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Cowboys' Jerry Jones Will Fire 'Schotty,' Claims Colin Cowherd in Surprise Prediction

Cowboys' Jerry Jones Will Fire 'Schotty,' Claims Colin Cowherd in Surprise Prediction

Yahoo3 days ago
Cowboys' Jerry Jones Will Fire 'Schotty,' Claims Colin Cowherd in Surprise Prediction originally appeared on Athlon Sports.
FRISCO — The Dallas Cowboys have their naysayers, and coming off a 7-10 season tacked on to their infamous "30-year championship drought?"
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Maybe "America's Team'' has fed those naysayers full of Dallas doubt.
New head coach Brian Schottenheimer, of course, has very little to do with the Cowboys' many years of being "almost good enough,'' which is, I think, a fair characterization of this team's annual status.
So — give it time — I say "Schotty'' has yet to earn the skepticism being shoveled out by the national media as it constructs its storylines and predictions for the upcoming 2025 season. ...
But old friend Fox Sports 1's Colin Cowherd is nevertheless shoveling out a pair of doozies, one shovelful burying Dallas and the other shovelful burying its coach.
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Cowherd is announcing his NFC bold predictions, and he has gone in double-hard on the Cowboys.
He expects them to get humiliated ... and often.
And he expects owner Jerry Jones to fire Schotteheimer after one season.
Brace yourself ...
"Brian Schottenheimer is a one and done," Cowherd said, adding that he thinks this is his "least surprising prediction.'' "Jerry will know by Thanksgiving he made a huge mistake. Forget the fact that Philadelphia and Washington will probably blow them out in the division twice. 'One and done' happens all the time now.
"I think Dallas is going to be humiliated on a lot of Sundays."
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Having been a guest on "The Herd'' more than a few times over the years, I've had the opportunity to experience "off-the-air'' and "pre-show'' Cowherd. So I can say that more than many in his chair, he takes doing his homework seriously.
But these two views don't show that.
To the two predictions ...
One — Jerry Jones, for a variety of reasons and over 36 seasons, has never fired a head coach after one year. Chan Gailey was not an organizational favorite, but he got two years. Dave Campo was an organizational favorite — with two Super Bowl rings — but he lasted three years here while going 5-11 in each of those campaigns.
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There is simply no precedent in Dallas upon which to base this prediction.
Additionally, by the way, Colin's assertion that "one-and-done'' NFL coach firings are some sort of a trend is way off.
Said Colin: "We've got a lot of one and dones happening now, David Culley, Steve Wilks, Urban Meyer, Nathaniel Hackett, Antonio Pierce, Jerod Mayo. ... One and done happens all the time now.''
Wait a sec. Culley was fired by the Texans three years ago. Hackett was fired by the Broncos three years ago. Meyer was fired by the Jaguars four years ago. Wilks was fired by the Cardinals seven years ago.
In the last 10 years, there have been around 75 different men hired to be NFL head coaches. And Cowherd is citing the firing of five of them as a trend that's "happening all the time now?"
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Based simply on the data, he's dead wrong.
Now to the numbers as they relate to the Cowboys getting "humiliated'' on the scoreboard on some sort of regular basis in 2025, with a focus on Washington and Philly. ... and let's go back a decade again.
In the Dak Prescott era, he's 11-2 vs. Washington. And he's 9-4 vs. Philadelphia.
So not only does Dallas not get blown out and "humiliated'' by those two NFC East rivals; Dallas usually wins those games.
Even last year, the 7-10 Cowboys didn't get blown out by the Commanders. They beat them in Week 12, Dallas winning 34-26, and they lost at the buzzer in Week 18 against third-string scrub QB Trey Lance in a 23-19 loss.
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As for the Eagles and their Dak history as it relates to blowouts?
It's really happened just once, a 37-9 loss in 2017.
Once. In a decade.
That 9-4 lifetime record against Philly is a number most "casual'' Cowboys fans know. I say respectfully that Colin should also have it memorized.
So, the Cowboys getting blown out by both Washington and Philadelphia (all four times?!) in 2025? There is no evidence there.
And the Cowboys firing Brian Schottenheimer in one-and-done fashion? There is no evidence there, either.
I say it a lot around here, to our 75-member staff and to you: "We're all entitled to our opinions, but opinions without facts are worthless.''
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And ... so here we are.
Naysayers' eye-catching opinions ... in conflict with hard Cowboys facts.
Related: 'We're Going To Win!' Bold Announcement Issued by Cowboys Coach Brian Schottenheimer
Related: Cowboys' 'Bazooka Joe' Milton 3 Steps Away From Winning Dak Backup Job
This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 27, 2025, where it first appeared.
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INDYCAR Midseason Report: The Good, Bad & Ugly For Teams, Drivers
INDYCAR Midseason Report: The Good, Bad & Ugly For Teams, Drivers

