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The NFL draft came and went and the Cowboys made a bunch of moves to improve the club.
But not everything is fixed just yet. Here are the 10 biggest post-draft issues the Cowboys face.
Weak wide receiving corps

The Cowboys parted ways with their all-time leader in receiving touchdowns in Dez Bryant before the draft. Without a true No. 1 on the roster, the Cowboys will rely on a wide receiver by-committee approach.
Dallas signed Allen Hurns in free agency, and he will enter the season as the team's de-facto No. 1 receiver. Terrance Williams, who had zero touchdowns last season, remains on the roster as does Cole Beasley after a down season of his own. The Cowboys drafted Colorado State's Michael Gallup in Round 3 of the draft and also traded for former No. 8 pick Tavon Austin. Can Dallas survive with a relatively unproven group of wide receivers?
Still no safety

The Cowboys enter next season with safety as one of their weaker positions. Byron Jones is moving to corner back and Dallas didn't address the position in the draft. It was thought that Dallas might trade up to take Florida State safety Derwin James, but the Cowboys stayed put at No. 19 to take linebacker Leighton Vander Esch.
The Cowboys have been connected to Seattle Seahawks safety Earl Thomas ever since he told Jason Garrett to come get him. There was some thought that Dallas could trade for Thomas during the draft, but that never happened. Could a trade still happen? Possibly, but for now the Cowboys will roll with Jeff Heath and Xavier Woods as their top safeties.
Weak at defensive tackle

Defensive tackle was also not addressed in the draft. The Cowboys have Tyrone Crawford and David Irving in the fold, but who knows what his future holds after a domestic violence incident earlier in April.
Who starts at tight end?

The Cowboys have a major void a tight end after the sudden retirement of Jason Witten.
Geoff Swaim, Blake Jarwin, Rico Gathers and fourth-round pick Dalton Schultz are the only tight ends on the roster. Swaim is the only one with any real experience, with nine catches for 94 yards in three seasons with the team.
Inexperience at linebacker

The Cowboys addressed one of their biggest needs by taking linebacker Leighton Vander Esch with 19th overall pick in the NFL draft. But Vander Esch doesn't change the fact the Cowboys are relatively inexperienced at the position, especially after losing Anthony Hitchens in free agency.
Sean Lee remains one of the game's best linebackers when he's healthy, but injuries have bitten him multiple times in the past. Vander Esch hasn't played in a NFL game yet and was only a starter for one year at Boise State. Jaylon Smith played in all 16 games, but it was virtually a rookie year for him after missing the 2016 season.
Rest of the NFC East got better

The NFC East is always tough, but it seems like each team in the division got better.
The defending-champion Philadelphia Eagles are getting Carson Wentz back and have a new tight end in Dallas Goedert. The Giants got one of the best players in the draft in running back Saquon Barkley and have Odell Beckham Jr. returning from injury. The Redskins have a new quarterback in Alex Smith and also drafted running back Derrius Guice.
Dak-friendly enough?

One of the Cowboys' goals this offseason was to make their offense more Dak-friendly to showcase the strengths of starting quarterback Dak Prescott.
Did they succeed? Allen Hurns and Tavon Austin add an element of speed to the Cowboys' offense and Connor Williams adds depth to the offensive line. Ezekiel Elliott should be available for all of next season barring injury.
But the Cowboys also lost Dez Bryant and Jason Witten. It remains to be seen if they did enough to replace those losses. Prescott struggled for the second half of last season while Elliott was serving a six-game suspension. He's got two more years on his rookie deal before the Cowboys decide whether to move forward with him as the face of their franchise.
Backup QB

Prescott is the unquestioned starter at quarterback, but Dallas doesn't have much behind him. Cooper Rush is still on the roster after impressing the Cowboys last preseason and ascending to the team's primary backup. The Cowboys drafted Western Kentucky's Mike White in the fifth-round of this year's NFL draft.
Stephen Jones said the team doesn't expect to sign a veteran quarterback. Instead, the team will allow Rush and White to compete for the backup job behind Prescott. In the doomsday case that Prescott suffers an injury that keeps him out long-term, Rush or White likely won't inspire much confidence.
Hot seat for Garrett?
Head coach Jason Garrett faces a pivotal season after missing the playoffs last year. SportsDay's Tim Cowlishaw even wrote that Garrett should be fired near the end of last season.
Garrett will return this season, as will coordinators Scott Linehan and Rod Marinelli. But does Garrett enter the season on the hot seat? Another disappointing year could mean the Cowboys will be in the market for a new head coach.
A very young secondary

The Cowboys released veteran corner back and team captain Orlando Scandrick earlier in the offseason. Sean Lee, DeMarcus Lawrence and Tyrone Crawford remain the veteran leaders of the defense, but Scandrick's loss leaves a void of experience in the secondary.
The Cowboys' need to hope that corner backs Chidobe Awuzie and Jourdan Lewis make big improvements in their second seasons, along with safety Xavier Woods. A career season from Byron Jones wouldn't hurt either. There's also Anthony Brown, who took a step back in his sophomore season last year.