4XPIPS wrote:A little shocked that Daboll was kept.
NorthHawk wrote:RD usually starts this thread, but I thought some changes were interesting.
Here are the HC changes so far:
We know that Saleh of the Jets, Allen of the Saints and Eberflus of the Bears were let go but today there are some more:
Jerod Mayo of the Pats
Doug Peterson of the Jaguars
NorthHawk wrote:There might be even more HC changes with Jerry Jones trying to create some drama with his decision. It might be another bad decision for them if he waited too long, but who in this forum really cares about Dallas?
NorthHawk wrote:For the Bears sake, I hope they don't sign Carroll because they need a younger Offensive HC who can develop Williams properly, not a HC who stifles their creativity. I could see him end up in Jacksonville where they really need a culture change and have a lot of young players to work with.
River Dog wrote:Yeah, Jones fired his head coach, but the guy he should really can is that general manager of his.
River Dog wrote:Yeah, Jones fired his head coach, but the guy he should really can is that general manager of his.
Aseahawkfan wrote:That GM built his Super Bowl teams, not Jimmy Johnson. He has the third ring to prove it. That GM's ego will never admit Jimmy Johnson built and developed that team even though 30 years later he still hasn't sniffed a Super Bowl again. He'd rather lose or fail year after year then ever admit he's not as good at picking the groceries as Jimmy Johnson was.
River Dog wrote:Jones pulled off one of the biggest fleece jobs of a trade in the history of professional sports when he traded Herschel Walker to the Vikings. That one trade, along with some sleepers like Troy Aikman and Michael Irvin, set the stage for his 3 rings. It went to his head. Since then, he hasn't done squat. He ranks up there with George Steinbrenner as one of the most despised owners in professional sports.
Jones is 82 years old and has shown no signs of stepping aside. He's like Al Davis and will die before he hands the reigns over to someone else.
River Dog wrote:Jones pulled off one of the biggest fleece jobs of a trade in the history of professional sports when he traded Herschel Walker to the Vikings. That one trade, along with some sleepers like Troy Aikman and Michael Irvin, set the stage for his 3 rings. It went to his head. Since then, he hasn't done squat. He ranks up there with George Steinbrenner as one of the most despised owners in professional sports.
Jones is 82 years old and has shown no signs of stepping aside. He's like Al Davis and will die before he hands the reigns over to someone else.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I contend Jimmy Johnson arranged that trade and then he created his trade value chart. Jerry Jones has been basking in the glory of Jimmy Johnson for 30 plus years thinking he did it when everyone in the NFL knows Jimmy Johnson pulled off that fleece job and picked and developed the talent as well. Jones can't stand the fact that everyone that looks at the Cowboys remembers either Tom Landry and the 70s Cowboys or Jimmy Johnson and the 90s Cowboys. No one thinks Jerry Jones did much but bask in the glory of owning one of the most storied franchises with two eras built by one of the most legendary coaches in NFL history and one of the most successful coaches in the 90s.
I'll always consider the 90s Cowboys the team Jimmy built, not Jerry. I'll never forgive Jerry for firing Jimmy Johnson without allowing him his shot at a threepeat with that amazing team Jimmy Johnson built. That 90s Cowboys team was stacked on both sides of the ball back to front. One of the greatest teams ever drafted and developed. Jimmy Johnson did it, not Jerry.
That's why Jerry has done nothing since Jimmy left. Not a damn thing of note. Jerry Jones didn't know football worth a damn. Jimmy built him a juggernaut, then he backstabbed Jimmy Johnson. Then he wins with Jimmy's team with that clown Switzer as head coach, Jerry's stooge. Maybe Switzer doesn't deserve that label, but it's what he was.
Nothing pissed me off more than to see Jimmy Johnson fired at the height of the Cowboy's greatness.
Just like when dumbass Jerry Krause fired Phil Jackson at the height of the Bull's greatness making Michael Jordan decide to retire rather than go for a four peat and seventh championship I think they would have won.
I hate owners and GMs who can't see greatness when they have it because their pathetic egos want more credit. I'll always consider the 90s Cowboys Jimmy's team. Just like Phil Jackson was the Bulls best head coach and he and Michael built Chicago into what it was and it's been nothing since they left. Same as the Cowboys.
GMs and owners too stupid to know when they have legendary greatness and not letting a head coach finish what they started piss me off.
I know you hate the Cowboys, but I loved watching that 90s Cowboys team. That was a fun team to watch. Seeing that Cowboys vs. Frisco rivalry was must see football. Same as the Lakers with Magic and the Celtics with Larry in the 80s.
