The Dallas Cowboys interviewed former New York Jets coach Robert Saleh on Saturday, another step in the search to replace Mike McCarthy.The in-person interview with Saleh came a day after Dallas held a virtual interview with Philadelphia offensive coordinator Kellen Moore,
The Dallas Cowboys have completed a virtual interview with Philadelphia offensive coordinator Kellen Moore in the first formal step in the search to replace former coach Mike McCarthy.
The Cowboys have requested permission to interview Eagles offensive coordinator and form Dallas assistant Kellen Moore for their head coaching job, a person with knowledge of their request told The Dallas Morning News.
The Cowboys are set to interview a pair of former NFL head coaches next in Robert Saleh and Leslie Frazier. Saleh was fired by the New York Jets five games into his fourth season in 2024. Frazier, the assistant head coach in Seattle this season, spent three-plus years as coach of the Minnesota Vikings a decade ago.
The Dallas Cowboys started their official search foe a head coach on Friday and got involved in a virtual and interview with top candidate Kellen Moore.
The Dallas Cowboys have requested permission to interview Philadelphia offensive coordinator Kellen Moore ... Saleh and Leslie Frazier, the person told The Associated Press. Moore has a long ...
The Cowboys announced they have completed an interview with Kellen Moore for their vacant coaching position, the team announced.
Moore was Dallas franchise quarterback Dak Prescott’s play-caller from 2019-2022, which included the first three years of McCarthy’s five-year tenure.
Philadelphia Eagles offensive coordinator Kellen Moore, a Boise State Hall of Fame member, completed a virtual interview with the Dallas Cowboys on Friday for t
On the latest Scoop City podcast, reporter Dianna Russini and former NFL quarterback Chase Daniel outlined why Moore is currently " the hot name " to land the open Cowboys gig—even with speculation swirling around Colorado coach Deion Sanders.
Sports experts have argued that McCarthy's three (12-5) winning seasons may not have been a strong enough case to keep him in Dallas for a sixth season.