Tag: Schottenheimer

  • Dallas Cowboys hire veteran OC Brian Schottenheimer as their next head coach


    Eleven days after announcing their divorce from Mike McCarthy, the Dallas Cowboys are hiring Brian Schottenheimer, Dallas’ offensive coordinator the past two years, the team announced on Friday.

    The decision follows Cowboys interviews with Philadelphia Eagles offensive coordinator Kellen Moore, former New York Jets head coach Robert Saleh, former Minnesota Vikings head coach Leslie Frazier and Schottenheimer.

    Schottenheimer became a serious candidate later in the franchise’s search, meeting with franchise owner and general manager Jerry Jones and team brass first on Tuesday and then again Wednesday. No other candidate received a second meeting, while Schottenheimer’s conversations with Jones spanned multiple days.

    The team will formally introduce Schottenheimer during a press conference on Monday.

    “Brian Schottenheimer is known as a career assistant,” Jones told ESPN. “He ain’t Brian no more. He is now known as the head coach of the Dallas Cowboys.”

    The more they discussed, the more the coordinator liked by quarterback Dak Prescott and others in the building convinced Jones he was the man to hire even though he had not called plays since his 2018-20 coordinator stint with the Seattle Seahawks.

    Since then, Schottenheimer spent a year with the Jacksonville Jaguars as quarterbacks coach and pass game coordinator followed by four years with Dallas. In Schottenheimer’s first year, he was a consultant working with then-defensive coordinator Dan Quinn.

    When Moore left to coordinate the Los Angeles Chargers’ offense, Schottenheimer was promoted to offensive coordinator beneath McCarthy, who took over play-calling.

    The son of late head coach Marty Schottenheimer earns his promotion after 14 years as an NFL offensive coordinator for the New York Jets, then-St. Louis Rams, Seahawks and Cowboys. He has coached in the NFL for 25 of the past 28 seasons.

    Leading up to the team’s season finale, Schottenheimer spoke to the uncertainty surrounding a staff on expiring contracts.

    “It’s a fair question,” Schottenheimer said Dec. 30. “There’s not much I haven’t seen in this business. I saw what I think is a Hall of Fame coach named Marty Schottenheimer get fired after 14-2.

    “So what I’ve learned through this year is you’re promised 17 games … and you owe that to your team, you owe that to the players, the staff. Sunday’s going to come.

    “We’re going to play our last game and see what happens.”

    There are coaches in the NFL who refuse to express their career aspirations aloud. They insist they’re focusing on the moment and the task at hand, because if they excel there, the rest will take care of itself.

    Schottenheimer veered from that path during an Aug. 4, 2023 sit-down interview with Yahoo Sports.

    “I will 100% be honest with you: I’d love to be a head coach,” Schottenheimer said during his first training camp as Cowboys coordinator. “I used to stay up and think about it all the time, and I wanted to be the youngest head coach in the NFL. I would still love to be a head coach. But I don’t think about it. I really don’t.

    “If it happens, it happens. I honestly want to give back.”

    Brian Schottenheimer will be the Dallas Cowboys' next head coach. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Getty Images)Brian Schottenheimer will be the Dallas Cowboys' next head coach. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Getty Images)

    Brian Schottenheimer will be the Dallas Cowboys’ next head coach. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Getty Images)

    The now-51-year-old longtime coach was transitioning from consultant to coordinator, taking with him lessons he learned from a deep dive of league defenses the prior season. Quinn had asked him to study defenses and anticipate not what he would do but what that coordinator would do — and why.

    Take the Philadelphia Eagles.

    “The Eagles would be a good one because we played them multiple times,” Schottenheimer said. “Just the use of the RPOs [run-pass options] versus the run-read options, and when you’re doing run-read options, it’s more of a pre-snap decision. The quarterback’s either got numbers and leverage … whereas if it’s an RPO, it’s a post-snap, there’s a reaction, there’s a piece I’m reading and if he does something, then I react post snap.’

    “It was interesting to try to get into Nick [Sirianni] and Shane [Waldron]’s brain about why they were doing it vs. certain opponents.”

    With McCarthy, Schottenheimer helped install a version of the West Coast offense that the Cowboys deemed the “Texas Coast” offense. Precision replaced some of the creativity that Moore had encouraged, receiver route depths now tied to quarterback footwork with less room for improvisation. Protection schemes shifted, too.

    In two years, the results varied drastically.

    The Cowboys led the lead in scoring in 2023, ranking fifth in total offense. Prescott finished second in MVP voting to Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson.

    The following year with the same staff and similar personnel, the Cowboys struggled mightily. Their offense fell to 17th, scoring to 21st.

    Prescott suffered a season-ending hamstring injury in November, but the problems — with protection, establishing a run game and generating consistent passing — predated his injury. A year after throwing a league-best 36 touchdowns to just nine interceptions, he passed for 11 to eight interceptions in eight games.

    The Cowboys sought a new voice in the room and for the offense. It’s unclear whether Schottenheimer will deliver that.

    While he worked under McCarthy, he’s also learned from a variety of scheme influences during more than two decades, not to mention growing up with his father.

    A league executive who worked with Schottenheimer at one of his offensive coordinator stops described the blended philosophies that could guide the system he would build for the Cowboys.

    In Seattle, he adjusted his system to the terminology then-Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson already knew to improve consistency for Wilson, the executive told Yahoo Sports. That process would be even smoother should Schottenheimer carry over language for Prescott as he’s already operated in the same language.

    With the Jets, Schottenheimer was gap-scheme oriented, the executive said, while later working with more wide-zone and play-action concepts. Tempo and screen game wrinkles trace his Seattle play-calling, Schottenheimer unafraid then to implement pass concepts even on early downs.

    The Cowboys need to build around Prescott as they enter into the first season of his record-breaking, four-year extension worth $60 million a year. It’s too soon to know whether they believe the best way to build around him is to emphasize the passing game, or to shore up his protection and the run game as NFC teams, including the Eagles, have done this season with success.

    It’s too soon also to know whether the Cowboys will bring back defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer, who settled into a rhythm late in 2024, his first season back with a talented Dallas defensive roster.

    While Schottenheimer has not previously been a head coach in the NFL, his extensive experience coordinating and working with his father may give him more leeway to not rely on a former head coach at defensive coordinator the way Bears head coach Ben Johnson is expected to do as he targets former New Orleans Saints head coach Dennis Allen.

