Tug of war between Cowboys, Commanders as Quinn pulls, poaches

Quinn’s desire to bring over a bunch of familiar names at his new digs was met with some level of resistance by Dallas. | From @BenGrimaldi

The Dallas Cowboys finally lost defensive coordinator Dan Quinn to a head coaching job after fending off suitors for two offseasons. Quinn did a great job turning around a defense that was one of the worst in franchise history and was rewarded for his three years of service by getting one of the top 32 gigs in professional football.

Unfortunately, the coaching job he took was with the Washington Commanders. As NFC East rivals, the Commanders and Cowboys have a long history of feuds and hatred between the two iconic organizations, and Quinn’s hiring appears to be stoking the flames once again.

Quinn’s hiring meant he was going to try and bring along coaches he’s worked with in the past, which includes several position coaches in Dallas. Since Quinn’s been the head man with the Commanders, there’s been a healthy amount of tug of war between the two teams involving their coaches.

Here’s who’s gone, who might go, and who hasn’t been allowed to go with Mr. Quinn to Washington.

Cowboys deny Commanders permission to interview TE coach Lunda Wells

The Cowboys blocked the Commanders from stealing another one of their assistants.

The Dallas Cowboys couldn’t stand in the way of defensive backs coach/passing game coordinator Joe Whitt Jr. following Dan Quinn to the Washington Commanders. Quinn hired Whitt to be his defensive coordinator with Washington.

The Cowboys wanted to interview Whitt to potentially replace Quinn as their defensive coordinator, but he chose to follow Quinn.

With Quinn so respected around the league, it wouldn’t be a surprise if he wanted others from the Dallas staff to follow him to Washington.

On Wednesday, Ian Rapoport of the NFL Network revealed that the Commanders requested permission to speak to Cowboys tight ends coach Lunda Wells. However, Dallas denied the request.

As Rapoport noted, Wells, 40, would be interviewing to be Washington’s offensive line coach. Wells has been with Dallas since 2020 and helped develop tight ends Dalton Schultz and Jake Ferguson. Before coming to Dallas, Wells spent eight seasons with the Giants, beginning as an offensive assistant, then moving to assistant offensive line coach, before finishing his time in New York as the Giants’ tight ends coach.

Dallas blocking Washington’s request means Wells is under contract for at least one more season. If the Commanders want Wells badly enough, they would need to offer him a promotion, such as attaching an assistant head coach/associate head coach title to the offer.

Wells is the first known candidate to interview for Washington’s offensive line coaching position.

Report: Cowboys block Commanders’ request to interview key offensive assistant

From @ToddBrock24f7: Lunda Wells was being eyed to coach Washington’s O-line under Dan Quinn and new OC Kliff Kingsbury, but he’ll remain the Cowboys’ TE coach.

Just days after losing their defensive coordinator to a division rival, the Cowboys are now doing some defending of their own against Dan Quinn.

The Cowboys have reportedly blocked a request from the Washington Commanders to interview tight ends coach Lunda Wells for a position on their offensive coaching staff. That development comes courtesy of NFL insider Ian Rapoport, who cited sources.

Shortly after arriving in Washington to take over his new team, Quinn moved quickly to hire away Joe Whitt Jr. from Dallas. The former secondary coach and defensive passing game coordinator will join Quinn’s staff as the new defensive coordinator.

Quinn also named former Cardinals coach Kliff Kingsbury as his new offensive coordinator, ousting Eric Bienemy from the role. Now looking to rebuild a staff under Kingsbury, the Commanders had come to the Cowboys requesting permission to interview Wells about becoming Washington’s new offensive line coach.

While assistant coaches cannot be blocked from interviewing with other clubs for promotions to coordinator positions, employing teams do reserve the right to decline an opponent’s request to speak to their assistants about assistant-to-assistant moves, which are considered lateral.

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The 40-year-old Wells was an assistant O-line coach with the Giants for several years before taking over their tight end room for the 2018 and 2019 seasons. He joined the Cowboys staff as tight ends coach in 2020, where he has overseen the development of Blake Jarwin, Dalton Schultz, and Jake Ferguson, who was named to his first Pro Bowl for the 2023 season.

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Cowboys TE coach talks drops, development, ‘babies talking to babies’

From @ToddBrock24f7: On Tight Ends Day, Lunda Wells acknowledges his group’s dropped passes but says it’s more about his guys looking forward and improving.

He was assessing just the handful of players under his immediate jurisdiction, but Cowboys tight ends coach Lunda Wells could have been speaking for the team’s entire fanbase and grading the organization as a whole, heading into the bye week with one-third of the regular season complete.

“I like where we’re at, but I’m not satisfied with where we’re at. We’ve got more to give.”

Jake Ferguson, Luke Schoonmaker, Sean McKeon, and Peyton Hendershot- before he went on injured reserve- have indeed contributed to the Cowboys’ 4-2 record, but perhaps not in the splashy highlight-reel ways that fans often equate with success.

“We always talk about our room being accountable, being available, and being reliable,” Wells told reporters during the team’s bye week. And in a West-Coast-style offense that is heavily predicated on short passes, the Cowboys tight ends are still working on that last trait.

