The Cowboys franchise-tagging George Pickens gives them two high salaries at wide receiver. A four-year CeeDee Lamb supporting-caster will now relocate.
Jalen Tolbert is joining the Dolphins, according to NFL insider Jordan Schultz, who adds the parties agreed to a one-year deal. Pickens’ Dallas arrival cooled the momentum Tolbert established as Lamb’s top sidekick in 2024, and he will attempt to rebound as one of Malik Willis‘ targets in Miami. As Schultz points out, Tolbert and Willis have been close since playing in the Senior Bowl together four years ago.
In 2024, Tolbert broke through with a 49-reception, 610-yard season that produced seven touchdowns. That is an outlier on the former third-round pick’s resume, however. Tolbert has not eclipsed 300 yards in another season, and he combined for just three TDs between the 2022, 2023 and 2025 campaigns.
Dallas saw little from Tolbert in 2022 and ’23, but he moved into the starting lineup in 2024. His breakthrough receiving season came in a year in which Dak Prescott missed extensive time with a hamstring injury. Tolbert teamed with Cooper Rush down the stretch, catching a touchdown pass in three straight games. He then closed that season with four receptions for 98 yards in Trey Lance‘s only start. Tolbert, 27, will be working with a similarly unseasoned QB in 2026.
After the Dolphins cut Tyreek Hill, they have an opening for a No. 2 receiver alongside Jaylen Waddle. The team has added two NFC tertiary targets in Tolbert and Tutu Atwell, each likely representing low-cost additions for a team set to carry a single-year dead money record (Tua Tagovailoa‘s $55.4MM) to go with dead cap from the Hill and Bradley Chubb cuts. Malik Washington, a 2024 sixth-round pick, remains on the roster as well. Washington averaged just 6.9 yards per reception last season.

Wow, perhaps there’s a new definition for breakthrough. In his third season he put up a 610 yards over 17 games, 15 of which he started as WR2.
Dolphin fans, prepare to be underwhelmed
Considering the dead-money they are saddled with as outlined in the above article, what options did they really have? The dolphins are in a rebuild (you have to be when you ditch a franchise-QB contract), so they will be hoping a few players on cheap contracts perform well, then sign elsewhere, granting them compensatory picks. You can’t fill a 56 player roster with nothing but draft picks and undrafted free agents.
Solid not spectacular wr. He should help this year right out the gate. I see him as the 3rd wr and if he has a great summer camp could be in line to start opposite Jaylen Waddle.