Fox News

time14 minutes ago

  • Fox News

INDYCAR Midseason Report: The Good, Bad & Ugly For Teams, Drivers

With nine races down and eight races remaining this INDYCAR season, it's time to take a look at how teams have fared so far. It is just past the midway point of the campaign, but the season started nearly four months ago and the final eight races will run over a span of nine weeks — including a doubleheader weekend at Iowa. So what has each team done, and what do they need to do over the last couple of months? Let's take a look as the series heads to Mid-Ohio on Sunday (1 p.m. ET on FOX). The teams are in order of their top driver in the standings: First in the standings: Alex Palou Fifth: Scott Dixon 16th: Kyffin Simpson Midseason Report: Obviously there's no arguing Palou's success and domination. Even after winning back-to-back titles, this was hard to predict. The Indianapolis 500 victory certainly would rank as the highlight for an organization that had won that race only once in the last 12 years. Both Dixon and Simpson are higher in points than they were at the end of 2024, but both certainly wish they had better results. Ganassi scaled from five cars to three with the 2025 season and the new charter system, but that focus on three cars has seemed to only really help one. Looking Ahead: Dixon needs a win, and that could be harder to come by as the hybrid has neutralized some of the advantage he had in managing fuel mileage. Simpson needs to continue improving. Palou just needs to keep the points lead, and unless another driver goes on a mega run, he should be able to do just that. Second: Kyle Kirkwood10th: Colton Herta 21st: Marcus Ericsson Midseason Report: Kirkwood (three victories) is having a breakout season. Some people saw this coming, as he continued to gain experience in INDYCAR after a successful career racing up the open-wheel ladder. Herta has shown glimpses of greatness but not enough. 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UPenn to ban transgender athletes, feds say, ending civil rights case focused on swimmer Lia Thomas
UPenn to ban transgender athletes, feds say, ending civil rights case focused on swimmer Lia Thomas

Associated Press

time15 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

UPenn to ban transgender athletes, feds say, ending civil rights case focused on swimmer Lia Thomas

WASHINGTON (AP) — The University of Pennsylvania has agreed to ban transgender women from its women's sports teams to resolve a federal civil rights case that found the school violated the rights of female athletes. The U.S. Education Department announced the voluntary agreement Tuesday. The case focused on Lia Thomas, the transgender swimmer who last competed for the Ivy League school in Philadelphia in 2022, when she became the first openly transgender athlete to win a Division I title. It's part of the Trump administration's broader attempt to remove transgender athletes from girls' and women's sports. Under the agreement, Penn agreed to restore all individual Division I swimming records and titles to female athletes who lost out to Thomas, the Education Department said. Penn also agreed to send a personalized apology letter to each of those swimmers. It wasn't immediately clear whether Thomas would be stripped of her awards and honors at Penn. The university must also announce that it 'will not allow males to compete in female athletic programs' and it must adopt 'biology-based' definitions of male and female, the department said. Education Secretary Linda McMahon called it a victory for women and girls. 'The Department commends UPenn for rectifying its past harms against women and girls, and we will continue to fight relentlessly to restore Title IX's proper application and enforce it to the fullest extent of the law,' McMahon said in a statement. The Education Department opened its investigation in February and concluded in April that Penn had violated Title IX, a 1972 law forbidding sex discrimination in education. Such findings have almost always been resolved through voluntary agreements. If Penn had fought the finding, the department could have moved to refer the case to the Justice Department or pursued a separate process to cut the school's federal funding. In February, the Education Department asked the NCAA and the National Federation of State High School Associations, or NFSHSA, to restore titles, awards and records it says have been 'misappropriated by biological males competing in female categories.' The most obvious target at the college level was in women's swimming, where Thomas won the national title in the 500-yard freestyle in 2022. The NCAA has updated its record books when recruiting and other violations have stripped titles from certain schools, but the organization, like the NFSHSA, has not responded to the federal government's request. Determining which events had a transgender athlete participating years later would be challenging. ___ The Associated Press' education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP's standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at

Penguins' rebuild is painful, but it might just be perfectly timed
Penguins' rebuild is painful, but it might just be perfectly timed

New York Times

time19 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Penguins' rebuild is painful, but it might just be perfectly timed

