The Cowboys' end-of-season press conference was laughable " Inside The Star
Briefly

The Cowboys' end-of-season press conference was laughable " Inside The Star
"The end-of-season press conference that Jerry Jones and the boys hold every single year after it ends in disappointment once again was pure comedy. Per usual, Jerry danced around any type of important questions that our fans wanted answers to, and credit to the reporters in attendance because they continued to drill him, and he made sure to avoid it as much as possible. I actually laughed at most of it, and continued to shake my head. Still, I watched the entire thing, and below are the three biggest takeaways that I took from the conference, and I will post a link to the entire conference here for you to watch if you would like to see everything else that was talked about."
"Many questions were asked about what this front office plans to do when it comes to who may be the next defensive coordinator of the Dallas Cowboys. Jerry Jones first said Brian Schottenheimer had a lot to do with hiring Matt Eberflus as the DC. Jones said if Schotty didn't want Eberflus as DC he wouldn't be here. So it started with Jerry doing everything in his power to NOT take the blame. He never takes accountability and this is the issue with the Cowboys and everyone knows it."
"Schotty on the primary tenet he's looking for in the next #Cowboys defensive coordinator: "we wanna find someone who's a great teacher and a great communicator ... who's passionate about football, and who can take complicated information and [have the ability] to communicate... pic.twitter.com/jEYdVhZbq9 - Patrik [No C] Walker (@VoiceOfTheStar) January 7, 2026"
The Cowboys held an end-of-season press conference after another disappointing finish. Jerry Jones repeatedly avoided direct answers and declined accountability for recent failures. Reporters pressed persistently on the team's defensive direction and potential hires. Brian Schottenheimer reportedly influenced hiring of defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus and will help vet candidates; being a former head coach is not required. The front office may consider first-time coordinators. The organization emphasized searching for a coordinator who teaches, communicates complex information effectively, and shows passion for football. No formal candidate requests had been started yet.
Read at Inside The Star
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]