoff

The history of the Dallas Cowboys wide receivers is one of the most special position-group legacies in the entire NFL. From the #88 club to guys like Terrell Owens, Amari Cooper, and now George Pickens, there is no shortage of star power in the lore of Dallas’s WRs.

In 2025, we saw a new layer added to this history as Pickens, CeeDee Lamb, and emerging contributor Ryan Flournoy racked up the receptions, yardage, and touchdowns throughout the season.

This trio is arguably the strongest aspect of Dallas’s team going into 2026, and I’m curious if we haven’t even seen the best of their abilities quite yet.

There is a highly exclusive club in the wide receiver world that should be talked about in connection to the Cowboys, as we inch toward what should be another explosive season on offense.


Could the Cowboys have 3 1,000-Yard Receivers?

First things first, yes, this has happened before. In fact, it’s occurred five times, but it has certainly been in a while; below are the instances where it’s happened:

1980 San Diego Chargers (John Jefferson, Kellen Winslow, Charlie Joiner)

1989 Washington Redskins (Gary Clark, Art Monk, Ricky Sanders)

1995 Atlanta Falcons (Eric Metcalf, Terance Mathis, Bert Emanuel)

2004 Indianapolis Colts (Reggie Wayne, Marvin Harrison, Brandon Stokley)

2008 Arizona Cardinals (Larry Fitzgerald, Anquan Boldin, Steve Breaston)

It sounds crazy, yes, but for Lamb, Pickens, and Flournoy (or even tight end Jake Ferguson) to add another submission to that group and snap the nearly 20-year statistical drought, they’d only really need two things to happen.

The first is for that third guy to step up. We know for a fact that Lamb and Pickens can both be 1,000-yard receivers together: they did it last year with CeeDee’s 1,077 and GP’s 1,429.

Flournoy, who is the most likely one to pull it off if it happens, reeled in just under 500, but he only started in four games. In total, he caught 40 passes for 475 yards, playing in 16, but only starting in that limited few. You can bank on him as the starting WR3 throughout the 2026 season.

On Ryan Flournoy (long):

A lot of Brian Schottenheimer quotes but choosing this one:

“Ryan Flournoy, I really think is taking the next step,” Schottenheimer said. “I think he has a chance to be a terrific receiver in this league.”

Article also talks about Flournoy as a leader

Ferguson actually had 600 on the dot, but I feel that’s his statistical ceiling, and that Flournoy, as a wide receiver, has much higher potential.

The second thing that would have to happen is for the running game to have a smaller impact than it did in the 2025 season. This could happen either by a regression from somebody like Javonte Williams, or from a philosophical change from Brian Schottenheimer.

Either way, you combine these two things and give me a healthy Dak Prescott season, I could really see the Cowboys wide receivers making a push for the record books.

Was this helpful?

Mark Heaney is an NFL scout and sports journalist who has covered college football and the NFL since 2018. He has professionally evaluated over 1,000 NFL Draft prospects. At InsideTheStar.com, Mark has published 319 articles on ITS reaching over 1.1 million readers. His work has also appeared on FanSided, Whole Nine Sports, and Downtown Sports Network. Mark studied at UNC Charlotte and served as a media intern for the Charlotte 49ers football program.

Dallas Cowboys football team logo and branding, promoting free Cowboys news app for fans.

Comments

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Loading comments…