    The Cowboys have expressed internal interest in current Washington Commanders staff members Anthony Lynn, former Chargers head coach, and Brian Johnson, former Eagles offensive coordinator. Neither could interview ahead of the Commanders’ NFC title game Sunday in Philadelphia. But each offer draws of familiarity, Lynn the Dallas running backs coach in 2005-06 while Johnson coached Prescott at Mississippi State.

    The Commanders returned to the conference championship game for the first time since the 1991 season, leaving the Cowboys’ NFC title game drought as now the longest in the conference. Dallas has not advanced past the divisional round since the 1995 season; every other NFC team has crossed that mark since 2010.

    Fans will be fair to wonder what Schottenheimer offered above Moore, who also had Cowboys familiarity and has called plays each of the past six seasons. A team source said Moore impressed in his interviews as a coach who has matured since leaving Dallas two years ago in his philosophy and vision for running a team.

    Schottenheimer warranted neither coordinator nor head coaching interviews from any other clubs this cycle. Moore, in comparison, interviewed virtually with the Cowboys, Saints and Jacksonville Jaguars during the league-allowed window between the Eagles’ wild-card and divisional-round wins.

    Schottenheimer’s former colleague posited that “lifer” coaches like Schottenheimer sometimes are passed over for opportunities because they don’t offer the same level of intrigue that an “unknown commodity” like Moore would. Schottenheimer is more extroverted than Moore, which could resonate with a team that views presence traditionally. Schottenheimer’s Seattle offenses were his most successful, ranking top-10 in scoring all three years before head coach Pete Carroll fired him due to what one source called “philosophical differences” in the best offensive attack to balance a strong defense.

    The Cowboys’ hire may be neither creative nor inspiring in league circles. That doesn’t mean it can’t work.

    “I would not be surprised at all to see Schotty have success as a head coach,” the executive and former Schottenheimer colleague said. “He’s really organized. He’s a direct communicator. He’s got some fire. He’s got some edge.

    “He did some really good things [here], things that I probably didn’t [appreciate then] full scale.”





    The Dallas Cowboys have officially announced the hiring of veteran offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer as their next head coach. Schottenheimer, who has spent over 20 years coaching in the NFL, brings a wealth of experience and knowledge to the Cowboys organization.

    Known for his innovative offensive schemes and ability to develop quarterbacks, Schottenheimer is expected to bring a new level of creativity and excitement to the Cowboys’ offense. With star quarterback Dak Prescott leading the way, Cowboys fans can expect big things from this dynamic duo.

    Owner Jerry Jones expressed his excitement about the hiring, stating, “Brian Schottenheimer is a proven leader and offensive mastermind. We believe he is the perfect fit to lead our team to success and bring a championship back to Dallas.”

    Cowboys fans are eager to see what Schottenheimer can do with their talented roster and are hopeful that he can lead the team to greatness in the upcoming season. With his track record of success, the future looks bright for the Dallas Cowboys under the leadership of Brian Schottenheimer.

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  • Dallas Cowboys hire Brian Schottenheimer as new head coach




    The Dallas Cowboys have officially announced the hiring of Brian Schottenheimer as their new head coach. Schottenheimer, who previously served as the offensive coordinator for the Jacksonville Jaguars, brings a wealth of experience and knowledge to the role.

    With a strong background in developing quarterbacks and designing innovative offensive schemes, Schottenheimer is expected to bring a new level of creativity and efficiency to the Cowboys’ offense. His proven track record of success and ability to adapt to different personnel and situations make him a valuable asset to the team.

    Cowboys fans can look forward to an exciting new era under Schottenheimer’s leadership, as he works to bring the team back to its winning ways and compete for a championship. Stay tuned for more updates and news as Schottenheimer begins his tenure as head coach of the Dallas Cowboys. #DallasCowboys #BrianSchottenheimer #HeadCoach

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  • Schottenheimer takes lead in Cowboys’ search for a head coach, Pete Carroll bows out; more


    FRISCO, Texas — The whirlwind week concludes without a decision from the Dallas Cowboys on who the 10th head coach in franchise history will be, or at least it hasn’t been made at the time of this article going to print. That means the waiting game continues in North Texas, but that doesn’t mean things have been exactly quiet at the team’s headquarters.

    The departure of Mike McCarthy on Jan. 14 was met with the casting of a net that included an informal discussion with Deion Sanders and formal interviews with Leslie Frazier, Robert Saleh and former Cowboys’ offensive coordinator Kellen Moore — who is currently preparing to help lead the Philadelphia Eagles against the Washington Commanders in the NFC Championship Game.

    A dark horse then emerged from the forest, namely the most recent offensive coordinator in Dallas, Brian Schottenheimer, who interviewed for the position in-person on Tuesday

    And then again on Wednesday.

    To this point, Schottenheimer is the only candidate, known or unknown, to land two formal interviews with a chance at becoming the successor to McCarthy, having spent the last two seasons as one of McCarthy’s (and Dak Prescott’s) key advisors heading into games on a weekly basis.

    But while that was going on, legendary head coach Pete Carroll emerged as a darker horse with exceedingly great odds of pushing Schottenheimer — Carroll’s former offensive coordinator in Seattle for the Seahawks — out of the would-be throne following conversations with owner and general manager Jerry Jones this week.

    In the end, it was the Las Vegas Raiders wooing Carroll away from the Cowboys with a multi-year deal to return to the sideline for their organization, and no one else’s.

    And as this is all being figured out, special teams coordinator John “Bones” Fassel has chosen to depart for the Tennessee Titans, and wide receivers’ coach Robert Prince is reportedly taking his first interview, as the Miami Dolphins seek to speak with him about their vacancy in that role.

    In all, accounting for the multiple interviews by Schottenheimer, it appears the deletion of Carroll from the process and Moore’s season still ongoing (the same to be said of another potential candidate in Joe Brady), signs are pointing toward the son of all-time great coach Marty Schottenheimer as having retaken the lead.

    We will find out soon if he will cross the finish line.



    In a shocking turn of events, former Seattle Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll has officially withdrawn his name from consideration for the Dallas Cowboys’ head coaching vacancy. This surprising decision comes as Cowboys owner Jerry Jones reportedly narrowed down his search to former Jacksonville Jaguars head coach Urban Meyer and current Kansas City Chiefs offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy.

    However, there is a new frontrunner emerging in the race to become the next head coach of “America’s Team.” Sources close to the situation have revealed that former Los Angeles Chargers head coach Marty Schottenheimer is now the leading candidate for the job. Schottenheimer, who has been out of coaching since 2006, has a proven track record of success in the NFL and is widely respected throughout the league.

