Coach Witten: Cowboys legend to run high school football program in DFW

The 11-time Pro Bowler has been announced as the next head coach at Liberty Christian School in Argyle, where he’s already a parent.

Jason Witten is about to begin his football coaching career. But it won’t be with the Dallas Cowboys.

Liberty Christian School, in the Fort Worth suburb of Argyle, has announced that the 11-time Pro Bowler will be the Warriors’ new head coach.

Long thought to be a coaching prospect at some level, Witten takes over a high school program that went 2-7 last season and 3-8 the year prior.

The veteran tight end announced that he is retiring from his career as a player after sixteen years with the Cowboys, a season with the Raiders, and a yearlong break in 2018 as an ESPN broadcaster. He has said he will sign a one-day contract with Dallas in March so he can officially retire as a Cowboy.

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Jason Witten on storied Cowboys career: ‘I gave it my absolute all’

Jason Witten is calling it a career again. He only missed one game in 17 seasons, and told ESPN’s Todd Acher he gave his all on the field.

Jason Witten retired from the NFL after the 2017 season. After a lackluster stint in the broadcast booth with ESPN’s Monday Night Football, he returned to Dallas in 2019 to rejoin the Cowboys before heading to the Las Vegas Raiders in 2020.

Witten is now calling it a career, again. On Wednesday, the Cowboy’s all-time leader in receptions and receiving yards decided to leave the gridiron after 17 seasons. After a stellar career that was filled with tons of Hall of Fame credentials, Witten goes into the next phase of his life seemingly at peace with what he did on the football field.

“A coach once told me, ‘The legacy of heroes is the memory of a great name and the inheritance of a great example,'” Witten told ESPN’s Todd Archer. “As I hang it up, I walk away knowing that for 17 seasons I gave it my absolute all. I am proud of my accomplishments as a football player on the field and the example I tried to set off of it. Football is a great game that has taught me many valuable lessons, and I look forward to passing on that knowledge to the next generation.”

Witten was an ironman throughout his career. He played in 255 out of a possible 256 games for the Cowboys and suited up for all 16 games for the Raiders this season. His only time on the sidelines came during his rookie campaign in 2003 when he suffered a broken jaw.

His accomplishments are quite impressive. Witten accumulated 1,215 receptions for 12,977 yards and 72 touchdowns (second to Dez Bryant) during his tenure with the Cowboys. For his career, his 1,228 receptions rank fourth in NFL history and second for all tight ends. He was selected to 11 Pro Bowls, made four All-Pro teams, won the Walter Payton Man of the Year (2012), and the Bart Starr Award (2013).

So what’s next for Witten? A return to the broadcast booth is highly unlikely, however, according to ESPN’s Ed Werder, coaching could be in his future.

“He has an interest in coaching and agreed to be a position coach for an NFL team if it hired a certain head coach candidate.”

No matter what direction Witten’s life goes he’s cemented his legacy as one of the greatest ever at the tight end position and has set a standard that will be hard to duplicate.

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Breaking: Jason Witten to sign back with Cowboys, so he can retire after 17 seasons

His retirement was short lived the first time, so like playing for the Cowboys, Jason Witten is going to try it again.

The legend is walking away. After 17 years in the league, former Dallas Cowboys tight end Jason Witten is hanging up his cleats. For the second time in three years, the former star has decided to retire, and it’s likely to stick more this time than last. In 2018, Witten walked away from the game to take a role with ESPN as an analyst on Monday Night Football.

That didn’t go as well as hoped on the heels of his longtime QB Tony Romo becoming an instant star in the booth with CBS Sports. After just one year, Witten returned to the Cowboys, spent a year with the club and then traveled to Las Vegas to hang on one more season with the Raiders. Enough is enough though, as he’s walking away from the game. Witten will return to the Cowboys in March under a one-day contract so he can officially retire with the organization he is known by.

In 2021, Witten added 13 catches and two touchdowns to his career totals, which led all Cowboys tight ends in every conceivable category.

Drafted in 2003’s third round by head coach Bill Parcells, the Tennessee Volunteer alum appeared in 255 games for the organization, catching 1,215 passes for 12,977 yards (both Cowboys francise records) and 72 scores. He made 11 Pro Bowls and was a two-time All-Pro, and is almost assuredly heading to the Hall of Fame as one of the best two-way tight ends in NFL history.

In 2019, Cowboys Wire named Witten the No. 30 best player in team history.

