The Dallas Cowboys announced on Saturday that they completed an interview with Robert Saleh for the team's open head coaching job.
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.
Minute-by-minute, story-by-story, we will report on what's going on here inside The Star and around the NFL in our Cowboys Coaching Carousel.
Until Deion Sanders gives Jerry Jones a straight-up "no" regarding the Dallas Cowboys head coaching vacancy ... on $104 million in dead cap space to trade Dak Prescot to the Tennessee Titans for the No. 1 overall pick in the 2025 NFL Draft so they can ...
The Detroit Lions have managed to eclipse both the Kansas City Chiefs and the Dallas Cowboys by becoming the most watched team throughout the 2024/25 NFL season as they claimed the
The East-West Shrine Bowl offers NFL teams a unique opportunity to evaluate top collegiate prospects ahead of April’s NFL Draft. This year, the Tennessee Titans
The countdown to Super Bowl LIX is on and talkSPORT.com will keep you up to date with all the news from around the league. The race to New Orleans on February 9 has reached the win-or-go-home
After a 5-12, last-place season that included 10 consecutive losses and the in-season firings of coach Matt Eberflus and offensive coordinator Shane Waldron, the Chicago Bears are now embarking on a search to hire the franchise’s next head coach.
The Bears have confirmed interviewing 15 candidates, a list highlighted by Detroit Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson, former Seattle Seahawks coach Pete Carroll, former Green Bay Packers and Dallas Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy and former Tennessee Titans coach Mike Vrabel, who got the job in New England.
Upsets this weekend by the Rams and Commanders could put the NFC title game in Los Angeles next weekend, after the NFL moved an opening-round playoff game to Arizona.
Josh Allen and Lamar Jackson were both first-round picks, and are both on a Hall of Fame track. They also share the same legacy of not having won enough in the postseason.