The Dallas Cowboys are entering their second week of searching for a head coach after moving on from Mike McCarthy last week. As of Monday morning, three interviews have been requested by the Jones family but there are names expected to be added to their list of candidates as they take it slow with their search.
The Dallas Cowboys rid themselves of the label as the team that couldn't win the big one by defeating the Miami Dolphins 24-3 in Super Bowl VI in New Orleans on Jan. 16, 1972.
Ever since Jimmy Johnson's firing more than 30 years ago, a through-line has linked the seven men who have since held the job of Dallas Cowboys head coach: Jerry Jones has been the club's true boss and culture-setter.
The next Cowboys head coach will be the 10th in team history, and the ninth under Jerry Jones's employ. So, who wants this job? And who does Jerry want?
McCarthy's overall lack of playoff success and the offense getting stale are big reasons Jerry Jones is making a coaching change.
It's not up there with having the audacity to fire legendary coach Tom Landry on a golf course in Austin, but Jerry Jones' fumbling of Mike McCarthy's exit from the Dallas Cowboys is, at best, a horrible look and,
The Dallas Cowboys are one of four teams still looking for a head coach. However, just how coveted should the Cowboys head coaching position be?
According to reports from NFL insider Ian Rapoport, the Cowboys are planning a second interview on Wednesday with offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer for their head coaching vacancy. The Cowboys reportedly spent four hours in their initial interview with Schottenheimer on Monday.
Former Cowboys coach Jason Garrett explains just how whomever succeeds Mike McCarthy can find success in Dallas.
McCarthy leaves looking like the bigger man. Partially because of the malaise that began to coat the Cowboys' fan base and partially because Jerry seems to again be operating on his gut as he moves forward.
Dallas parted ways with McCarthy this week after a disappointing season. The Denton Record Chronicle's Brett Vito spoke with KERA's Andrew Garcia about where the Cowboys go from here.
McCarthy spent six years in the college ranks before he broke into the NFL in 1993 on Marty Schottenheimer’s Kansas City staff as a quality control coach. He was a quarterback coach for the Chiefs and Green Bay Packers before leaving to become the offensive coordinator of the New Orleans Saints in 2000.