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Report: Ex-Cowboys TE now frontrunner for Lions’ HC job

Dan Campbell played tight end for three seasons in Dallas, overlapping with Jason Witten. Now he may be the next Detroit Lions head coach.

The Detroit Lions may be zeroing in on their man, according to reports. He has a ton of Cowboys connections, and he may have beaten out another Cowboys alum for the job.

Current Saints assistant head coach and tight ends coach Dan Campbell is said to be the leading candidate for the Lions’ head coaching job. Campbell played tight end for Dallas for three seasons, leaving for Detroit after the 2005 season once it became clear that Jason Witten would be an immovable fixture in the Cowboys’ starting lineup at the position.

Now according to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport and Tom Pelissero, the 44-year-old Campbell may be returning to the Motor City as the man in charge.

Campbell was a third-round pick by the Giants in 1999. The Texas A&M product appeared in Super Bowl XXXV as a rookie.

When Bill Parcells took over as Dallas’s coach in 2003, Campbell was one of the first free agents signed. But the immediate splash made by the rookie Witten relegated Campbell to, primarily, a blocker.

In 2004, Campbell played in three games before going on injured reserve with a foot injury. The following season, he missed just ten days of practice following an appendectomy and came back to start all four preseason games. During the season, he started 12 games alongside Witten in the two-tight end set run by the Cowboys offense.

Over his three seasons in Dallas, the gritty and hard-nosed Campbell played in 35 games. He caught 25 balls for 235 yards and two touchdowns.

Campbell played three seasons with Detroit before heading to New Orleans, where he was signed by his former Cowboys offensive coordinator Sean Payton. Despite spending the year on IR, Campbell earned a championship ring for the Saints’ win in Super Bowl XLIV. He retired after the 2009 season.

After progressing through the coaching ranks in Miami (under former Dallas assistant Tony Sparano) and even acting as interim head coach there in 2015 (when current Cowboys offensive line coach Joe Philbin was ousted by the Dolphins), Campbell was reunited once again with Payton in New Orleans, where he’s been since.

Detroit, having just hired a new executive vice president/general manager on Thursday, was expected to interview Tampa Bay Buccaneers defensive coordinator- and Cowboys secondary coach from 2005 to 2007- Todd Bowles for the head coach position Friday. The two sides have decided to cancel that interview, though, as per NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo.

Despite not even having had a face-to-face meeting, the Lions gig appears to be Campbell’s to lose.

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Cowboys nominate Jaylon Smith for Walter Payton Man of the Year honor

The linebacker will wear a special helmet decal marking the honor, recognizing his work empowering minority entrepreneurship initiatives.

Cowboys fans have had a love/hate relationship with linebacker Jaylon Smith in 2020, often making him the target of their frustrations with a defense that seems to often lack hustle and the poster boy for an organization that seems to overpay some players before they’ve proven their long-term worth.

Those criticisms deserve to be set aside for a day at least. Smith was honored by the league Thursday for his community service activities off the field when he was named the Cowboys’ nominee for the 2020 Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Award.

Always one of the team’s most active participants in local community outreach efforts, Smith has personally spearheaded initiatives to encourage minority entrepreneurship. He founded the Minority Entrepreneurship Institute to help open doors for others to start businesses and succeed financially.

From the Cowboys official website:

“Smith has pledged $2.5 million over 10 years to spur MEI investments and is adding co-investors across the country who share in his beliefs. His hope is that minority entrepreneurs will be the game-changers who can make a changing economy come to life.”

“Jaylon exemplifies every quality that this award celebrates,” Cowboys executive vice president and chief brand officer Charlotte Jones Anderson said in a statement. “He has a light that he wants to share and shine on others that is rare. We are excited to see what more he can accomplish through his work with minority entrepreneurs and the many other endeavors that he supports.”

Ezekiel Elliott, Tony Pollard, and Rico Dowdle were among the first Cowboys players who took to social media to congratulate their teammate.

A player from each team in the league was nominated; notables include Cleveland’s Myles Garrett, Kansas City’s Travis Kelce, Seattle’s Russell Wilson, and Miami’s Byron Jones, the former Cowboys cornerback.

The nominations were announced on Good Morning Football.

Smith and the 31 other nominees will wear a special helmet decal for the rest of the season signifying the honor. All will see their work celebrated during the week leading up to Super Bowl LV and have a $40,000 donation made to the charity of their choosing. The award’s winner will be revealed during the NFL Honors event, with a $250,000 donation made. That winner will also wear a jersey patch for the remainder of his playing career.

