Breaking: Cowboys HC Mike McCarthy to return for 2024 season

The Cowboys will have Mike McCarthy return for the 2024 season. | From @KDDrummondNFL

The news has finally landed and there will not be a change atop the Dallas Cowboys coaching tree. Head coach Mike McCarthy will return for the 2024 season, his final under his five-year contract signed in 2020. Based on his regular season results this seemed like a foregone conclusion, but Dallas’ disastrous wild-card round loss clouded the picture.

After finishing 12-5 for the third consecutive season and winning the NFC East for the second time in the span, McCarthy’s Cowboys looked woefully inept in their home defeat against the Green Bay Packers. Dallas lost 48-32, in a game that wasn’t that close, as the only home team to lose among the six games over the weekend. After meeting with him on Wednesday, owner Jerry Jones informed McCarthy he would get the chance to redeem himself.

 

Cowboys to play in Germany in 2024? 1 in 9 shot

After the NFL announced the home teams for the four European games next season, with only one of the team’s being on Dallas’ road schedule. | From @KDDrummondNFL

The NFL has announced the four teams who will serve as hosts in the European version of the 2024 International Series. The Chicago Bears, Minnesota Vikings and Jacksonville Jaguars will “host” games in London, England and the Carolina Panthers will be the “home” team for a game in Munich, Germany next fall.

While Dallas doesn’t haven’t any of the London teams on their schedule next year, they do travel to the Panthers as part of the NFC East and NFC South divisional rotations in 2024. That means they are one of nine opponents which could be selected to travel across the Atlantic to show some NFL diplomacy.

The Cowboys have played in the International Series just once, traveling to London to face the Jaguars, who annually play there. The NFL has yet to announce who the home team will be for the league’s first foray into South America where they will play a game in Brazil in 2024.

Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has been very adamant about not wanting his franchise to lose a home game in order to support the league’s expansion into other markets. However he has noted he has no problem being the big-ticket draw as the visiting club, as long as he doesn’t have to give up any home dates at AT&T Stadium.

The NFL voted to expand the series during the Winter Meetings, and will have nine international games a year starting in 2025. All teams will have to host a game, but that will potentially include Mexico City, the one international destination Jones isn’t adamant in avoiding.

Jimmy Johnson retrospective, Cowboys Ring of Honor induction photo gallery

A look back on Saturday night’s induction ceremony of the incomparable Jimmy Johnson. | From @KDDrummondNFL

Jimmy Johnson became the 24th person inducted into the Dallas Cowboys’ Ring of Honor on Saturday night. The halftime festivities included a ton of emotion for the two-time Super Bowl winning coach, who seems to have finally been able to bury the beef with owner Jerry Jones.

Several RoH members were on hand for the ceremony, including Roger Staubach, Tony Dorsett and Johnson’s own triplets: Troy Aikman, Michael Irvin and Emmitt Smith. Check out the pics from the festivities and a handful of other memories from Johnson’s tenure.

Cowboys fans shouldn’t be distracted by McCarthy contract headlines

From @ToddBrock24f7: Sunday morning brought whispers of a supposedly imminent extension for the head coach, but Jerry Jones is keeping his options open.

The Dallas Cowboys have one of the NFL’s best records through the first 14 weeks of the 2023 season.

Mike McCarthy is under contract with the team through 2024.

These are incontrovertible facts. Black and white. But things get myriad shades of gray in a hurry if you ask owner Jerry Jones to make any sort of proclamation beyond that.

Despite a Sunday-morning headline from NFL insider Ian Rapoport that almost makes it sound like Jones is working on a contract extension for the 60-year-old head coach and play-caller, the truth is there is no news whatsoever on that front.

According to Rapoport, Jones was asked at this week’s league meeting in Dallas “whether he envisions” an extension for McCarthy. Rapoport goes on to state, “The indication was yes.”

But was it really?

Look at what Jones actually said in response:

“That’ll have a course that seeks its own time frame.”

Read that again.

That is a big fat helping of typical Jerry Jones word salad. Ten words that come across as profound on the surface but say absolutely nothing of consequence, a sentence that borders on nonsensical rambling.

He was at least somewhat more definitive with his next utterance:

“I don’t do anything of that sort until the season is over.”

