This story has been updated.Here are five things to know about the Cowboys' new offensive coordinator, Kellen Moore:How we got here
Like it or not, Ben Johnson does not fall into one of Cowboys owner Jerry Jones two customary categories used for previous searches.
The last time the Dallas Cowboys went shopping for a new head coach, they interviewed two candidates: Mike McCarthy and Marvin Lewis. So when reports emerged last Monday on the Cowboys being interested in Deion Sanders,
Jerry Jones is thus far running a Dallas Cowboys’ coaching search that is starting to show all kinds of 2007 vibes.
Troy Aikman has said multiple times the Lions remind him of his legendarily stacked Cowboys teams. He might be on to something.
Moore is deeply familiar with the Cowboys, having spent eight seasons in Dallas (2015-2022), including four as the team's offensive coordinator (2019-2022). During his tenure as coordinator, he twice guided the offense to a league-leading finish in total yards (2019 and 2021) and orchestrated the NFL's highest-scoring offense in 2021.
Washington Commanders QB Jayden Daniels is a star in the making, but the Detroit Lions won't squander the best homefield advantage in football.
The Cowboys are set to interview a pair of former NFL head coaches next in Robert Saleh and Leslie Frazier. Saleh was fired by the New York Jets five games into his fourth season in 2024. Frazier, the assistant head coach in Seattle this season, spent three-plus years as coach of the Minnesota Vikings a decade ago.
The Washington Commanders, led by quarterback Jayden Daniels, the Detroit Lions, led by quarterback Jared Goff, in an NFC Divisional Round Playoff game on Saturday, Jan. 18, 2025 at Ford Field in Detroit,
The Detroit Lions picked up Al-Quadin Muhammad as a depth pass rushing option and he has "grown" in his role as injuries have piled up.
Out on the turf, the Lions' storied Honolulu blue melded with the team's secondary color, a dull shade best described as "putty" or "cement" — too gray for a pleasing contrast, and too blue for tone-on-tone harmony — into a swirling mass of blah that seemed to echo the team's lackluster performance.