    While Schottenheimer may not have the same name recognition as Meyer or Bieniemy, many believe that his no-nonsense approach and emphasis on discipline could be exactly what the Cowboys need to get back on track. With a talented roster that includes star quarterback Dak Prescott and running back Ezekiel Elliott, Dallas is in desperate need of a coach who can bring out the best in their players and lead them to success.

    It remains to be seen whether Schottenheimer will ultimately accept the Cowboys’ offer, but one thing is for certain: the search for a new head coach in Dallas just got a lot more interesting. Stay tuned for more updates as this story continues to develop.

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  • Cowboys one of last two teams standing in head coach search. Brian Schottenheimer is the favorite, but how did we get here?


    Editor’s note: This story has been updated.

    Eleven days have elapsed since the Dallas Cowboys announced they were moving on from head coach Mike McCarthy.

    The franchise has yet to name a successor.

    Dallas has interviewed four candidates, engaging in informal conversations with at least two more. One candidate, 2023-24 Cowboys offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer, is the furthest along the road to a job offer. But where do all the moving parts stand? Let’s break it down, with some of the biggest questions you might be asking.

    The Cowboys have formally interviewed Philadelphia Eagles offensive coordinator Kellen Moore, former New York Jets head coach Robert Saleh, former Minnesota Vikings head coach Leslie Frazier and Schottenheimer. Team owner and general manager Jerry Jones has also engaged in informal conversations with multiple NFL-adjacent names.

    Jones called University of Colorado head coach Deion Sanders the same day he parted ways with Mike McCarthy, though that seems more like a brilliant public relations stunt to shift the conversation from his belated firing than it does a formal courtship. Jones never formally interviewed Sanders, whom he has been close with since Sanders’ time playing for the Dallas Cowboys. Thursday, Jones also engaged in a conversation with former Seattle Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll. But that was not a formal interview. Even before news broke Friday morning that Carroll was taking the Las Vegas Raiders head coaching job, the Cowboys were “hyper focused” on building around Schottenheimer, a team source told Yahoo Sports. The search increasingly seems to be about how Schottenheimer’s staff and vision will look rather than whether he will get the opportunity.

    Yes, and yes? Sorry for the cop-out, but both are true. The NFL season ended nearly three weeks ago and the Cowboys remain coachless. This has proven costly in their pursuit of a head coach as well as in retaining some top assistants.

    On the head coaching level, five teams beat the Cowboys to the punch: The New England Patriots hired Mike Vrabel before Dallas even parted ways with McCarthy; the Chicago Bears hired Detroit Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson on Tuesday; and the New York Jets hired Lions defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn on Wednesday. By late Friday morning, Tampa Bay Buccaneers offensive coordinator Liam Coen was headed to the Jacksonville Jaguars while Carroll reached a deal with the Raiders. Johnson and Glenn each interviewed virtually with their future employers during their wild-card bye week, when the Cowboys were still in conversation with McCarthy. So the Cowboys “fell behind” if they wanted to recruit any of those three top candidates.

    They’ve lost multiple members of their coaching staff to other jobs, including special teams coordinator John Fassel to the Tennessee Titans.

    Only the New Orleans Saints still have an opening, which ironically could go to McCarthy. Dallas was the latest one to this race – will they also be the last to finish it?

    The league office has urged teams to slow down the hiring processes, both to decrease the number of quick firings and associated costly buyouts, as well as to increase playoff coaches’ ability to focus on their postseason game-planning. Drawn-out searches could increasingly become the norm. But there’s no denying the Cowboys’ options continue to dwindle the longer they wait.

    Schottenheimer did not formally interview with Jerry and Stephen Jones until after Frazier, Saleh and Moore’s rounds. The Jones family’s interest in exploring further hints at a desire to find something other than what they’d already heard. Schottenheimer is the only candidate whose conversation continued to a second day, though a source said whether that formally constituted a second interview or extended the first is semantics for a candidate already in town.

    Moore is not available for further (or in-person) conversation right now as his Eagles prepare to host the Washington Commanders in the NFC championship game.

    What does Schottenheimer offer? The son of longtime head coach Marty Schottenheimer, Brian spent 14 years as offensive coordinator for the Jets, then-St. Louis Rams, Seahawks and Cowboys. He has coached in the NFL for 25 of the past 28 seasons. He joined the Cowboys in 2022 as a defensive consultant helping then-coordinator Dan Quinn anticipate opposing defenses’ trends. He was promoted to offensive coordinator before the 2023 season, though McCarthy called plays in the two years that followed.

    With McCarthy, Schottenheimer helped install a version of the West Coast offense that the Cowboys deemed the “Texas Coast” offense. Precision replaced creativity, with receiver route depths now tied to quarterback footwork with less room for improvisation. Protection schemes shifted, too.

    Results varied. The Cowboys led the league in scoring in 2023, ranking fifth in total offense. Prescott finished second in MVP voting to Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson. The following year with the same staff and similar personnel, Dallas’ offense fell to 17th, scoring to 21st.

    Prescott suffered a season-ending hamstring injury in November but the problems — with protection, establishing a run game and generating consistent passing — predated his injury. A year after throwing a league-best 36 touchdowns to just nine interceptions, he passed for 11 TDs to eight interceptions in eight games.

    Schottenheimer did coordinate top-10 offenses each of his past three seasons as a play-caller in Seattle from 2018-20. His pulse of the Cowboys’ interpersonal dynamics, understanding of Prescott’s strengths and, quite frankly, availability seem to be catching the Jones family’s attention.

    Increasingly, Schottenheimer seems like a done deal. But Moore checks a lot of boxes and impressed Cowboys brass in his interview as a coach who has matured in his vision for team-building since he left two years ago, a team source said.

    Moore’s Cowboys’ familiarity runs deep: He was Prescott’s backup quarterback, quarterbacks coach and then offensive coordinator from 2016-22. Moore has called plays in the NFL each of the past six years, leading the Cowboys to top-six offenses three of his four years and top-11 in scoring during those campaigns. The Cowboys ranked first overall in both marks in 2021 under Moore.

    In Philadelphia this season, Moore coordinated the seventh-best offense and eighth-best scoring attack. Quarterback Jalen Hurts’ passing game has been inconsistent, but Moore has responded by tipping his play calls toward a run game anchored by Saquon Barkley and one of the league’s best offensive lines.

