Report: Former Cowboys HC Jason Garrett could replace Drew Brees on NBC’s Sunday nights

Garrett has been teamed with Jac Collinsworth on USFL coverage since April; he may stay with the network for college and pro work this fall. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Just a few months into his TV broadcasting career, Jason Garrett could already be in line for a promotion.

The former Cowboys coach has been working with NBC on USFL coverage, which began in April. Now it appears he may be taking over for Drew Brees in the booth for Notre Dame football games this fall and possibly in the studio for Football Night in America, the network’s Sunday night NFL pre-game show.

The report comes from the New York Post. NBC declined to comment, according to the paper.

Garrett, 56, has been teamed with Jac Collinsworth (son of Cris Collinsworth) for the relaunched USFL’s first season and done well, by all accounts. Collinsworth- a Notre Dame grad- is apparently being eyed to take over the Fighting Irish play-by-play duties on Saturdays from Mike Tirico, who is replacing Al Michaels on Sunday Night Football.

That shuffle suggests that Garrett could stay partnered with Collinsworth and replace Brees after just one year on the job. The former Saints quarterback was said to be out at NBC back in May. Fox is rumored to be interested in bringing Brees aboard as their No. 2 analyst.

If Garrett takes Brees’s seat on Saturdays, it stands to reason the network could also have him assume Brees’s studio duties on Sunday nights.

NBC has already revealed that Cris Collinsworth and Melissa Stark will join Tirico for Sunday night game coverage.

It should be noted, however, that neither Brees nor NBC have said whether the 13-time Pro Bowler would return to the network in some other capacity for the 2022 season.

But social media posts from Brees confirmed that some sort of change was in the offing for him, as he toyed with the notion of everything from an NFL comeback or the senior golf tour to coaching kids or concentrating on business and philanthropic work.

After 17 seasons on coaching staffs in Miami, Dallas, and New York, Garrett admitted to a similar level of uncertainty as he took a noncommitted approach into his first TV gig just a few months ago.

“I love coaching. I love players, I love building teams, all of that. This was just an opportunity that came up this offseason,” Garrett said at the time. “It just sounded like something that was going to be interesting and fun to do. So I’m diving in right now, but all doors are open in the future.”

With the USFL season scheduled to culminate as a champion is crowned on July 3, that next door may be opening for Garrett. And it may be just down the hall from his current post.

The Cowboys are currently slated to be featured in NBC’s Sunday night coverage in their season opener hosting Tampa Bay on Sept. 11, in Week 6 at Philadelphia, and in Week 13 versus Indianapolis.

[listicle id=698210]

[listicle id=698233]

[listicle id=698203]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Jason Garrett reflects on Cowboys past, broadcasting present, coaching future

The former Cowboys coach had fun in his first week on the job with NBC, but made it clear “all doors are open” on a return to the sidelines. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Jason Garrett is the kind of guy who always comes across as calm, cool, and collected. Maybe even to a fault. During nearly a decade as head coach of the Cowboys, that unflappable demeanor didn’t always sit well with fans who might have liked a bit more fire from time to time. But things very rarely seemed to truly rattle the man they called Red Ball.

Still, he admits that during his first weekend in the broadcast booth for NBC’s coverage of the USFL, there was a steep learning curve.

“I don’t know if the word is nervous,” he explained, “but there’s a lot of stuff that goes into being an announcer. And obviously, I don’t have a ton of experience with that, but I was just trying to have some fun up there.”

Garrett did a Friday morning phone-in with the crew at 105.3 The Fan, and it was just like the old days, with the ex-coach soft-selling what went right from the previous game, putting a positive spin on lessons that could be learned, and looking ahead to the next time out.

The 56-year-old said getting into a rhythm with booth partner Jac Collinsworth, figuring out which monitor to be watching when, taking a producer’s cues in his headset, and enhancing the on-field action for the viewers with engaging patter between plays all took some getting used to.

While he did do a few NFL Europe games for Fox Sports toward the end of his playing career, Garrett hinted that he tried to draw largely on advice he had learned first-hand from one of the true legends.

“John Madden’s the one that everybody points to,” Garrett offered. “I was fortunate; in the ’90s, John Madden and Pat Summerall did almost every one of our games, so we developed great relationships- personal relationships- with those guys. Just to hear John Madden do a game, obviously, he’s the best of the best.”

