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Who will return

Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 2:18 pm
by 1niksder
With the season over and the rumors flying which will return to That team in Texas?
Bill Parcells or TO?

Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 2:48 pm
by TheBigTuna
They are both gonna return because both love to win and neither want to
walk away with out the opportunity to win a championship

Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 2:51 pm
by 1niksder
TheBigTuna wrote:They are both gonna return because both love to win and neither want to
walk away with out the opportunity to win a championship

The rumor is your namesake won't return if TO comes back.
Plus he might be looking at the Miami job.

Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 5:59 pm
by UK Skins Fan
1niksder wrote:Plus he might be looking at the Miami job.

Who - Parcells or TO?

Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 6:44 pm
by SkinsJock
I think the fat coach has had enough and I do not think a new coach is going to want to have to deal with Owens - his talent (apart from dropping the most passes in the NFL) can not overcome the distractions.

Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 9:11 pm
by 1niksder
UK Skins Fan wrote:
1niksder wrote:Plus he might be looking at the Miami job.

Who - Parcells or TO?

Parcells... could be just another rumor though

Posted: Sun Jan 07, 2007 10:06 pm
by Countertrey
The loss will eat at TO, he will be unable to resist cheap-shoting Romo, and, that, will be that.

I do think that Parcells will think long and hard about the Miami job, but he will remain a tuna in pukeland.

Parcells keeps 'Boys waiting about '07 return

Posted: Thu Jan 18, 2007 9:29 pm
by 1niksder
Parcells keeps 'Boys waiting about '07 return
IRVING, Texas (Jan. 18, 2007) -- Nearly two weeks after the Dallas Cowboys' season ended, Bill Parcells still hasn't decided whether he wants to keep coaching.

Jerry Jones has told Parcells to take all the time he wants. At least, until the Feb. 1 deadline that's in his contract.

Fans aren't as patient. Their need for an answer, one way or another, grows each day. His status remains the most-talked-about topic on local sports radio, with shows treating it like a hostage situation: Day X of Dallas under siege. (Jan. 18 was Day 12)

With no word directly from Parcells, inquiring minds are left to read between the lines. That's led to theories such as:

He's staying because he keeps showing up for work every day. If he was quitting, he'd be out by now. Tom Landry had the job for 29 years and needed only a few hours to gather up all his personal belongings.

He's going because he let trusted assistant coach David Lee leave to become the offensive coordinator at Arkansas. Parcells has known Lee more than 30 years and he's widely credited with developing Tony Romo's throwing mechanics.

He's staying because of Romo and the chance to have a full season with him as the starting quarterback. Parcells himself said last season that the combination of "a fiery coach and a young quarterback ... that ought to be enough to perk you up for a while." Besides, he could replace Lee with an even closer friend, Dan Henning, recently fired as offensive coordinator in Carolina.

He's going because he's supposedly thinking about other jobs, like when the New York Giants were looking for a general manager.

He's staying because of how outraged he was to have been linked to that opening.

He's going because Pat Summerall, one of Parcells' best buddies locally, said so on a radio show.

He's staying because Parcells stopped speaking to Summerall after hearing about it.

He's going because Phil Simms said so, although he admitted he was just guessing.

He's staying to spite Simms.

Ugh.

Maybe the holdup is Terrell Owens. What if Parcells has given Jones a me-or-him ultimatum?

Another wrinkle could be money. Parcells is due about $5.5 million in 2007, which is a lot more than Social Security would pay the 65-year-old coach. Television doesn't pay nearly that well, either.

While Parcells has recouped much of what he lost in a divorce that preceded his arrival in Dallas, he knows this could be his last big payday.

So maybe the wait is all about trying to squeeze Jones for an extension with a golden -- no, platinum -- parachute. Having his name linked to the Giants job may have been a negotiating ploy.

But what if it backfired? What if it angered Jones and ruined their extension talks? In that case, Parcells could be dragging his feet while all the top candidates take other jobs, leaving Jones no choice but to bring him back.