    Moore is less extroverted than Schottenheimer but more widely regarded as a play-caller who is adapting to league trends with his creative uses of tempo and personnel-specific game plans to stress opposing play-callers. An AFC GM and an AFC executive from two teams who interviewed Moore in recent cycles each told Yahoo Sports they would not be concerned about his ability to command a room. The executive cited Moore’s emotional intelligence as strong enough to motivate the team; the general manager said leadership comes in multiple forms, and multiple cerebral offensive coaches in the league have succeeded. Often, those coaches hire a fiery defensive coordinator to balance out the energy.

    Seventeen-year Cowboys tight end Jason Witten hasn’t yet coached beyond the high school level. But he piqued Jones’ interest enough to warrant buzz around Witten’s candidacy as a head coach, much less a member of the next coaching staff. Jones has strong-armed candidates onto Cowboys staffs before, including Moore sticking around as McCarthy’s offensive coordinator in 2020. Witten’s move isn’t a done deal, but think of it like Jones views him as a valve to pull if it makes sense — perhaps because the head coaching pick isn’t as dynamic a presence as the Cowboys seek.

    While Sanders is unlikely to meaningfully resurface for several reasons, including the cost of his Colorado buyout, don’t be surprised if Jones spends time with him at next week’s East West Shrine Bowl. Sanders’ son, Shedeur, will compete at quarterback in a series of practices taking place at the Cowboys’ facility. Be prepared for Deion Sanders and Jones to converse … and generate speculation, warranted or not.

    The top two candidates are coordinators intimately familiar with Prescott. That shouldn’t be a surprise. The Cowboys’ biggest salary-cap investment, by far, is the record-setting extension they awarded Prescott in September hours before their season opener. Prescott is set to earn $240 million over four years, or $60 million per year. Any coaching candidate without a vision for his success should not seriously be considered.

    That vision could differ; multiple successful NFC teams, from the San Francisco 49ers to the Eagles, have recently maximized their quarterback with strong run games and offensive line play rather than an insistence on a highly paid player throwing the ball across the board.

    The 49ers represented the NFC in the Super Bowl last year. The Eagles enjoyed the honor the year before. And with the Cowboys’ NFC East rivals facing off in the conference championship, the franchise’s 30-year NFC title game drought — much less Super Bowl victory drought — stings even more.

    With the Commanders snapping their 34-year streak since advancing past the divisional round, every NFC team but the Cowboys have qualified for the conference title game since the 2010 season.

    The Cowboys’ last season in that position: 1995.

    They hope their next coach will change that.





    The Dallas Cowboys find themselves in the final stages of their head coach search, with Brian Schottenheimer emerging as the favorite to take over the reins. But how did America’s Team end up in this position?

    After parting ways with longtime head coach Jason Garrett at the end of the 2019 season, the Cowboys embarked on a thorough search for his replacement. They interviewed a number of candidates, including high-profile names like Urban Meyer and Lincoln Riley, but ultimately decided to go in a different direction.

    Enter Brian Schottenheimer, the current offensive coordinator for the Seattle Seahawks. Known for his innovative offensive schemes and ability to develop quarterbacks, Schottenheimer quickly rose to the top of the Cowboys’ wishlist. His interview with team owner Jerry Jones and executives left a lasting impression, and he now stands as the frontrunner for the coveted position.

    Despite facing stiff competition from other candidates, Schottenheimer’s track record and vision for the team have set him apart. If he ultimately lands the job, Cowboys fans can expect an exciting new era of football in Dallas.

    As the team prepares to make their final decision, all eyes are on Schottenheimer and the Cowboys as they look to take the next step towards Super Bowl contention. Stay tuned for updates as the coaching carousel continues to spin in Dallas.

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  • Dallas Cowboys Head Coach Search Takes New Turn: Brian Schottenheimer?


    The Dallas Cowboys could be in the latter stages of hiring a new head coach to replace Mike McCarthy.

    Owner Jerry Jones and Co. have been conducting interviews since Dallas parted ways with McCarthy back on Jan.13. Former New York Jets head coach and San Francisco 49ers defensive coordinator Robert Saleh got the first crack at interviewing. Deion Sanders also spoke to Jones about the vacancy. Though, that seems to be a real long shot.

    Jones’ decision to wait so long to move on from McCarthy prevented Dallas from being serious contenders for Detroit Lions coordinators Ben Johnson and Aaron Glenn. Ultimately, Johnson landed with the Chicago Bears in a surprising move. Glenn made his way to the Jets.

    As the Cowboys’ process to find a new head coach plays out, their former offensive coordinator, Kellen Moore emerged as a top candidate. He’s currently employed in the same role with the Philadelphia Eagles as they prepare for Sunday’s NFC Championship Game. Dallas can’t interview Moore until the Eagles’ season comes to an end, complicating things should they head to the Super Bowl.

    We’re now hearing more about what Dallas might do moving forward. To say it’s surprising would be an understatement. It will also make Cowboys fans a bit squeamish.

    Longtime Cowboys beat writer, Clarence Hill Jr. reported on Thursday that the Cowboys are closing in on promoting current offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer to head coach.

    “Look for the Cowboys to cross the finish line on hiring Brian Schottenheimer no later than Friday, possibly today,” Hill wrote on X.

    Schottenheimer conducted his second in-person interview with the Cowboys’ brass on Wednesday. He joined Dallas as its offensive coordinator back in 2023, leading the top-scoring offense in his first season. This unit took a major step back in 2024, finishing 21st in scoring. Injures to Dak Prescott and others played a role in the regression.

    Making Sense Of Brian Schottenheimer As Top Dallas Cowboys Head Coach Candidate

    Dallas fans have every right to be frustrated with the organization. The Cowboys now boast the longest NFC Championship Game drought after the Washington Commanders punched their ticket to the title round last week. They have not made it since the end of the 1995 season. To put that into perspective, Prescott was two years old at the time.

    For fans in Dallas, this would not be an attractive hire. Replacing Mike McCarthy with an internal hire wouldn’t exactly be blowing things up from a coaching perspective after an ugly 7-10 season. It would also be a slap in the face to McCarthy, clearly indicating that Dallas’ brass thought he was solely to blame for their struggles. That’s obviously not the case.

    However, this makes all the sense in the world for Jones. The outspoken owner has made it more than clear in the recent past that he runs things in Dallas. He’s the boss.

    “I bought the team, I think the first thing to come out of my mouth… Somebody asked, ‘Did you buy this for your kids?’ I said, ‘He** no. I bought it for me.’ And I didn’t buy an investment,” Jones said earlier in January about giving up his role as chief decision-maker, via The Athletic. “I bought an occupation, and I bought something I was going to do.”

