Cowboys, Deion Sanders and Jerry Jones
On Monday, the Cowboys officially welcomed Brian Schottenheimer as the 10th head coach in franchise history after parting ways with Mike McCarthy. It
The Dallas Cowboys have officially hired their next head coach, and it's not Deion Sanders. Sanders had shockingly talked to Jerry Jones about the role, but the team has moved in a completely different direction.
Cowboys owner Jerry Jones lifted the lid on his meeting with Deion Sanders amid their search for the next head coach in Dallas.
The Dallas Cowboys officially unveiled Brian Schottenheimer as the 10th full-time head coach in franchise history.
Brian Schottenheimer appears to be furthest along the road to a job offer, but Kellen Moore is more widely regarded around the league as a play-caller who is adapting to league trends.
Dallas Cowboys owner and general manager Jerry Jones said that he never actually had a formal interview with former NFL cornerback and current Colorado head coach Deion Sanders for the team's open head-coaching position.
The Cowboys were left with a late vacancy after Mike McCarthy decided to pursue other opportunities when the two sides could not come to an agreement on a contract extension. Jones reached out to Sanders, the former Cowboys great who has engineered a turnaround at Colorado, about the job.
A source is revealing to CowboysCountry.com that while Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has been getting top billing for being a singular 'solo mission' driver in the coach search, is it son Stephen who making the powerful push to hire Brian Schottenheimer for the job.
Cowboys Hall of Famer Michael Irvin shared his thoughts on the team’s new head coach. And he wasn’t pleased on Saturday night. In an NSFW video he posted, Irvin let everyone know that he was disappointed with the hire of Brian Schottenheimer as the Dallas next head coach.
Mike Zimmer, who helped turn around the Dallas defense over the course of a difficult 7-10 season, reportedly won't come back to the Cowboys with Brian Schottenheimer in charge.
If Irvin had been in charge of hiring a new head coach, he would have swung for the fences and gone all out for Colorado head coach Deion Sanders. Sanders and the Cowboys reportedly had mutual interest in one another, but ultimately Dallas went with their offensive coordinator.