If you owned an iconic NFL franchise, and you just doubled down on an awful season with a coaching hire that didn’t exactly overwhelm a mutinous fan base, and you were, well, a little nuts, how would you mitigate the fallout?
If there’s one thing NFL fans love to do, no matter what time of year, it’s rant and rave about anything and anyone involved with the League. Dallas Cowboys owner and recent Landman guest star Jerry Jones has certainly heard and earned his share of armchair-quarterback commentary over the years,
Dallas Cowboys team owner Jerry Jones raised eyebrows when he used an old-school phrase while talking about his feelings toward fans' visceral reactions.
After a 65-minute news conference in which Jones-speak more than doubled the efforts of new head coach Brian Schottenheimer — no stranger to the filibuster himself —Jerry and Stephen did their best to exhaust smaller groups of media with a few answers that felt direct but many more that rambled out of bounds.
Jerry Jones both admitted he’s taking a major risk and delivered a message to critics on Monday sitting beside his new Cowboys head coach Brian Schottenheimer.
Jerry Jones's words highlighted the introductory press conference for Dallas Cowboys head coach Brian Schottenheimer. Legendary radio host Dan Patrick couldn't let Jones' performance slide.
Jerry Jones was widely criticized for the decision to hire Brian Schottenheimer and the process that led to the move. The Cowboys owner pushed back.
During a post-press conference media scrum on Monday, Cowboys owner and G.M. Jerry Jones played one of his greatest hits. With a twist. "There's a very low percentage of this that is smiles and gloryholes,
Jones said after introducing Brian Schottenheimer as the Cowboys' head coach that he only talked with Sanders.
The Dallas Cowboys are fresh off hiring offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer to be their next head coach. Owner Jerry Jones ran a process to find the next head coach of the Cowboys after they parted ways with Mike McCarthy and decided Schottenheimer was the best candidate for the