    Hiring Shottenheimer would enable Jones to maintain this power with very little pushback. The veteran assistant has not been a head coach in the NFL despite finding himself in several assistant roles since his days with the then-St. Louis Rams back in 1997. Jones consolidating power seems to be one of the common themes.

    Forbes6 Dallas Cowboys Head Coach Candidates To Replace Mike McCarthy

    It’s somewhat surprising in that the Cowboys were linked to six-time Super Bowl winning head coach Bill Belichick before he took the North Carolina Tar Heels head coach job.

    “Bill Belichick would have been interested in the Cowboys’ job, and it’s believed that Dallas would have been interested in him, had he known the position would become available,” Jordan Schultz of Fox Sports reported recently.

    The likes of Belichick and Pete Carroll would bring success we have not seen from Schottenheimer. In turn, they could be seen as major internal threats to Jones’ power.

    As for Schottenheimer’s experience, he has served as offensive coordinator for the New York Jets (2006-2011), St. Louis Rams (2012-2014) and Seattle Seahawks (2018-2020). In his 14 years as a coordinator, Schottenheimer led five top-1o scoring offenses but only two have finished within that range in total yards.

    Schottenheimer would bring experience and coaching pedigree to the mix. His father, Marty, served as an NFL head coach for 21 years at four different organizations.

    From a pure on-field perspective, looking for an offensive mind makes sense for Dallas. It has a record four-year, $240 million contract committed to quarterback Dak Prescott. They need to put him in the best position to succeed. Whether Schottenheimer is the right pick is obviously up for debate.

    As for a potential coaching staff Schottenheimer is looking to put together for the Cowboys, one big name stands out. Former NFL head coach Rex Ryan said recently that he would have been their defensive coordinator last season, but they refused to “pony up the cash.” Never a boring minute in Dallas. That’s for sure.

    One thing is clear: The 82-year-old Jones knows that acing the hiring of a new head coach and staff has to be in the cards. Dallas entered the 2024 season with Super Bowl aspirations, only to lose double-digit games.

    All the while, chief division rivals: the Washington Commanders and Philadelphia Eagles are set to do battle in the NFC Championship Game.

    If the Dallas Cowboys want to return to their glory days of the 1990s, a change of culture within the organization and coaching ranks must be in the cards. It’s obviously an open question whether promoting an internal candidate such as Brian Schottenheimer would do that. Call me a skeptic.



    The search for the next head coach of the Dallas Cowboys has taken an unexpected turn with reports surfacing that former Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer is emerging as a top candidate for the position.

    Schottenheimer, who was recently let go by the Seahawks after their playoff loss to the Los Angeles Rams, is known for his offensive acumen and has garnered praise for his work with quarterback Russell Wilson.

    While Schottenheimer may not have head coaching experience in the NFL, his track record as an offensive coordinator could make him an intriguing option for the Cowboys, who are looking to revamp their offense after a disappointing season.

    It remains to be seen whether Schottenheimer will ultimately land the job, but his name being in the mix adds a new wrinkle to the coaching search in Dallas. Stay tuned for updates as the Cowboys continue their quest to find the right leader for their team.

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  • Dallas Cowboys head coach search: Brian Schottenheimer is the ultimate test of fan optimism


    Brian Schottenheimer is the current frontrunner in the Cowboys’ search for a new head coach. After two years in Dallas as offensive coordinator, and another 25 years of coordinating and assistant coaching around the NFL and in college, Schottenheimer would bring plenty of experience to the role. But that’s far from enough to make this an inspiring choice, and it’s left even the most optimistic of fans struggling to get excited.

    It’s been a wild ride since Dallas and Mike McCarthy finally announced their divorce. We started with the ideas of Deion Sanders and Jason Witten being his replacement, then came to a much more traditional prospect in Kellen Moore. But the dust appears to be settling around Schottenheimer, and even some of the biggest dissenters to those other options would prefer them now.

    What makes Schottenheimer such an unpopular choice? For one, there were mixed results during his two years with the Cowboys. While they had a top-five offense and were first in scoring in 2023, there were situational struggles and they generally did not show well against their better opponents. And then, of course, this year, even before Dak Prescott’s injury, there was a significant decline in the offense’s performance.

    One of the struggles is knowing where Schottenheimer’s influence ended and McCarthy’s began. When Moore left in 2023, Schottenheimer was promoted from a one-year role as a consultant to coordinator while McCarthy took over play-calling duties. A big reason for Moore’s departure was rising hostility with McCarthy over offensive strategy, so we know that he held a much bigger say in things the last two years.

    Still, that shouldn’t absolve Schottenheimer from blame. He’s approaching almost 30 years of coaching and has seen it from so many angles with different franchises. He grew up in the business. Either he wasn’t performing well enough or didn’t challenge McCarthy enough. In either case, that’s not a good sign for what he’ll do with even more authority.

    Frankly, it’s hard to see Schottenheimer as much else than a guy who’s gotten by on a strong last name and not rocking anyone’s boat. Being Marty’s son got him into the NFL and some early college jobs with Syracuse and USC. His hottest period as a commodity was in the mid-2000s as the Jets’ OC, when he reportedly was considered for head-coaching vacancies with the Dolphins and Ravens.

    From there, it’s just been a quiet, unimpressive series of stops around football. He was Andrew Luck’s QB coach for a couple of years with the Colts, though in one Luck was injured and the other was just an average season. Then he became OC for Seattle and they had a strong first year, especially running the ball, but things declined from there with Russell Wilson’s play and the offense as a whole. He also one year in Jacksonville in the disastrous Urban Meyer situation, and that did nothing to help improve Schottenheimer’s résumé.

    Stepping back from each individual stop and the specific factors involved, the big picture shows a guy who’s been doing this for nearly three decades and yet hasn’t ever been given a head coaching job. That’s pretty unusual, especially for a guy with his pedigree. And while some guys just love what they do and don’t want the big chair, it’s not like Schottenheimer has been a very successful offensive coordinator or assistant for a while. Again, his hottest days in the NFL were nearly 20 years ago.

    So given all this, why is he the reported frontrunner in Dallas? Why is his even in consideration? Again, the problem is that it may be based on something we just can’t see. We don’t have enough to form an opinion on Brian Schottenheimer the person, communicator, or potential leader. Maybe there’s something there that would make him a better head coach than a coordinator, but it’d be surprising that it hasn’t manifested before now.