Then again, Jones' top candidate could be Bill Cowher and Jones figures he'll have to wait a year to get him anyway. In that case, Jones would take Parcells for one more year -- but only one, and not for more money.

The longer Parcells' status remains in limbo, the more every little thing is going to get overanalyzed and conspiracy theories such as these will make the rounds.

Parcells should be used to it considering he plays this waiting game nearly every year; that's why there's a decision deadline in his contract.

It's been this way since he walked away from the New York Giants because of heart problems following his second Super Bowl title, back in January 1991. There was even drama surrounding him most offseasons when he was out of coaching because it was always presumed that he was waiting to jump back in.

Last year, Parcells took only five days and came back with the extension through 2007.

This year's wait proves that Jones is in no hurry to get rid of Parcells, an idea that gained traction when the Cowboys lost four of their last five games, culminating with a playoff loss at Seattle. It left Dallas 34-32 in four years under Parcells, including 0-2 in the playoffs. The Cowboys haven't won a playoff game since 1996, the longest drought in club history.

If Parcells is not working on his exit strategy, then he's probably thinking about putting together his staff, starting with a new defensive coordinator because Mike Zimmer took the same job in Atlanta.

Zimmer's contract was about to expire and he didn't want to wait for things to get sorted out in Dallas -- even though he would've been the leading in-house candidate to replace Parcells (if he left) and Parcells told Zimmer he would keep his job (if Parcells stayed).

Lee's departure offered more intrigue.

At Parcells' request, Lee put the Arkansas offer on hold. After five days of stalling the Razorbacks -- Jones' alma mater, by the way -- Parcells told Lee not to wait any longer because he couldn't say for sure whether he'd be back.

So ...

Will he or won't he?

The only certainty is that an answer should come by Feb. 1.

Posted: Fri Jan 19, 2007 9:13 am
by joebagadonuts
If he does decide to leave, what does Jones do? He must have candidates in mind to replace Parcells, but theoretically all the most qualified people are being hired by teams with current vacancies. I think Jones has a Dallas assistant in mind to fill the void should it be there to fill. Although, Art Shell is still available......

Posted: Fri Jan 19, 2007 9:24 am
by Redskin in Canada
joebagadonuts wrote:Although, Art Shell is still available......
D. Green has gone out in search of greener pastures too ... :lol:

Posted: Fri Jan 19, 2007 7:07 pm
by JPM36
I hope Parcells leaves. I hear Jones would go after Wade Phillips if he lost Parcells haha.

Posted: Fri Jan 19, 2007 11:46 pm
by 1niksder
This is the 3rd assitant to take off:

DeHaven leaves Cowboys, takes same job in Seattle

Veteran special teams coach Bruce DeHaven on Friday left the Dallas Cowboys to accept the same position with the Seattle Seahawks.


DeHaven, 58, is the third assistant to leave coach Bill Parcells' staff since the end of the 2006 season. Defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer took the same position with the Atlanta Falcons and quarterbacks coach David Lee moved to the University of Arkansas as offensive coordinator.


A 20-year NFL veteran, DeHaven has long been regarded as one of the league's top special teams coaches. In Seattle, he will replace Bob Casullo, who left earlier this week to become the tight ends coach for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.


It had been rumored for the past week that DeHaven might depart the Cowboys after four seasons with the franchise.


After four years in the college ranks, DeHaven moved to the professional level in 1983, when he took a job with the New Jersey Generals of the USFL. In three years, DeHaven worked for three different USFL teams.


In 1987, he began a 13-year relationship with the Buffalo Bills, and his units were ranked at the best in the league twice during his tenure there. He worked three seasons for the San Francisco 49ers (2000-2002), before joining Parcells' staff in 2003.

Posted: Sat Jan 20, 2007 5:34 am
by redskindave
I think just Parcells