The unit has 23 total receptions on 38 targets in 2023, a 60.5% catch rate. If they were combined into one player, that number would have our composite tight end sitting in Pat Freiermuth/Colby Parkinson territory- just below Dalton Schultz, the former Cowboy they’re all trying to replace.

Drops have undoubtedly been a high-profile issue thus far for the Dallas group. Hendershot had his hands on a surefire touchdown in Week 1 and couldn’t haul it in; Ferguson had two drops of his own in that same game. The rookie Schoonmaker missed an on-target end zone catch in Week 4’s rout of New England and has snagged just one pass thrown his way all season.

Wells is aware of the problem, but he’s focused more on finding a solution than giving an excuse.

“You’ve got to own the success and the failures,” he said. “We own those drops, but then, hey, keep going forward. You’ve got to own the next opportunity.”

Often for a tight end, the next opportunity comes in some other phase of the offense, like providing key blocks in the run game or simply hustling to be in the right place at the right time, like when McKeon trailed KaVontae Turpin and recovered a fumble 55 yards down the field against the Patriots.

“A lot of times, we talk in our room about having great energy. Energy is great, right? It’s solid. It’s dope, right? But if the energy is not showing up between the white lines, meaning the way that you play the game on a high level, with effort…” Wells trailed off. “I don’t care if you missed the block, didn’t make the catch, we’re moving forward and having great energy.”

Dak Prescott and the offense have looked to Ferguson to step into a leading role after Schultz’s departure in the offseason. While the second-year product out of Wisconsin currently sits third on the team in both catches and receiving yards, Wells has credited him with doing a lot of what he calls “sleep money,” or behind-the-scenes work- like protections- that doesn’t show up in a box score but makes the rest of the offense go.

“Ferguson has done a heck of a job handling the responsibility, preparing himself to get to this point,” Wells said of the 24-year-old. “And then with some of the success he’s had in the passing game, he’s handling it very well every day. He’s coming in, continuing to work hard on the field and off the field, in meetings. He’s doing a nice job.”

Schoonmaker has had a rougher transition to Sunday play. There were big expectations for the second-round draft pick out of Michigan, but the return on the Cowboys’ investment thus far has been minor.

“We got behind the 8-ball a little bit in the offseason,” Wells said, referring to a plantar fascia injury suffered by the rookie this summer, “but since he’s been able to get back on the grass, he’s continually gotten better. Some of the things that we’ve been emphasizing in the run game [are] playing with a little bit more play strength. And in the passing game, just being more decisive, so we continue to work on that, and then also, just the ball skills and the RAC [run-after-catch] ability. So he’s progressing; hasn’t had a ton of production.”

With a group that’s still evolving, every bit of input helps. And that’s why Prescott, the offense’s field general, has taken it upon himself to start sitting in on tight end positional meetings, something he’s not done in years past.

Wells shared that he used to take Schultz to the QB room for meetings. But with a platoon of young and inexperienced tight ends all vying for snaps, Prescott’s presence at the Saturday-morning sessions allows him to get on the same page with all of his tight ends at once.

But it’s doing far more than that.

The quarterback is “really showing them what he’s thinking,” Wells said, “but even more so, showing them that he sees them. That’s been encouraging for the room. That gets them a little bit excited.”

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It’s all part of the overall maturation of the Dallas tight end room, whose members- including practice squadder Princeton Fant- have an average age of under 25 and an average pro resume of just 18 games.

So yes, they still have much to learn. And if special Saturday-morning classroom work with their $40-million quarterback helps their development and communication, then so be it.

“It’s like babies talking to babies,” Wells said of his troops. “Nobody else really needs to understand it, but as long as they understand it, then it’s all good.”

Then Wells laughed and clarified a key point about his 6-foot-tall pupils.

“Not saying that they’re babies.”

Except in NFL terms, they are.

Cowboys Nation, though, is hoping they do some growing up fast.

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Report: Lunda Wells leaves Giants for Cowboys

Tight ends coach Lunda Wells is leaving the New York Giants for the Dallas Cowboys.

Once upon a time, tight ends coach Mike Pope left the New York Giants for the Dallas Cowboys, which was a tough pill to swallow for many. And now, Lunda Wells has followed in Pope’s footsteps.

Although his departure won’t resonate in the same way Pope’s did, Wells is now bound for Jerruh World where he’ll take over as the Cowboys’ tight end coach.

Wells originally joined the Giants as a first-time NFL assistant in 2012 after four years at LSU. He served as an offensive assistant on Tom Coughlin’s staff and was later promoted to assistant offensive line coach, where he served from 2013-2017, spanning the end of Coughlin’s tenure to Ben McAdoo’s.

In 2018, under incoming head coach Pat Shurmur, Wells was moved to tight ends coach, where he remained through the 2019 season.

Under newly hired head coach Joe Judge, it was unlikely Wells would remain at his post, but he still deserves a tip of the cap for surviving two previous head coaching changes. It speaks volumes about his ability to lead.

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