River Dog wrote:From what I've read, trading Walker was definitely Johnson's idea, but as much as it may pain us to admit it, we have to give some credit to Jerry Jones. First off, Jones was Johnson's boss and could have easily killed the idea, but he trusted his coach and took the risk. Secondly, from the accounts I've read, Jones did a magnificent job of running up the asking price by making the Vikings think that there were more teams interested in trading for Walker than there really was and created a bidding war. It was a great game of poker on his part. And lastly, Jones is the one who decided when to pull the trigger.
But I do agree with you that the primary architect of the Cowboys dynasty of the early 90's was Jimmy Johnson. And yes, I hate the Cowboys, and it's almost exclusively tied to the way Jones fired Tom Landry when he first bought the team, not even bothering to tell him in person. I wasn't a huge Tom Landry fan, but I've never seen or heard of such an incredibly insensitive act. The only head coach the team had ever known, he'd been with them for nearly 30 years, won two Lombardis with them, yet Jones treats him like yesterday's newspaper.
River Dog wrote:From what I've read, trading Walker was definitely Johnson's idea, but as much as it may pain us to admit it, we have to give some credit to Jerry Jones. First off, Jones was Johnson's boss and could have easily killed the idea, but he trusted his coach and took the risk. Secondly, from the accounts I've read, Jones did a magnificent job of running up the asking price by making the Vikings think that there were more teams interested in trading for Walker than there really was and created a bidding war. It was a great game of poker on his part. And lastly, Jones is the one who decided when to pull the trigger.
But I do agree with you that the primary architect of the Cowboys dynasty of the early 90's was Jimmy Johnson. And yes, I hate the Cowboys, and it's almost exclusively tied to the way Jones fired Tom Landry when he first bought the team, not even bothering to tell him in person. I wasn't a huge Tom Landry fan, but I've never seen or heard of such an incredibly insensitive act. The only head coach the team had ever known, he'd been with them for nearly 30 years, won two Lombardis with them, yet Jones treats him like yesterday's newspaper.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Jerry Jones gets whatever credit you get for backing a great idea from your new head coach.
I will never consider Jerry Jones a great GM or owner. He's living off Jimmy's glory, everyone that watched the Cowboys during that period knows it, including Jerry who has been trying to prove Jimmy wrong for thirty years.
River Dog wrote:I think we're closer to agreeing than we are disagreeing. IMO Jerry Jones is one of the worst GM's/owners in the game. All I'm saying is that you have to give him some credit for those early years.
4XPIPS wrote:Looks like the Jets found their next victim. Aaron Glenn, going to be the new HC of the Jets. I know it's a dream to becoming a HC, but anyone taking the Jets job is going to be short lived. When you have the owner of the Jets bouncing trade suggestions off his 19 year old son, and rejecting trade offers because their Madden rating isn't high enough, best of luck Aaron.
River Dog wrote:Now, the drama with the Jets is whether or not Nathanial Hackett and/or Aaron Rodgers stays.
River Dog wrote:Now, the drama with the Jets is whether or not Nathanial Hackett and/or Aaron Rodgers stays.
4XPIPS wrote:It's been drama ever since they signed Aaron Rodgers. I say keep him and keep Hackett, watch the sh1t show continue to evolve. Aaron get's fired up on big plays, similar to what Saleh was like, and I can see Aaron pushing Aaron off like he did to Saleh. It would make great comedy if they keep Aaron and Hackett, who is an OC who isn't calling plays.
River Dog wrote:Yeah, between the Jets and Cowboys, there's two teams that I love watching flounder, so I'd love to see that tandem make an encore. I can't stand Aaron Rodgers.
River Dog wrote:Yeah, between the Jets and Cowboys, there's two teams that I love watching flounder, so I'd love to see that tandem make an encore. I can't stand Aaron Rodgers.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Rodgers is just annoying. Another one of those great QBs I'd love to have with an annoying personality. Similar to Brady, though Brady seems cooler now that he's retired and having fun.
River Dog wrote:I compare my personal experiences during my working life with what others in sports, politics, etc experience. Had I done the things that Brady and Rodgers did and got away with it would have caused me to be fired.
I hear that Pete Carroll may be up for the DC job with the Niners. Is he that desperate to get back into coaching that he'd take a demotion to a DC? And if he took a job with our most hated rival, how would our fan base react? Would he get the same rude treatment that Russell has received?
https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/other/ ... ngNewsSerp
NorthHawk wrote:It would be interesting to see Carroll as DC with the 49ers but I’m not sure if he could be an Assistant Coach after decades as a HC in both College and the NFL. I heard a comment that Saleh might return to SF if he doesn’t get a HC position.
NorthHawk wrote:Do you think he could put a cap on his seeming control needs?
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