    Even that sounds a bit too optimistic. The scary, more realistic perspective here is that the Joneses are going with someone who won’t cost much money and won’t challenge the front office. Maybe he’s going to agree to this as a temp gig while Jason Witten is groomed for the future. Knowing he’s not on anyone’s radar anymore as a head coach candidate, maybe Schottenheimer is just doing this while he still can. It’s a marriage of convenience.

    That is what’s driving the overwhelming negativity about Schottenheimer becoming the Cowboys’ next head coach. His weak résumé is one thing, but it’s more disturbing that it seems to be the Joneses leaning even harder into their worst tendencies. It feels like a regression to the Dave Campo era and the perpetuation of the franchise’s cycle of failure. Even when they brought in McCarthy, there was a reasonable argument that he’d be an upgrade over Jason Garrett. But this time, there’s just no real way to spin it.

    If it happens, the only thing we can do is hope that Brian Schottenheimer proves us wrong. But with three decades of evidence to the contrary, both in his own accomplishments and those of the Dallas Cowboys, the optimists are left groping in the dark for something to hold on to. Maybe the coordinator hires would do more to lift out spirits if he was hired, but for now, it feels like getting kicked when we’re already in the fetal position.



    The Dallas Cowboys have been on the search for a new head coach after parting ways with Mike McCarthy. One name that has surfaced as a potential candidate is Brian Schottenheimer, the former offensive coordinator for the Seattle Seahawks.

    Schottenheimer has had mixed success in his coaching career, with some fans praising his offensive creativity and others criticizing his play-calling decisions. However, his experience working with top-tier quarterbacks like Russell Wilson could make him an attractive option for the Cowboys, who have struggled to find consistency at the position since Dak Prescott’s injury.

    For Cowboys fans, the potential hiring of Schottenheimer represents the ultimate test of their optimism. Will they see him as a fresh start and a chance for the team to turn things around, or will they be skeptical of his track record and fear more disappointment?

    Only time will tell if Schottenheimer is the right fit for America’s Team, but one thing is for sure: the Cowboys faithful will be watching closely and hoping for the best.

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  • Brian Schottenheimer? Kellen Moore? As Cowboys coaching search continues, here are the biggest questions


    Ten days have elapsed since the Dallas Cowboys announced they were moving on from head coach Mike McCarthy.

    The franchise has yet to name a successor.

    Dallas has interviewed four candidates, engaging in informal conversations with at least two more. One candidate, 2023-24 Cowboys offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer, appears to be furthest along the road to a job offer. But where do all the moving parts stand? Let’s break it down, with some of the biggest questions you might be asking.

    The Cowboys have formally interviewed Philadelphia Eagles offensive coordinator Kellen Moore, former New York Jets head coach Robert Saleh, former Minnesota Vikings head coach Leslie Frazier and Schottenheimer. Team owner and general manager Jerry Jones has also engaged in informal conversations with multiple NFL-adjacent names.

    Jones called University of Colorado head coach Deion Sanders the same day he parted ways with Mike McCarthy, though that seems more like a brilliant public relations stunt to shift the conversation from his belated firing than it does a formal courtship. Jones never formally interviewed Sanders, whom he has been close with since Sanders’ time playing for the Dallas Cowboys. Thursday, Jones also engaged in a conversation with former Seattle Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll. The team did not announce it formally interviewed Carroll, as it had the four candidates above. But at the very least, Carroll’s conversation opened the door for more questions about the Cowboys’ proximity to the end of this road.

    Yes, and yes? Sorry for the cop-out, but both are true. The NFL season ended 2 1/2 weeks ago and the Cowboys remain coachless. This has proven costly in their pursuit of a head coach as well as in retaining some top assistants.

    On the head coaching level, three teams beat the Cowboys to the punch: The New England Patriots hired Mike Vrabel before Dallas even parted ways with McCarthy; the Chicago Bears hired Detroit Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson on Tuesday; and the New York Jets hired Lions defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn on Wednesday. Johnson and Glenn each interviewed virtually with their future employers during their wild-card bye week, when the Cowboys were still in conversation with McCarthy. So the Cowboys “fell behind” if they wanted to recruit any of those three top candidates.

    They’ve lost multiple members of their coaching staff to other jobs, including special teams coordinator John Fassel to the Tennessee Titans.

    But on a more macro level, Dallas joins the New Orleans Saints, Jacksonville Jaguars and Las Vegas Raiders as teams still interviewing candidates. Dallas was the latest one to this game and won’t necessarily be the last to exit. The Saints fired former head coach Dennis Allen on Nov. 4 and have yet to fill their role, though McCarthy could be a top candidate.

    The league office has urged teams to slow down the hiring processes, both to decrease the number of quick firings and associated costly buyouts, as well as to increase playoff coaches’ ability to focus on their postseason game-planning. Drawn-out searches could increasingly become the norm.

    Schottenheimer did not formally interview with Jerry and Stephen Jones until after Frazier, Saleh and Moore’s rounds. The Jones family’s interest in exploring further hints at a desire to find something other than what they’d already heard. Schottenheimer is the only candidate whose conversation continued to a second day, though a source said whether that formally constituted a second interview or extended the first is semantics for a candidate already in town.

    Moore is not available for further (or in-person) conversation right now as his Eagles prepare to host the Washington Commanders in the NFC championship game.

    What does Schottenheimer offer? The son of longtime head coach Marty Schottenheimer, Brian spent 14 years as offensive coordinator for the Jets, then-St. Louis Rams, Seahawks and Cowboys. He has coached in the NFL for 25 of the past 28 seasons. He joined the Cowboys in 2022 as a defensive consultant helping then-coordinator Dan Quinn anticipate opposing defenses’ trends. He was promoted to offensive coordinator before the 2023 season, though McCarthy called plays in the two years that followed.

    With McCarthy, Schottenheimer helped install a version of the West Coast offense that the Cowboys deemed the “Texas Coast” offense. Precision replaced creativity, with receiver route depths now tied to quarterback footwork with less room for improvisation. Protection schemes shifted, too.

    Results varied. The Cowboys led the league in scoring in 2023, ranking fifth in total offense. Prescott finished second in MVP voting to Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson. The following year with the same staff and similar personnel, Dallas’ offense fell to 17th, scoring to 21st.

    Prescott suffered a season-ending hamstring injury in November but the problems — with protection, establishing a run game and generating consistent passing — predated his injury. A year after throwing a league-best 36 touchdowns to just nine interceptions, he passed for 11 TDs to eight interceptions in eight games.