But Garrett may not necessarily be ready to follow in Madden’s footsteps by abandoning coaching forever for a permanent broadcast gig. When asked about a return to the sidelines, he reverted right back to coachspeak by giving a non-answer of an answer that’s wide open for interpretation.

“I love coaching. I love players, I love building teams, all of that. This was just an opportunity that came up this offseason,” Garrett said. “It just sounded like something that was going to be interesting and fun to do. So I’m diving in right now, but all doors are open in the future.”

For a time, it looked as if the next door to open for Garrett would be in the college ranks. Shortly after being dismissed as the Giants offensive coordinator in November 2021, he was rumored to be the frontrunner for the head coaching job at Duke University.

The Blue Devils ultimately went a different direction, but Garrett says the notion of one day taking over a collegiate program has a lot of upside.

“You get these kids coming in- 17, 18 years old- and you have an opportunity to be around them and create an environment for them where they can be their best, on and off the field, at a very formative time in their life,” he said. “That’s always something that’s intrigued me. I’ve been in pro football my whole life: the last 31 years as a player and a coach, so I’m not going to say college football is foreign to me, but I just haven’t done it. I haven’t been a college coach. But those opportunities are always intriguing.”

No matter Garrett’s next stop, it will always be his time with the Cowboys that makes up the bulk of his resumé. And even though his tenure in Dallas ended sooner than he might have liked- and with far less hardware than anyone associated with the team would have wanted- it doesn’t change how he looks back now on his many years with America’s Team.

“I loved every minute of every day that I was playing and coaching for the Dallas Cowboys,” Garrett said. “What a unique experience, to be a part of some of the teams that I was around, to get a chance to work with some of the coaches and the players, the organization. It’s an incredible place. Literally, I never worked a day I was there; I’d get there early, and I’d stay late. We’d go to work every day, but it was never working.”

[listicle id=696270]

[listicle id=696257]

[listicle id=696224]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Former Cowboys HC Jason Garrett gets booth job for USFL games

Garrett will join NBC’s crew as an analyst for the first season of the newly-relaunched USFL; the regular season starts Saturday. | From @ToddBrock24f7

To use a phrase from his own parlance, Jason Garrett loves ball. The former Cowboys backup quarterback, offensive coordinator, and head coach enjoys nothing more than to talk Xs and Os, drawing from a lifetime of learning about the game at every level to dissect what’s happening- and what should happen- on the field.

And now he’ll be paid to do it in the broadcast booth.

Garrett will serve as an analyst for NBC’s coverage of the USFL season, it was announced Tuesday. Jac Collinsworth and Paul Burmeister will lead the crew, with Garrett joined by Michael Robinson and Cameron Jordan in analyst roles. Zora Stephenson and Corey Robinson will act as sideline reporters, while Sara Perlman will host halftime and postgame coverage.

Fox will simulcast the league’s games and have its own crew: Curt Menefee and Joel Klatt as the voices of the game with Kevin Kugler handling play-by-play calls, and Brock Huard and onetime Cowboys quarterback Mark Sanchez doing analysis.

Garrett spent two decades in the Cowboys organization, the first seven as player. He earned two Super Bowl rings with the dynasty teams of the 1990s behind Hall of Fame quarterback Troy Aikman. As a third-string option, Garrett memorably got the start for 1994’s Thanksgiving Day game, leading Dallas to a dramatic comeback win over the Packers.

He returned to Dallas in 2007 as the team’s new offensive coordinator after having spent two seasons as quarterbacks coach in Miami. On the Cowboys sidelines, he moved up the ranks to gain an assistant head coach title in 2008. In 2011, he took over when head coach Wade Phillips was fired after eight games and guided the Cowboys to a 5-3 record to close out the season.

The Princeton grad was named the eighth head coach in Cowboys history for the team’s 2021 season. His contract was not renewed following the 2019 season; Garrett had compiled an 85-67 record as Cowboys head coach, 2-3 in the playoffs.

Garrett was then hired as offensive coordinator for the Giants, but was dismissed before the 2021 season was over. He was rumored to be the front-runner for the head job at Duke University; the school ultimately went a different direction.

