

The Micah Parsons contract saga last offseason for the Dallas Cowboys was one big unnecessary distraction, both for the franchise and the player.
We all knew the money involved; we knew Micah wanted to stay, and Jerry Jones wanted him to.
Reportedly offering Micah around $40 million APY to the All-Pro pass rusher, the deal went sideways once the time came for Jerry to talk to Parsons' agent, David Mulugheta.
Jerry thought they had a deal after talking with Parsons, Micah wanted it approved by the agent, and neither side talked to the other for weeks.
That then escalated when Parsons and his agent reportedly returned to the Cowboys to seek a deal, but nothing came of it.
Then, Parsons was traded to the Green Bay Packers, a shocking move at the time, with the franchise moving on from one of its best players a week before the season began.
We have heard Micah talk about the move to Green Bay, but we haven't heard him talk on his relationship with Jerry...until now.
Speaking with Clarence Hill Jr. of DLLS Cowboys, Micah made it known on his thoughts towards Jerry.
"I just wish some of those things never happened," Parsons said. "I just wish he never brought me into the office and just let the agent speak. I wish he didn't compromise out relationship. I thought me and Jerry had a good relationship up until that point.
"It's sad that it went to [expletive] like that."
Hmm, ok Micah.
Of course, most of Cowboys Nation knows that what Micah said wasn't all true.
And our own Mike Fisher has reacted to Micah's comments.
"Micah, you know that's not what happened," Fish said. "Jerry didn't summon you to the office three times. Jerry didn't summon you to the suite at AT&T Stadium during a Bowl game.
"You decided you wanted to play with the big guys, and it's on you to inform your agent. This paints the picture that Jerry was trying to screw Micah. He was screwing him to the tune of $40 million a year. Micah's trying to spin this, and he's not good at it.
"Jerry didn't summon him to his office and order him to not contract his agent, that is not what happened. They met three times at The Star in March, that's factual. At least once, it was Micah's idea."
We know there are some holes in Micah's story, and most of Cowboys Nation knows this. If not, Fish just spelled it out.
It wasn't all Micah's fault, and it wasn't all Jerry's fault. There is enough blame to go around for the contract saga's spectacular failure.
And Fish just educated everyone on what really happened between Micah and Jerry.