    Schottenheimer did coordinate top-10 offenses each of his past three seasons as a play-caller in Seattle from 2018-20. His pulse of the Cowboys’ interpersonal dynamics, understanding of Prescott’s strengths and, quite frankly, availability seem to be catching the Jones family’s attention.

    Carroll appears to be making a push for it. But Moore seems to check more boxes even if he wouldn’t return with the Super Bowl (yet?) and NCAA championship lore that Carroll would.

    His Cowboys’ familiarity runs deep: Moore was Prescott’s backup quarterback, quarterbacks coach and then offensive coordinator from 2016-22. Moore has called plays in the NFL each of the past six years, leading the Cowboys to top-six offenses three of his four years and top-11 in scoring during those campaigns. The Cowboys ranked first overall in both marks in 2021 under Moore.

    In Philadelphia this season, Moore coordinated the seventh-best offense and eighth-best scoring attack. Quarterback Jalen Hurts’ passing game has been inconsistent, but Moore has responded by tipping his play calls toward a run game anchored by Saquon Barkley and one of the league’s best offensive lines.

    Moore is less extroverted than Schottenheimer but more widely regarded as a play-caller who is adapting to league trends with his creative uses of tempo and personnel-specific game plans to stress opposing play-callers. An AFC GM and an AFC executive from two teams who interviewed Moore in recent cycles each told Yahoo Sports they would not be concerned about his ability to command a room. The executive cited Moore’s emotional intelligence as strong enough to motivate the team; the general manager said leadership comes in multiple forms, and multiple cerebral offensive coaches in the league have succeeded. Often, those coaches hire a fiery defensive coordinator to balance out the energy.

    Seventeen-year Cowboys tight end Jason Witten hasn’t yet coached beyond the high school level. But he piqued Jones’ interest enough to warrant buzz around Witten’s candidacy as a head coach, much less a member of the next coaching staff. Jones has strong-armed candidates onto Cowboys staffs before, including Moore sticking around as McCarthy’s offensive coordinator in 2020. Witten’s move isn’t a done deal, but think of it like Jones views him as a valve to pull if it makes sense — perhaps because the head coaching pick isn’t as dynamic a presence as the Cowboys seek.

    While Sanders is unlikely to meaningfully resurface for several reasons, including the cost of his Colorado buyout, don’t be surprised if Jones spends time with him at next week’s East West Shrine Bowl. Sanders’ son, Shedeur, will compete at quarterback in a series of practices taking place at the Cowboys’ facility. Be prepared for Deion Sanders and Jones to converse … and generate speculation, warranted or not.

    The top two candidates are coordinators intimately familiar with Prescott. That shouldn’t be a surprise. The Cowboys’ biggest salary-cap investment, by far, is the record-setting extension they awarded Prescott in September hours before their season opener. Prescott is set to earn $240 million over four years, or $60 million per year. Any coaching candidate without a vision for his success should not seriously be considered.

    That vision could differ; multiple successful NFC teams, from the San Francisco 49ers to the Eagles, have recently maximized their quarterback with strong run games and offensive line play rather than an insistence on a highly paid player throwing the ball across the board.

    The 49ers represented the NFC in the Super Bowl last year. The Eagles enjoyed the honor the year before. And with the Cowboys’ NFC East rivals facing off in the conference championship, the franchise’s 30-year NFC title game drought — much less Super Bowl victory drought — stings even more.

    With the Commanders snapping their 34-year streak since advancing past the divisional round, every NFC team but the Cowboys have qualified for the conference title game since the 2010 season.

    The Cowboys’ last season in that position: 1995.

    They hope their next coach will change that.





    The Dallas Cowboys are still in the midst of their coaching search, and two names that have been circulating as potential candidates are Brian Schottenheimer and Kellen Moore. Both have experience in the NFL and could bring a fresh perspective to the team. But as the search continues, there are a few key questions that need to be answered.

    1. Can Schottenheimer or Moore handle the pressure of coaching a high-profile team like the Cowboys? Both have experience in the league, but coaching America’s Team comes with a unique set of challenges and expectations.

    2. How will they handle the dynamic between owner Jerry Jones and star quarterback Dak Prescott? Jones is known for his hands-on approach, and the relationship between the owner and the QB will be crucial for the team’s success.

    3. What changes would they bring to the team’s offensive strategy? Schottenheimer and Moore both have offensive backgrounds, but their philosophies may differ. Will they be able to implement their vision effectively with the current roster?

    4. How will they handle the team’s defense, which has been a weak spot in recent years? The Cowboys have struggled on defense, and the new head coach will need to address this issue to have a successful season.

    As the coaching search continues, these questions will be important to consider when evaluating potential candidates like Schottenheimer and Moore. Only time will tell who will ultimately lead the Cowboys to success in the upcoming seasons.

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  • 2025 Cowboys head-coaching search: Brian Schottenheimer set for second interview, per report


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    The Dallas Cowboys are perhaps the NFL’s most unpredictable team when it comes to this offseason’s coaching carousel. Will they pry Deion Sanders from college football? Will they turn to an old friend in Kellen Moore? It turns out they might just stay in-house, as incumbent offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer is set for a second interview for the club’s head coaching job, as NFL Media reported Wednesday.

    The 51-year-old Schottenheimer is “well respected in the building,” NFL.com noted Tuesday, indicating Dallas views the assistant as an “intriguing option” to replace the departed Mike McCarthy. This comes days after oddsmakers suddenly tabbed Schottenheimer the favorite to land the Cowboys’ top job, despite bigger external names like Sanders once making headlines as splashy targets.

    The son of former NFL head coach Marty Schottenheimer, the Cowboys offensive coordinator has been working at the NFL level for close to three decades, although his roles in Dallas have not included play-calling responsibilities. Originally hired as a coaching analyst in 2022, Schottenheimer was promoted to coordinator after Moore’s departure, spending the last two seasons as McCarthy’s second-hand man.

    Prior to joining the Cowboys, Schottenheimer spent one year as the Jacksonville Jaguars‘ passing game coordinator and three seasons as the Seattle Seahawks‘ offensive coordinator, overseeing three consecutive Pro Bowl appearances by quarterback Russell Wilson.





    In the latest update on the 2025 Cowboys head-coaching search, it has been reported that Brian Schottenheimer is set for a second interview with the team. This news comes after Schottenheimer impressed during his initial interview and has continued to be a top candidate for the position.

    Schottenheimer, who currently serves as the offensive coordinator for the Seattle Seahawks, has a strong track record of success in the league. He has worked with some of the top quarterbacks in the NFL and has helped lead his teams to multiple playoff appearances.