The newly-relaunched USFL will kick off its season on Saturday. All eight teams will play their entire schedule of regular-season games in one of two stadiums in Birmingham, Alabama. Postseason contests will be played in Canton, Ohio, with the championship game slated for July 3.

The Cowboys have several former players on USFL rosters. Former Dallas assistant Todd Haley will coach the Tampa Bay Bandits. Longtime Cowboys fullback Daryl Johnston is the league’s executive vice president of football operations.

And Garrett, Johnston’s former Cowboys teammate, will be giving his thoughts on all of it with a bird’s-eye view, a headset, and a live television audience.

[listicle id=695879]

[listicle id=694319]

[listicle id=695712]

[lawrence-newsletter]

SEC Network hires Deuce McAllister to analyst role

SEC Network hires former Saints RB Deuce McAllister to analyst role

[mm-video type=playlist id=01eqbyahgz6p2j3xp7 player_id=none image=https://saintswire.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Good news, SEC fans. Legendary New Orleans Saints running back Deuce McAllister accepted a position with the SEC Network to work as a college football analyst this year, bringing the proud Ole Miss product back to his old stomping grounds. His first assignment will be working the Sept.11 game between Auburn and Alabama State, so mark your calendars.

Interestingly, McAllister will continue to work Saints games for WWL Radio — he’s now joined in the booth by longtime television broadcaster Mike Hoss, who replaces Zach Strief. So he’ll have quite a busy schedule in the fall.

McAllister is the latest former Saints player to join the SEC Network, along with his teammate and Super Bowl XLIV champion Roman Harper (an Alabama alum) and fan-favorite tight end Benjamin Watson (who studied at Georgia). With Jonathan Vilma calling NFL games for FOX Sports and Drew Brees on the call for Notre Dame kickoffs on NBC Sports, there’s quite an assembly of former Saints on the airwaves this year.

[listicle id=48626]

Former Saints LB Jonathan Vilma joins FOX Sports NFL broadcasting team

Retired New Orleans Saints LB Jonathan Vilma left his job as an ESPN college football analyst to join the Fox Sports NFL broadcasting team.

New Orleans Saints fans will hear a familiar voice calling games this fall. Super Bowl XLIV-winning linebacker Jonathan Vilma left his role as an ESPN college football analyst for the opportunity to call NFL games with FOX Sports, Andrew Marchand reported for The New York Post.

Vilma is expected to replace Ronde Barber in the booth next to veteran play-by-play broadcaster Kenny Albert. No. 51 previously co-hosted a college football Saturday pregame show with Mark Sanchez on ABC (in partnership with ESPN and Disney) while sometimes appearing on ESPN’s weekday morning shows.

Obviously, this wasn’t an opportunity he could pass up. Vilma has held his own in booth and panel settings as an analyst, but offering color commentary on games is new ground.

FOX is set to broadcast 10 Saints games this year, as well as their Week 2 preseason game with the Pittsburgh Steelers (which will be nationally-broadcast). That includes their season opener with Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, their midseason rematch with the San Francisco 49ers, and this year’s Christmas Day game against Minnesota Vikings. Not a bad slate to start with for a rookie broadcaster.

[vertical-gallery id=35147]

Say it ain’t so! Former Bears QB Jay Cutler, Kristin Cavallari are getting a divorce

Former Bears QB Jay Cutler and reality television star Kristin Cavallari announced they are getting a divorce.

Former Chicago Bears quarterback Jay Cutler and reality television star Kristin Cavallari announced the two will be getting a divorce in a post on Instagram.

The Bears all-time leading passer and former Laguna Beach star met over 10 years ago when Cutler was playing in Chicago. The two wed in 2013 and have three children together, living in Chicago until Cutler was released by the Bears in 2017.

After retiring from the NFL following a stint with the Miami Dolphins, Cutler and Cavallari moved to Nashville, TN and starred in the reality show “Very Cavallari” where Cutler became a TV phenomenon thanks to his dry sense of humor and interests in deer hunting.

Cutler has been rumored to be joining a television booth for NFL gamedays, according to a report from the Big Lead earlier this year. It’s unclear if his looming divorce will have any impact on his decision to pursue a broadcasting career.

[lawrence-related id=443809,443761,443694,443640]