Following a disappointing 2024 season, ex-Cowboys HC Jason Garrett went on The Dan Patrick Show to discuss Jerry Jones' ownership ideology.
The Cowboys have retreated into their turtle shell, which continues to harden over the years and is now impacting every alligator-armed attempt to reach success. | From @KDDrummondNFL
The Dallas Cowboys' new head coach has left fans feeling underwhelmed, and owner Jerry Jones' bizarre defense of the hire didn't help much.
Jones broke into the league by firing an NFL coaching icon in Tom Landry and replacing him with a college coach. Jimmy Johnson was a successful college coach, but that rarely translated into being a successful NFL coach in the late ’80s and early ’90s.
The Dallas Cowboys filled their open head coaching vacancy Friday, hiring offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer to replace Mike McCarthy as the head man in Dallas. Former Cowboys wide receiver and longtime NFL Network analyst Michael Irvin talked about the hire on his YouTube channel on Saturday,
This week, former Cowboys quarterback, offensive coordinator and head coach Jason Garrett spoke to Kevin Clark on the This Is Football podcast. “There is no doubt that ownership is involved. Jerry Jones is the general manager of the team,” Garrett told ...
They want real change in Dallas, not a continuation of the current model featuring Jerry Jones ... The four coaches Jones hired before Schottenheimer — Mike McCarthy, Jason Garrett, Wade ...
Winning is not everything; it is the only thing,” is a quote legendary Green Bay Packers coach Vince Lombardi helped make famous decades ago.
Former NFL linebacker Jay March shared his take on the Dallas Cowboys, the team he played with for four seasons, on Thursday.
However, after firing Mike McCarthy following a 49-35 record over five seasons, another former Cowboys head coach — Jason Garrett ... asked Garrett: “If I said to Jerry Jones, you can ...
This family has put us all in purgatory for nearly three decades. Until they divest themselves from the team, we need to put them through as much hell as we can generate. This would get Jerry Jones’ attention much more effectively than a boycott that does no economic damage.