ESPN joins speculation Jason Garrett will not be part of Cowboys future

The shoe hasn’t dropped, but it appears that more people have gathered outside the lobby of the Dallas Cowboys tower of never-ending drama, waiting for an Italian-leather loafer to hit the marble floor. All week, there has been speculation over …

The shoe hasn’t dropped, but it appears that more people have gathered outside the lobby of the Dallas Cowboys tower of never-ending drama, waiting for an Italian-leather loafer to hit the marble floor. All week, there has been speculation over whether or not the Cowboys are going to relieve head coach Jason Garrett of his duties,  let him leave the franchise or reassign him somewhere else in the organization.

Fueled by Jerry Jones himself saying no door was shut on Garrett’s future with the organization, as reported by USA Today’s Jori Epstein, the crazy has crescendoed all week. Now, the biggest sports media entity has weighed in, after four days of confusion. ESPN’s Ed Werder tweeted on Thursday night the Cowboys are expected to come to a decision soon and it’s expected Garrett will no longer be part of the organization.

The tweet is not saying that it has happened yet; according to Werder’s source, it will likely conclude with Garrett being out. However Garrett is still on hand, working through a week of exit interviews with his players.

Still, ESPN proper decided to take their reporters words and enhance them a bit, tweeting out a Breaking News alert that the decision had been made.

Words matter, and considering ESPN sources had the Jacksonville Jaguars firing head coach Doug Marrone last weekend, and then had to backtrack that report on Wednesday, there’s plenty of reason to have a long pause before fully ingesting the leap of ideas here.

The Garrett Watch has now entered Day 5 with no official word from the club.

If anyone thinks this is an absurdly long delay, it’s because it is.

With all the reports swirling, it’s pretty clear the long delay after the season ended has the Cowboys considering something about retaining Garrett, but the degree is unknown. Perhaps Werder’s source has learned some new information, that if Garrett and Dallas were unable to find a role for him, they are now ready to part ways.

There have been reports of players being confused by the language Garrett used in his exit interviews with players, telling some about the club’s plans for them next season. That’s not seen as something a departing coach would do, but Garrett remains an employee of the organization and it may just be his way to keep coaching like he has a job until he doesn’t.

Garrett’s contract doesn’t officially end until January 14, 2020, which is likely aiding in some of the confusion.

For now, the watch is still on.

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