Mike McCarthy won't return as the
Cowboys' coach. Deion Sanders could be a candidate to replace him
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[January 14, 2025]
By ROB MAADDI and SCHUYLER DIXON
DALLAS (AP) — Mike McCarthy will not return as coach of the Dallas
Cowboys, who are going on three decades since their last Super Bowl
title, owner Jerry Jones said Monday.
Jones said the organization and McCarthy mutually agreed to part
ways. A search for the team's next coach begins immediately, he
said.
“I have great respect for Mike, and he has led the team through some
very unique and challenging times during his tenure,” Jones said in
a statement.
McCarthy’s contract expired on Jan. 8 following a 7-10 season.
Dallas was 12-5 each of the three years before that under him, but
still hasn’t been past the divisional round of the NFC playoffs
since its last Super Bowl at the end of the 1995 season.
University of Colorado coach Deion Sanders — who played on the last
Super Bowl-winning Cowboys team — has a good relationship with Jones
and could emerge as a coaching candidate. The two have discussed the
job, according to a person with knowledge of the conversation. The
person, speaking on condition of anonymity because a formal
interview hasn’t been arranged, said the team was still in the
process of gathering candidates.
The Cowboys had an exclusive negotiating window with McCarthy
through Tuesday, but the parties decided to split ahead of the
deadline.
At least one NFL team asked during that time about talking to the
61-year-old coach, who won a Super Bowl with Green Bay.
Next season will be the 30th for the Cowboys since winning the last
of their five Super Bowl titles.
Before taking the Dallas job after a full season out of coaching,
McCarthy was with the Packers for 13 seasons and had a 125-77-2
record from 2006-18. He was 10-8 in the playoffs and led Green Bay
to a Super Bowl title at AT&T Stadium, the home of the Cowboys, 14
years ago.
There were also three other NFC championship games for McCarthy in
Green Bay, and that is what Jones envisioned — and more — when he
hired the coach in 2020 after Jason Garrett never got that far in
his 10 years.
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Dallas Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy talks to reporters following
an NFL football game against the Washington Commanders, Sunday, Jan.
5, 2025, in Arlington, Texas. The Commanders won 23-19. (AP
Photo/Gareth Patterson)
McCarthy finished with a 50-38 record in Dallas,
including a 1-3 mark in the playoffs. That included last season,
when the Cowboys were NFC East champions and had won 16 consecutive
home games before trailing by 32 points in the fourth quarter of a
48-32 wild-card loss to the seventh-seeded Packers.
Dallas played the final nine games this season without franchise
quarterback Dak Prescott because of a torn hamstring. Top receiver
CeeDee Lamb, seven-time Pro Bowl guard Zack Martin, cornerback
Trevon Diggs and rushing defending DeMarcus Lawrence also finished
the season on injured reserve.
Garrett had the franchise’s second-longest coaching tenure. Hall of
Fame coach Tom Landry was the coach for the Cowboys’ first 29
seasons, the same number of seasons they have now gone since winning
a Super Bowl. Jones fired two-time Super Bowl winner Landry when he
bought the Cowboys before the 1989 season.
Only 12 NFL coaches have more career regular-season wins than
McCarthy’s 174, which is still far behind Don Shula’s record 328.
The only active coaches with more wins than McCarthy are Andy Reid
(302 in 29 seasons) and Mike Tomlin (183 in 18 seasons).
Jones' next coach will be his ninth. He hired Jimmy Johnson from the
University of Miami, and the Cowboys won back-to-back Super Bowls in
the 1992-93 seasons before the college teammates at Arkansas had an
acrimonious split.
Barry Switzer replaced Johnson, a Pro Football Hall of Fame coach,
and won a Super Bowl in his second season but was fired two years
later following a 6-10 season. Bill Parcells, another Hall of Famer,
led the Cowboys to the playoffs twice in four seasons from 2003-06
but lost in the wild-card round both times.
___
Maaddi reported from Tampa, Florida.
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