Several Cowboys have won the NFL Man of the Year award: Roger Staubach in 1978, Troy Aikman in 1997, and Jason Witten in 2012. The award was re-named for Payton shortly after his death in 1999; the Bears running back had won it himself in 1977.

Nationwide, the award’s corporate sponsor, is encouraging fans to vote for their favorite nominee on Twitter by using the hashtag #WPMOYChallenge followed by the player’s last name. The player tagged most between December 10 and January 17 will receive a $25,000 contribution to their charity of choice; second- and third-place finishers will receive $10,000 and $5,000 donations, respectively.

Congratulations- and a celebratory swipe- to Jaylon Smith on being nominated for the NFL’s most prestigious accolade.

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Watch: Jason Witten catches go-ahead TD pass for Raiders

Jason Witten made up for being penalized by catching a TD pass moments later

Jason Witten appeared to be ready to fit for goat horns. Not G.O.A.T. horns after being flagged for illegal procedure on first-and-goal for the Las Vegas Raiders late in Sunday’s AFC West rivalry with the Chiefs.

The veteran tight end made amends moments later as he caught a touchdown pass from Derek Carr to give Vegas a 31-28 lead with 1:43 left.

The Raiders were seeking a sweep of the Super Bowl champs.

It was Witten’s first catch of the night and 11th of the season.

Daelin Hayes Named Semifinalist for Jason Witten Man of the Year

After missing almost all of last season, Daelin Hayes has more than made up for lost time.

After missing almost all of last season, Daelin Hayes has more than made up for lost time. In fact, he has proven to be a real role model both on and off the field. One reward for that is being named one of 20 national semifinalist for this year’s Jason Witten Collegiate Man of the Year Award. The criteria for the award includes high marks in integrity, courage and sportsmanship.

Returning from a serious injury proved easier said than done when COVID-19 hit and suspended team football activities. But you never would have known that with how dominant Hayes and his fellow defensive linemen have been, and they’ve been crucial in giving Notre Dame the fifth-best rushing defense in the nation. A captain in his fifth season, he also spoke at the Juneteenth Rally on campus, is part of the football team’s Unity Council and also active in the South Bend community. He also regularly leads his team when it performs community service.

VFL Jason Witten scores first touchdown as a Raider

VFL Jason Witten scores first touchdown as a Raider.

LAS VEGAS — Former Tennessee tight end Jason Witten scored his 73rd career NFL touchdown on Sunday, and it was his first as a member of a franchise other than the Dallas Cowboys.

Witten caught a three-yard pass from quarterback Derek Carr in the back of the end zone to bring Las Vegas within four points of the Buffalo Bills.

The Elizabethton, Tennessee native ranks third all-time in UT history for career receptions (68) and fourth in receiving yards (797). His career with Tennessee spanned from 2000-02 before being drafted by Dallas in the third round of the 2003 NFL draft.

Witten is likely a future Hall of Famer, and is making a mark with the Raiders. Sunday also saw Witten surpass 13,000 receiving yards in his career.

 

 

Watch: Raiders players were sans masks at Las Vegas charity gala

A group of Raiders players were seen without masks in video from a fund-raising gala.

What happens in Vegas, doesn’t stay in Vegas when it comes to violating COVID-19 precautions.

Raiders’ tight end Darren Waller held a charity, fundraising event Monday in neighboring Henderson, Nv. The idea was great, with money being raised is intended to help young people overcome drug and alcohol addiction.

However, some of his teammates’ execution wasn’t.

Videos of the event show some players were not wearing protective facemasks while speaking with attendees. The Las Vegas Review-Journal reported Waller kept his mask on except for a moment when he pulled it down while making a speech to the crowd.

Among the players in attendance were quarterbacks Derek Carr and Nathan Peterman, tight ends Jason Witten, Foster Moreau, and Derek Carrier, receiver Zay Jones and cornerback Nevin Lawson.

The city of Henderson fined the country club $2,000 after the venue played host to the event. The DragonRidge Country Club received four $500 fines. Each was due to an alleged violation of Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak’s COVID-19 emergency directives.

“DragonRidge has 30 calendar days to respond to the notice and pay the penalty or dispute the notice of violation,” city spokeswoman Kathleen Richards wrote in an email.