It's about an hour before Brian Schottenheimer is introduced as the 10th head coach in the history of the Dallas Cowboys. Through the atrium windows at The Star, Dak Prescott is seen rehabbing from the surgery he had to repair a right hamstring avulsion suffered in a Week 9 loss to the Atlanta Falcons.
We heard Dallas Cowboys head coach Brian Schottenheimer talk at his introductory press conference about the need to build close relationships with his players. Now, offensive coordinator Klayton Adams echos that sentiment,
The Dallas Cowboys offense will look a little different in 2025, with Brian Schottenheimer calling the offensive plays, but his support staff will also be different. Klayton Adams will be the offensive coordinator and Conor Riley the offensive line coach,
The Dallas Cowboys should look much different in 2025 under a new coaching staff.While Brian Schottenheimer was hired partially due to his familiarity with Dak Prescott and the rest of the offense, he also has a different approach than Mike McCarthy.
Another offseason, another long contract dispute? Dallas Cowboys head coach Brian Schottenheimer weighed in on the impending negotiations with Micah Parsons.
CeeDee Lamb, who has worked closely with Schotty in the past two seasons, will now see a different side of Brian as the pair will no doubt work closely together to get this offense up and rolling with Dak Prescott in 2025. But what does Lamb think of Schottenheimer now that he's in the big chair in Dallas?
As the NFL offseason continues, the Cowboys and Micah Parsons are at a standstill on negotiations, with it being a "two-way street"
FRISCO - The 2025 season looms as a massively important one for 10th-year Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott ... as it does for first-time head coach Brian Schottenheimer. Prescott, noting that both are on four-year contracts, views them as tied ...
Foot-dragging handcuffed the Cowboys in free agency a year ago, with the cap-savings from new contracts for receiver CeeDee Lamb and quarterback Dak Prescott coming too late to matter. This year, as linebacker Micah Parsons waits for his overdue (frankly) second deal, will ownership once again use an all brakes, no gas approach?
The Cowboys have let recent contract negotiations with star players go deep into the offseason. Will things drag out with Parsons as well?