Cowboys officials have met with the agents of quarterback Dak Prescott and wide receiver Amari Cooper a second time since the end of the NFL scouting combine, a source said.

For the first time in the offseason, team officials met with the two high-profile free agents at the NFL scouting combine last week. The Cowboys talked with Prescott’s agent, Todd France, either in person or by phone twice since the end of the 2019 season.

A source said the Cowboys offered Prescott an average salary of $33 million with a guaranteed contract of $105 million.

Financial proposals for Cooper are not known, but he’s seeking one of the largest contracts for a wide receiver.

The Cowboys and the agents for both players, are almost in a holding pattern, waiting for a potential new collective bargaining agreement to be concluded. NFL players are now voting on a possible new CBA and have until Thursday at 10:59 p.m. to vote.

“I don’t have a sense when they vote,” Jerry Jones said last week from the NFL scouting combine.

“I do have a keen sense that we’ve got some decisions with just the Cowboys. We have, for this year going forward without an agreement, we have decisions we’re contemplating making right now as though we don’t have an agreement.”

If the Cowboys can’t secure a new deal with Prescott or Cooper, they have until Thursday to place an exclusive franchise tag or a transition tag on either player.

If there’s a new CBA in place by March 12, the Cowboys will just have the ability to place an exclusive franchise tag on a player and it will be Prescott.

Jones said Prescott isn’t going anywhere based on the mechanisms at the team’s disposal.

Cooper, meanwhile, could hit the open market if there’s a new CBA and the Cowboys place a tag on Prescott. Of course, if the Cowboys can secure a long-term contract with Prescott or Cooper before the March 12 deadline, it would answer numerous questions.

“It’s what it is,” Jones said. “We just have to figure out a way to do it. That was one of the reasons I’ve said was why I could have conceived not doing it.

“There’s no question it’s going to prove a bigger angst, but we’re going to be better off for it, and I think we’ll be better off for it as a team. But there’s a little more challenge here on our part to not have both tags. To be trite.”

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