The Cowboys will have to wait a little longer to meet with a Commanders assistant and former Chargers head coach
On Day 10 of the Cowboys’ search for a head coach who’d carry out Jerry Jones’ instructions, if not his luggage, Brian Schottenheimer got his second interview with Dallas, which leads the rest of the league in Brian Schottenheimer interviews.
Dallas tied with the Bears as the most attractive jobs, despite being seen as having the best QB situation with Dak Prescott (tied with Jacksonville and Trevor Lawrence) and the best roster (tied with the Bears). The reason they don’t sit in first place by themselves is the third category, ‘et cetera’.
Aside from Detroit Lions fans, no other fanbase was more angry than the Dallas Cowboys' to see the Washington Commanders reach the NFC title game. Beyond
The former wideout just watched Dan Quinn pull off a postseason win in his first attempt with the Washington ... Jones of not being focused on winning at that time as well, saying “winning must not be in the vocabulary.” Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry ...
After the Cowboys' season-ending loss to the Washington Commanders, Jones mentioned an "incentive plan" when it comes to coaches. "For instance, I might say, 'Look, I'm going to pay you this much ...
The Commanders punched their ticket to the NFL's version of the Final Four, their first appearance there since the 1991 season.
Maybe the national media should review what rookie Jayden Daniels and the Washington Commanders just did Saturday night at the Detroit Lions. But in Dallas? This is a Cowboys playoff story, too.
The NFL coaching carousel is spinning slowly. The Jets, Saints and Bears got a head start in their searches because they fired coaches during the season. The Jaguars and Raiders joined the hunt last week. The Cowboys jumped in Monday so they have to wait to interview assistants on playoff teams because the first window passed.
What head coach Dan Quinn has achieved with the Washington Commanders this year hasn't been lost on at least one prominent player from his last stop.
Deion Sanders and Jason Witten are two of Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones’ former — and favorite — players, and both have been floated as potential replacements for coach Mike McCarthy.