While the Cowboys are, in fact, in great shape heading into Week 15- near the top of most sets of power rankings and a favorite to do damage in the playoffs- they haven’t even matched their win total of last season… or the season before… and there was a not-insignificant faction of Cowboys Nation ready to run McCarthy out of town after both of those January exits.

If the team were to catastrophically collapse over the final four games, or get bounced out of the bracket on Wild Card Weekend, or get spanked in the divisional round, or get blown off the field in the NFC championship, the seat under McCarthy would no doubt- once again- get pretty toasty pretty quickly.

And Jones is a man who insists on keeping his options open.

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Add in the probability that defensive coordinator Dan Quin- (the obvious choice if McCarthy were to no longer be the guy- is eventually going to be offered a head coaching position somewhere he actually wants to go (and would likely take assistants with him), and Jones would be downright foolish to call any sort of a shot now.

A Super Bowl ring (or even, really, just an appearance in the big game) would almost certainly make a McCarthy extension a foregone conclusion, especially after the improvements he’s made to the offense’s production since taking over playcalling duties. As Rapoport rightly suggests, “in most other situations, McCarthy would be the subject of coach of the year talk.”

But despite how casually tossing out a headline about McCarthy and an imminent contract extension makes for a great tease on the Sunday pre-game shows, it’s simply too early for the front office to actually make that kind of decision about McCarthy’s future, despite the way things look right this minute.

And that’s what Jones’s non-answer really means.

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Twitter reacts to big Cowboys, Jimmy Johnson announcement: ‘It’s about time!’

Cowboys Nation and national observers all had similar reactions to the news that Johnson will finally be honored. | From @KDDrummondNFL

Finally. After all these years, Jimmy Johnson is finally going to get the respect he deserves from the owner of the Dallas Cowboys. Buzz started to circulate among the Cowboys media and as everything in the world today, Twitter quickly disseminated the information to the general public. Ahead of kickoff for Week 11, on the road in Carolina, Jerry Jones finally gave in.

Jones announced a press conference for 25 minutes before kickoff and when Johnson appeared with him on the field at Bank of America Stadium, it was obvious what was happening. Johnson will be enshrined in the club’s Ring of Honor during halftime of the team’s December 30 bout with the Detroit Lions. Finally.

Johnson was Jones’ first coach as owner of the Dallas Cowboys, and they won two Super Bowl’s together. But the relationship soon soured and Jones fired Johnson, winning a third Super Bowl two years later with Barry Switzer as his head coach.

Though the two eventually repaired their relationship, Jones has refused to put Johnson in the storied Ring of Honor, despite Johnson being enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2020. The delay has angered Cowboys fans, whose greatest memories involve Johnson leading the charge. As expected, Twitter responded with a hugh sigh of relief at the news, and the potential for the curse to be broken.

Lack of Aggression: Cowboys’ Jones says other teams will have to initiate trade talks

From @ToddBrock24f7: The Cowboys owner hinted he’d “extend” himself to improve the team, but is more interested in fielding phone calls than making them.

Cowboys fans watched the division-rival Eagles improve an area of relative mediocrity on Monday by trading for safety Kevin Byard, leveraging the two-time All-Pro away from Tennessee for basically a ham sandwich that won’t even come due until spring.

They should not be holding their breath for Dallas to make a similarly shrewd move before the Oct. 31 trade deadline. Cowboys owner Jerry Jones is sticking with the party line, saying he’s content with the team as it exists now and suggesting the front office may be open to taking calls from other clubs having a fire sale, but they likely won’t be the ones burning up the phone lines to try to work a blockbuster deal.

“It’ll have to come our way. I don’t want to preclude it in any way, but it always does,” Jones told 105.3 The Fan’s Shan & RJ on Tuesday. “You have a lot of machinations that you’re working with every day- I do- but the initiation of an opportunity to make a trade at this time that would help us, principally, has to start over on the other end. That’s not showing a lack of aggressiveness; it’s just that’s where it starts. I like where we are with our personnel today, and so I’m not thinking in any way that we need to upgrade our roster.”

That won’t sit well with many Cowboys fans who also like the team’s personnel… but also happen to believe that there’s room for improvement and maybe even cause for concern after going just .500 over the past month.

