Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has been making moves lately. The Cowboys parted ways with former head coach Mike McCarthy and replaced him with offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer. This move had a mixed response in the fan base,
Though Jones and Sanders spoke briefly about the job, and Sanders was at one point the betting favorite, Sanders never had an official interview. Jones confirmed on Monday that, though he and his son said they “think the world of” Sanders, he was never a serious candidate for the job.
Thanks to the failed Ezekiel Elliott experiment and Rico Dowdle set to hit free agency after a 1,000-yard season, the Cowboys have zero running backs under contract for 2025, so who will be the lead back next season? DallasCowboys.com takes a look.
The Dallas Cowboys are still searching for a new head coach, and they are currently looking at former Seahawks HC Peter Caroll.
The Bears will interview Mike McCarthy now that he's out of Dallas and some view the veteran coach as the perfect hire for Chicago.
After the Cowboys parted ways with former head coach Mike McCarthy, Sanders was a name that was linked to the role, but he was never formally interviewed. Schottenheimer, who along with Robert Saleh and Kellen Moore, was the only other name on the short list of candidates and he was offered an interview.
We’re tracking all the latest coaching and staff developments with news, notes and nuggets from the search — and what comes next.
Mike McCarthy can convince the Saints to make him their next head coach thanks to recent Jerry Jones failures involving Kellen Moore and Dan Quinn.
Mike Zimmer will not be returning as the defensive coordinator for the Dallas Cowboys in 2025, and will most likely retire.
A lot has changed over the last 30 years, except for one thing: the Cowboys' lack of playoff success. This Sunday Dallas' NFC Championship drought turns three decades old. And now that the division rival Commanders have reached the conference's semifinal,
Many would call the Cowboys’ hiring of Brian Schottenheimer on Friday night as the next head coach a decision founded in comfort and safety. While that’s true from a football operations standpoint, it’s also perhaps the riskiest decision Jones could have made. That risk isn’t tied to wins and losses, but something Jones cares about even more.