The New York Jets have their new head coach, Aaron Glenn, and many people seem to be excited about the move. One of the people happy about the move is Bill Parcells, who was Glenn’s coach with the Jets and the Dallas Cowboys,
Former Dallas Cowboys head coach Bill Parcells is fired up for Aaron Glenn after the former Cowboys DB accepted the New York Jets head coaching job.
The re-hiring of Eberflus would follow the Cowboys’ objective of maintaining continuity with their scheme. Eberflus runs a similar 4-3 scheme as previous coordinator Mike Zimmer and that’s part of the reason why he’s a favorite.
The curious part is that Brian has been an assistant coach since 1998, and while he had the tag of “Hot Assistant Coach” for a while, it faded. He’s served as an analyst, a quarterbacks coach, a tight ends coach, and an offensive coordinator since he started his career with the St. Louis Rams, in 1997.
Glenn, who played cornerback under Parcells with the Jets from 1997-99 and then with the Cowboys in 2005 and 2006, is the Jets new head coach.
The next Cowboys head coach will be the 10th in team history, and the ninth under Jerry Jones's employ. So, who wants this job? And who does Jerry want?
The Dallas Cowboys were literally a laughingstock to Washington Commanders and Philadelphia Eagles fans on Sunday.
Timing is everything. Had Bill Belichick known the Dallas Cowboys job might become available he may not have taken the North Carolina Tar Heels gig to begin wit
Jerry Jones is thus far running a Dallas Cowboys’ coaching search that is starting to show all kinds of 2007 vibes.
Legendary football coach Bill Parcells had something to say about the New York Jets' decision to hire Aaron Glenn as head coach.
There are six head coach vacancies in the NFL, each with unique properties. New Orleans has the charm of Bourbon Street and good food. Las Vegas has the Strip, and you have to face the Chiefs and QB Pat Mahomes twice a year. Chicago has the lure of playing in the rugged NFC North.
The Cowboys' split with coach Mike McCarthy will have wide-ranging effects felt beyond Dallas. Who were the biggest winners and losers of the move?