Despite three convincing wins over their first four weeks, no one who watched Dallas fall flat on its face in Arizona, get out-everything’ed in San Francisco, and barely squeak out a victory in L.A. believes this team is perfectly constructed as is to the point actively looking for deals should be off the table.

And by the time they line up for their next measuring-stick game at Lincoln Financial in Week 9, the trade deadline will be long gone and the Cowboys will have no choice but to like their guys.

Jones admits there are positions where the team could be stronger, but he maintains that taking an aggressive approach to pursuing players isn’t the way to address those spots.

“You’re laying in wait, so to speak,” he said. “I have areas of the team that we could, if certain circumstances happen, that you might improve. You don’t know that your best chance to get it done is[n’t] when it comes by you and you grab it. To go out and push it? The odds of getting it done at the price or the trade conditions… is dreaming.”

That doesn’t sound like the same strategy that the Eagles used to snag Byard. Or that the 49ers used last year to land Christian McCaffrey. Or that the Dolphins have been using to assemble an all-star track team.

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Heck, remember when Dallas pulled a late-October deal to get Amari Cooper and instantly change the entire team’s dynamic?

That was just five years ago. What happened since then?

The Cowboys may actually be just one or two key playmakers away from putting themselves in that echelon of talent this season. But fans will likely never find out because of the Joneses’ overly-conservative approach.

Jones loves to say he would write any size check to win a Super Bowl. But he apparently won’t pick up the phone to try to get them closer.

“I would really extend to improve our team right now. That gives you an idea, because I think we’ve got a team that’s a contender. So I would do it right now,” Jones said.

“Would I do something that would take away from this team so that it could help us in the future? Probably not.”

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‘Really ridiculous’: Jerry Jones attempts to shut down talk of replacing Prescott, McCarthy

From @ToddBrock24f7: Despite a 42-10 blowout loss and loads of doubt around the fanbase, the Cowboys owner is unwilling to consider a change at QB or playcaller.

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones saw the same disastrous performance in Santa Clara that the team’s fans did, but he has a very different take from most on what to do about it moving forward.

Dak Prescott’s 14-of-24 passing numbers and his one-touchdown-to-three-interceptions ratio, in a game that the entire organization had built up as a monumentally important measuring stick within the NFC, have renewed longstanding doubts about the quarterback’s viability. And despite posting blowout wins in two-thirds of their outings, the offense under head coach Mike McCarthy’s play-calling has yet to really find itself.

It’s led many within Cowboys Nation to wonder out loud- just five weeks into the season- if it’s time to blow it all up and make a radical change, either in the starting lineup or on the coaching staff… or both.

Jones doesn’t see it that way.

“Do we have the ability to do this? I think that’s the question every fan should be asking,” Jones told 105.3 The Fan’s Shan and RJ. “Do we have the players? Do we have the healthy players that can get this done? Do we have the players that can do the protections and the blocks? The answer is: we do.”

On paper anyway, he seems to be right. At least most Cowboys thought so as recently as a few weeks ago. Having utterly dismantled the Giants and Jets in back-to-back contests to start the season by a combined 70-10 score, Dallas was sitting at or very near the top of most power rankings, a true front-runner for the conference crown.

Their no-show of a showing versus San Francisco erased that talk. Even the eternal optimist Jones was able to say as much.

“When something tells you what it is, don’t try to dream that it’s something else. What I’m trying to say is: we can do better than what we did out there Sunday night. That’s a given. We can do better, we have the potential to do better. We have the preparation to do better. We didn’t do it at all,” he admitted, “Sunday night.”

But with Dallas’s Super Bowl drought having now surpassed 10,000 days, Jones says he is convinced the organization is as close as ever to finally getting back there with Prescott at the helm.

“Let me be very affirmative: I completely believe that we have the quarterback that can take us where we want to go,” the billionaire said.

“Dak Prescott is a quarterback that can get us to the Super Bowl. That’s the way that’s going to be. We have other quarterbacks on that roster, and players that certainly [are capable] if something should happen to Dak. But I want to be real clear: Dak is very capable of making this team be where we want it to go.”