The Athletic has live coverage of NHL free agency. PITTSBURGH — July 1 used to be a day of great celebration for Pittsburgh Penguins fans, as their favorite team signed or traded for big names to help their Stanley Cup push for the better part of two decades. Memorably, Phil Kessel joined the Penguins 10 years ago today. Those were the days. Advertisement These most certainly are not the days, unless signing Parker Wotherspoon revs your engine. But they are necessary days. The Penguins aren't going to be very good in 2025-26. On paper, they're one Sidney Crosby injury away from being one of the five worst teams in the NHL. They might be headed in that direction even if Crosby stays healthy and continues to defy age. The great philosopher Wayne Campbell long ago gave us this line: 'It's like coming home on Friday night and doing your homework right away so that your Saturday night is free to just party.' That pretty much sums it up. Right now in Pittsburgh, it's 8 p.m. on a Friday. You aren't out partying, eating a nice dinner or playing video games — or even reading a fulfilling book. You're not at the mall or wherever kids have fun these days. No, you're in your bedroom by yourself, doing that chemistry homework. Your mom took your phone away for the night. No human contact. Just you and your homework. It's miserable. It's boring. It feels like it'll never end. You're missing out. But Saturday is coming. And it might be a little sweeter than you might have imagined. The Penguins have made many mistakes in the past few years, and there's enough blame to go around. Jim Rutherford is in the Hockey Hall of Fame for a reason, but some of his decisions in the post-Stanley Cup years certainly didn't work out. Any GM would've picked Matt Murray over Marc-Andre Fleury, but it failed. Ron Hextall? Well, not everything he did was wrong, believe it or not, but he did plenty of damage. I'm hardly going to bore you with the details. The first few months of the Kyle Dubas era gave us Ryan Graves, Erik Karlsson, Noel Acciari, five more years of Tristan Jarry and six more weeks of winter. To Dubas' credit, he realized fairly quickly that he made mistakes in the summer of 2023 and it was time to try something new. We're 18 months into that rebuild. It might not seem like it, but he has made great progress. The Penguins have about 10 to 12 legitimately good prospects in their system now. When Dubas took over, they had maybe two or three. Advertisement Now, suddenly, the Penguins hold a considerable amount of leverage. They just need to be patient for a little longer, and then it could be party time. Let's consider what's going on around the league and specifically with the Penguins: • The salary cap is going way up. Predictably, teams are spending that extra money without much thought. Average defensemen are signing long deals for $5 million a year. • Almost every team thinks it's good or has a chance to be good next season. Maybe they're right. That's the beauty of parity. • By contrast, the Penguins know full well they aren't good and likely won't be next season. Though it's never fun to look in the mirror and not like what you see, at least Dubas is being honest about what he sees in the current roster. You may hate that. You may want him to go on a spending spree in hopes of a miracle season. But Dubas knows better. He knows the odds of that are extremely minimal. • The 2026 NHL Draft class, by all accounts, is superb. The Penguins are almost certainly going to get a high first-round pick next June. They also have three second-round picks and two third-round picks in the draft. • It's becoming clearer that either Bryan Rust or Rickard Rakell — perhaps both — are going to be traded before the deadline in March. Each player might bring the Penguins a first-round pick in that mighty 2026 draft. • Some teams are said to be terrified of losing a 2026 first-round draft pick. Fair enough. That just means those teams, if they want to improve, will have to part with top-notch prospects or top-tier young NHL players they ordinarily would not trade. Any way you look at this, the Penguins win. They are one of the only sellers in the league, so they have a serious opportunity. It's not just about all of those draft picks and prospects in their very near future. Advertisement Yes, the Penguins are going to enjoy a substantial wave of young talent in the coming years, but notice how patient Dubas is right now. Jokes aside, the Wotherspoon signing was decent business. Two years at a $1 million cap hit for a young third-pairing defenseman is fine. They also made modest signings in bringing back Philip Tomasino and Connor Dewar on affordable one-year contracts. And because of that type of restraint, the Penguins are going to have serious money to spend soon. Evgeni Malkin, Acciari, Kevin Hayes, Danton Heinen, Blake Lizotte, Connor Clifton and Ryan Shea are off the books after this coming season. Do you think any of them will be around when the Penguins contend again? Of course not. By next July 1, the Penguins are scheduled to have $50 million in cap space. That number will go down, but you get the point. By then, teams will have slowed their spending frenzies because they'll realize you don't find great value in free agency. Trade costs will go down — relatively speaking — because teams will need to shed salary after spending so frivolously. But not the Penguins, who by then will have a group of talented, cheap, young players ready to make their mark and will be able to make a huge dent in free agency. They also won't be desperate because Dubas has a plan: play the long game. As they so often have done before, the Penguins picked a good time to rebuild. Gavin McKenna is out there among the many other outrageously gifted prospects. There's no way around it: These are tough times for the Penguins and their fans. They might bottom out next season. But then you look around the NHL today and see all of the stupid money being spent. The Penguins have needed to rebuild for a long time. They finally are, and they may have picked an ideal time to do it. Saturday night might be a couple of years away, but it's coming. Time to do some homework. (Photo of Parker Wotherspoon: Luke Hales / Getty Images)

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