During his Cowboys introduction Monday, Dallas’ newest head coach reflected on what Marty Schottenheimer accomplished throughout his career while
The Dallas Cowboys are moving to put together Brian Schottenheimer's staff, but Jason Witten is not expected to be a part of it.
The Dallas Cowboys stayed in-house for their new head coach, promoting Brian Schottenheimer as Mike McCarthy's successor. They're welcoming a former head coach from outside the building to aid Schottenheimer,
Jerry Jones was insistent about his risk-taking track record, but he will need to add to it as soon as this offseason to help his new head coach.
Jerry defended the decision as the culmination of a “thorough, thorough process.” The Cowboys interviewed Robert Saleh, Leslie Frazier, Kellen Moore, and Schottenheimer. They created some buzz by making it known that they spoke to Deion Sanders and Pete Carroll, although neither was officially interviewed.
Schottenheimer only expected one or two of his players to show up to the presser. To his surprise, Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott and numerous members of the roster turned out to support their new coach, who was also their offensive coordinator over the last two years.
The Cowboys will hire an offensive coordinator, but like Mike McCarthy before him, Brian Schottenheimer will call the offense.
The Super Bowl LIX matchup is officially set: the Philadelphia Eagles will take on the Kansas City Chiefs in New Orleans on Sunday, February 9.
After five seasons with Mike McCarthy leading the charge, the Dallas Cowboys decided to move on. An even bigger surprise
Dallas is collecting coaches other teams no longer wanted at an alarming rate, this one comes with a twist though. | From @ArmyChiefW3
Chris Broussard shares his thoughts on Brian Schottenheimer's fit as the Dallas Cowboys' head coach. He believes it will be a repeat of last season, with struggles to make the playoffs.