Over the course of his 20-minute weekly call-in, Jones also gave a definitive vote of confidence to the coaching staff as a whole, pointing out that the team is just five games into McCarthy’s new tenure as the offense’s play-caller.

“We’re just getting started,” Jones reminded. “We did view this game as a game that would tell us where we are, and nobody likes where we are.”

The Cowboys are averaging 327 offensive yards per game, a mediocre 17th in the league. They do rank 6th in total points, but four of Dallas’s 13 total touchdowns- or 30 percent- have come from the defense and special teams. Of the offense’s 52 possessions thus far, only 19 have penetrated the red zone… and just seven have resulted in six points.

They never reached the red zone at all at Levi’s Stadium in their 42-10 loss, but Jones doesn’t believe the sky is falling.

“We should recognize that we had a very bad outing, and San Francisco had a very good outing,” he said. “We should recognize that and call it what it is and not mislead ourselves. But as far as sitting here and saying we should completely change out the towels here, that’s not even in the cards. And it’s really ridiculous.”

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The Cowboys will look to get themselves back on track against the 2-2 Los Angeles Chargers, who are coming off a bye week and putting up top-ten numbers in yards per game and points per game under Kellen Moore, the offensive coordinator who Dallas parted ways with in order to hand the reins to McCarthy.

What once looked like a game the Cowboys should win handily now feels like one they absolutely must win- and arguably, with authority- even if for purely psychological reasons. If they go into their own bye week swimming in the doubts and bad juju that are swirling now, keeping their heads above water the rest of the way could prove very difficult.

The Cowboys, clearly, are not the team everyone thought they were.

The question now, though, as Jones himself put it repeatedly on Tuesday: are they capable of becoming that team?

Jones says yes, but he, like the rest of us, are still waiting to see it.

“Sure, we all had aspirations of going through this thing and being dominant, really being dominant,” he concluded. “But the facts are that every game for us is going to be a challenge.”

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Cowboys Jerry Jones’ alleged quote on lack of Black personnel in NFL surfaces

A quote attributed to Jones was included in a lawsuit filed over the league’s ousting of a prominent journalist. | From @ArmyChiefW3

A quote by Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones appeared in a 53-page complaint filed by former NFL Network reporter Jim Trotter, who alleges the league did not renew his contract in retaliation for his continued questions about the league’s lack of diversity at the home office.

Trotter filed a lawsuit against the NFL and the league-owned cable channel for racial discrimination. Among the complaints, the lawsuit claims that in August of 2020, Trotter asked the Cowboys owner why there weren’t more black professionals in decision-making positions and Jones allegedly responded by saying: “If Blacks feel some kind of way, they should buy their own team and hire who they want to hire.”

Trotter also mentioned Jones on-air, during his 2021 coverage when racist emails coming from former NFL head coach Jon Gruden came to light. The lawsuit claims that two of Trotter’s supervisors instructed him to avoid the Jones comments.

According to the complaint, his supervisor asked one of Trotters colleagues: “Why does Jim keep bringing this up?”

After working for the NFL Network for five years, vice president Sandra Nunez told Trotter’s agent in November of 2022 that she “could not envision any reason why his contract would not be renewed.” That was before Trotter pressed the NFL commissioner about the topic.

This is not the first time Jones has come under scrutiny over racial divides. In November 2022, a photo from 1957 shows a young Jones, who was a high school sophomore at the time, in the vicinity of white students blocking black students from entering their school. Jones also apologized back in 2013 after being recorded making racially insensitive remarks to a woman.

Jerry Jones and the Dallas Cowboys have yet to release a statement on the matter.

Twitter reacts to Jerry Jones’ reaction to Sam Williams’ arrest

After the arrest of the Cowboys’ young DE became public news, public reaction could only be trumped by Jerry Jones. | From @KDDrummondNFL

The Dallas Cowboys returned to the headlines on Wednesday, and if you know anything about football, you know it most likely wasn’t a good thing. Unless the club is making a roster move of some kind, there aren’t too many things that could bring them into the national spotlight on a Wednesday. During the regular season, Wednesday is a big practice day as the club’s initial injury report is released, but things are still in exhibition mode for the next week.

