The drama surrounding the blockbuster trade between the Dallas Cowboys and the Green Bay Packers is only getting louder — and now Terrence Parsons Jr. is pouring gasoline on the fire.
After months of frustration over how Dallas handled contract negotiations with Micah Parsons, Terrence took to social media once again to blast the Cowboys front office following what became one of the biggest trades in recent NFL history.

According to Terrence, Dallas completely failed to recognize what they had before it was too late.
He claimed the Cowboys prioritized other contracts while dragging their feet on extending Micah Parsons, ultimately allowing the market for elite pass rushers to explode beyond what the organization was willing to pay. In his eyes, the front office practically forced the trade themselves.
Terrence didn’t hold back either.
“I told y’all months ago, if y’all don’t value greatness while you have it, don’t complain when it’s gone,” he posted online. “Dallas thought they could replace the heart of that defense with picks. Good luck with that.”
And honestly, looking at the numbers, it is becoming harder and harder for Cowboys fans to argue against him.

While Dallas received a major package in return — including Kenny Clark and multiple first-round picks — the immediate on-field results have heavily favored Green Bay.
Despite arriving late and learning a brand-new defensive system on the fly, Micah Parsons still dominated during his first season with the Packers. In only 14 games, he recorded 12.5 sacks, earned another All-Pro selection, and finished with a ridiculous 83 quarterback pressures.
That number becomes even crazier when you compare it to the rest of the NFL.
League leader Aidan Hutchinson finished with 89 pressures — but he played three more games than Parsons. Parsons also led the NFL in pressure percentage at 20.7%, proving just how disruptive he was on a snap-to-snap basis.
Meanwhile, the Cowboys defense completely collapsed without him.

Dallas finished dead last in scoring defense, allowing 490 points during the season. They also ranked 31st in total defense and 32nd in passing defense, giving up an ugly 7.7 yards per pass attempt. Simply put, opposing quarterbacks shredded them all year long.
Green Bay, on the other hand, surged defensively with Parsons leading the charge.
The Packers finished:
- 10th in scoring defense
- 8th in total defense
- 9th in passing defense
That contrast is exactly why Terrence Parsons believes the trade exposed Dallas’ biggest mistake.
The Cowboys may have added talent, including Rashan Gary and other pieces, but replacing a generational edge rusher is never simple. Parsons wasn’t just producing sacks — he was changing protections, collapsing pockets, and forcing offenses to completely alter game plans.
And now Packers fans are already circling one matchup on the calendar.
The Cowboys are scheduled to travel to Lambeau Field this season, setting up what could become one of the most emotional revenge games of the year. Assuming Parsons is healthy by then, all eyes will be on his first showdown against the franchise that decided it could move on without him.
As if the rivalry between Green Bay and Dallas needed any more fuel.