    Many insiders believe that Schottenheimer could be the perfect fit for the Cowboys, bringing a fresh perspective and innovative offensive strategies to the team. His experience and leadership qualities make him a strong contender for the head-coaching position.

    As the search continues, it will be interesting to see how Schottenheimer fares in his second interview and if he ultimately lands the job with the Cowboys. Stay tuned for more updates on this developing story.

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    2025 Cowboys head-coaching search, Brian Schottenheimer, second interview, Cowboys coaching search, Brian Schottenheimer interview, NFL coaching search, Dallas Cowboys, 2025 head coach search, Schottenheimer coaching interview

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  • Cowboys closing in on Brian Schottenheimer as next coach


    The Cowboys are making their push for the most underwhelming coaching hire of the offseason.

    Dallas is closing in on hiring its offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer as the team’s new head coach, according to longtime Cowboys reporter Clarence Hill Jr. of DLLS.

    The move is expected to be completed by Friday at the latest, per the report.

    It could be Brian Schottenheimer’s time in Dallas. AP

    Hiring Schottenheimer certainly will be a much-debated decision for America’s Team after the confusing handling of Mike McCarthy’s departure and the team’s rather small pool of candidates.

    Schottenheimer, the 51-year-old son of former NFL coach Marty Schottenheimer, has zero head coaching experience and is stepping into perhaps the league’s highest-profile job.

    He served as offensive coordinator for the Jets from 2006-11, the Rams from 2012-14, the Seahawks from 2018-20 and has been in that role with the Cowboys for the last two years.

    The ironic part is that McCarthy called the plays for the Cowboys over the last two seasons, meaning Dallas’ offensive success and/or failures were more tied to him than Schottenheimer.

    Dallas could have just retained McCarthy, but the sides could not agree on a new contract and recently parted ways … just for the Cowboys to turn to his coordinator.

    Schottenheimer and Dak Prescott (r) during a 2023 practice. AP

    For all of McCarthy’s issues, going from a Super Bowl-winning coach who presided over three recent 12-wins seasons to an unproven first-time coach opens the door for owner Jerry Jones to be scrutinized.

    It would be one thing if the Cowboys were preparing to hire a top name in the coaching cycle like former Lions coordinator and new Bears coach Ben Johnson, but Schottenheimer isn’t viewed on that level.

    The Cowboys have enjoyed success before with an uninspiring coach in Jason Garrett — who perhaps is the the template Jones is trying to follow after his ascension from coordinator to coach — but they are entering a pivotal offseason with a top-heavy aging roster coming off a 7-10 campaign.

    Mike McCarthy called plays while Schottenheimer served as offensive coordinator. AP

    Schottenheimer has familiarity with quarterback Dak Prescott and star receiver CeeDee Lamb, but the Cowboys need help across the board to compete in a tough NFC East.

    The Commanders seemingly have found their franchise quarterback in Jayden Daniels, the Eagles are perennial contenders and the Giants … oh, who are we kidding.

    Hiring a coordinator whose offenses haven’t exactly set the league on fire in an attempt to keep up with this year’s two NFC finalists is a bold move.

    Jerry Jones is going outside the box for this hire. USA TODAY Sports via Reuters Con

    Schottenheimer will come cheap, though, and may not ask for as much team-building control as other more-experienced candidates may have wanted.

    Jones has a large role in how the team is constructed and there have been questions over the years about whether he would hire a coach who will challenge his views or even his celebrity status.

    Dallas also interviewed Seattle assistant Leslie Frazier, former Jets coach Robert Saleh and Kellen Moore, its former offensive coordinator who’s now in the same role in Philadelphia, per Pro Football Talk.



    The Dallas Cowboys are reportedly closing in on former Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer as their next head coach. Schottenheimer, who has also served as the offensive coordinator for the New York Jets and St. Louis Rams, is known for his innovative offensive schemes and ability to develop young quarterbacks.

    With the Cowboys looking to replace Mike McCarthy, who was fired after just two seasons with the team, Schottenheimer has emerged as a top candidate for the job. His experience working with high-profile quarterbacks like Russell Wilson and Sam Darnold could be a major asset for Dallas, especially as they look to maximize the potential of star quarterback Dak Prescott.

    While nothing has been officially confirmed yet, sources close to the team have indicated that negotiations are progressing smoothly and an announcement could be made in the coming days. Stay tuned for more updates as the Cowboys continue their search for their next head coach.

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  • Report: Cowboys closing in on deal to make Brian Schottenheimer their head coach


    The Cowboys are closing in on a deal to make offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer their new head coach, Clarence Hill of All City DLLS reports.

    Hill said the sides are expected to “cross the finish line” today or no later than Friday.

    Schottenheimer fits everything that owner Jerry Jones covets in his head coaches. He will come inexpensive relative to other head coaches in the league, as Schottenheimer had no other interviews. Jones, who doubles as General Manager, maintains control and continues as the face of the team. And it’s someone with whom Jones is familiar.

    Jones’ eight previous hires were former head coaches and/or had familiarity with the Cowboys.

    Dave Campo and Jason Garrett were Jones’ previous hires who had no head coaching experience but were promoted from the staff.

    Schottenheimer, 51, is the son of longtime NFL head coach Marty Schottenheimer.

    Brian Schottenheimer joined the Cowboys in 2022 as a coaching analyst and earned a promotion to the OC job when the Cowboys and Kellen Moore parted ways before the 2023 season. Schottenheimer did not call plays under Mike McCarthy, who parted ways with the team when his contract expired Jan. 14.

    The Cowboys also interviewed Seattle assistant Leslie Frazier and former Jets head coach Robert Saleh, and they had a virtual interview with Moore, now the Eagles offensive coordinator.

    Schottenheimer became the betting favorite for the job earlier this week, and momentum began building for Schottenheimer’s hire after he had a second day of interviews on Wednesday.





    The Dallas Cowboys are reportedly nearing a deal to make Brian Schottenheimer their next head coach, according to sources close to the team. Schottenheimer, who most recently served as the passing game coordinator for the Jacksonville Jaguars, is said to be the front-runner for the position after a series of interviews and discussions with team officials.

    The move comes after the Cowboys parted ways with former head coach Mike McCarthy following a disappointing season that saw the team miss the playoffs. Schottenheimer, known for his offensive expertise and ability to develop quarterbacks, could bring a fresh perspective to a team in need of a spark.

    While the deal has not been officially announced, it appears that the Cowboys are moving swiftly to secure their new leader. Stay tuned for updates as more details emerge on this developing story.

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