No, Wednesday brought news from the police blotter, a narrative that follows the Cowboys since their glory days. Second-year defensive end Sam Williams was arrested on Sunday evening, but it didn’t surface to the Dallas media until the middle of the week, when Clarence Hill of the Ft. Worth Star-Telegram emerged with the news. The Twitter responses to the charges, and the club’s reputation, were immediate. The Cowboys’ owner’s reaction when asked about Williams’ transgressions were iconic Jerry Jones.

The initial reports seemed to indicate Williams was arrested for possession of marijuana. Then it was clarified to be a non-marijuana controlled substance, which led to wild speculation. It turned out to be THC oil. Williams was involved in a car crash this past December after going 98 mph. Mixed together, it created a wild ride for Cowboys Nation. Follow along with the best Twitter reactions to it all.

Did the Joneses catch strays from Jay Gruden’s criticism of Dan Snyder?

Jay Gruden didn’t intend to criticize the Cowboys front office when he spoke out of Dan Snyder’s interfering but the parallel is easy to draw. | From @ReidDHanson

In what could only be viewed as something a long time coming, Dan Snyder is finally out as the owner of the Washington franchise. With a tenure marked by scandal after scandal and limited on-field success, Washington now turns the page on an embarrassing 24-year-old chapter in their franchise’s storied history.

Amidst all the statements, parting shots, and gory details, former Washington coach Jay Gruden offered harsh criticism of Snyder’s involvement in matters of personnel. And he possibly caught the Cowboys’ front office with some strays in the process.

In an interview on The Kevin Sheehan Show, Gruden discussed Snyder’s insistence in inserting himself in matters of personnel.

“He wasn’t experienced enough in the business to make those decisions,” Gruden said of Snyder. “He didn’t put in the work. For him to pick a player in the draft is asinine. He didn’t put the work in. He didn’t watch the players. He didn’t go to the meetings. He didn’t go to the scouts’ meetings.”

Gruden clearly didn’t appreciate the chief decision maker not watching film or attending meetings.  It’s understandable since most front offices are structured in a way the film-watching GM is the final say in matters of personnel. Scouts, both pro and college, report to the GM and the team works together in near countless strategy sessions and film reviews to make decisions.

That’s not how things went in Washington.

While the Cowboys aren’t nearly as dysfunctional as Washington was under Snyder, the untraditional structure in Dallas has similarities.

Jerry Jones is the Cowboys owner, president and general manager, meaning he oversees the big picture of the team (sales, revenue, branding, etc…) and is the final say in matters of personnel. Given the importance of the three roles, it’s highly unlikely he even approaches the lowest level of film review traditional GMs digest on an annual basis.

Stephen Jones (the Cowboys COO, EVP and director of player personnel) is more focused on day-to-day personnel than Jerry Jones, but even he probably falls short in typical levels of film consumption. Like his father, he wears multiple hats in the organization and his daily routine is likely far from that of the average NFL scout or GM.

Contrary to popular opinion, Jerry Jones does not rule over matters of personnel with an iron fist. He knows with Will McClay (VP of player personnel), he has one of the best true personnel men in the league. But Jerry Jones still carries weight as the GM and if he and Stephen are aligned, they would likely be hard to overturn.

Perhaps working in the Cowboys’ favor is the team effort they put into decision making. McClay and the Joneses work together to make decisions. They even involve coaches in the process (which many teams do not do).

The famous Johnny Manziel draft had Jerry Jones on one side of the aisle with everyone else on the other. Jerry caved to the group and the Cowboys selected Zack Martin in a victory for the ages.

“I don’t respect the guy that doesn’t watch the film and comes in, makes the pick, and tells you who he is signing in free agency,” Gruden said. “It makes no sense when we and the scouts are doing all of the film work, and all of a sudden, he comes in and makes the pick.”

It’s safe to say Jerry Jones is not putting the work of the normal NFL GM. There simply aren’t enough hours in the day to do that. But he’s also not the sole decision maker in Dallas so does that make it okay?

There’s no clear answer. Most decision makers in high levels (in both business and politics) aren’t the subject matter experts who work in the weeds. But the successful ones have an uncanny ability to listen and weigh recommendations with a big picture view.

It’s something to think about even if it’s something which is unlikely to ever change in Dallas.

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