The Los Angeles Chargers will need to make several significant decisions this offseason. One of those decisions is whether to re-sign their star pass rusher.
Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones was one of many sports icons who donated to the Donald Trump Inauguration Committee
Bleacher Report seems to agree, as they listed Pipkins as the Chargers' top cap casualty heading into the offseason. He's set to make $9.3 million in 2025, with the Chargers saving $6.8 million by releasing him.
Schottenheimer began his coaching career back in 1997 when he landed an assistant position with the St. Louis Rams. Over the years, he has served on the coaching staff for teams such as the Washington Commanders, Los Angeles Chargers, New York Jets, Seattle Seahawks, Jacksonville Jaguars and several others.
Cowboys owner Jerry Jones confirmed Monday that, yes, he and Pro Football Hall of Famer/Colorado head coach Deion Sanders spoke before the team eventually hired Schottenheimer as the 10th head coach in franchise history.
But the Bolts made an equally important decision one year ago today when they brought on Joe Hortiz as the new Chargers General Manager. Hortiz had been up for other GM jobs around the league, but he knew it would take the perfect fit for him to leave Baltimore.
With Super Bowl 59 on the horizon, we only have one more game to worry about before the NFL goes into the heart of the offseason. While the AFC champion Kansas
For Cowboys officials, Schottenheimer became the logical choice regardless of what others thought because of the continuity he brings to the position. Schottenheimer joined the organization as an offensive consultant in 2022 and served as the team’s offensive coordinator for the past two seasons.
Once the NFL postseason comes, the stakes are raised, and it comes down to whether or not a quarterback is ready to rise to the occasion.
College-to-NFL head coaching jumps have been a rare occurrence in recent seasons. Fourty-three head coaches were hired between the 2019 and 2024 offseasons, and just four of them came directly from the college ranks: Kliff Kingsbury (Arizona Cardinals,
Schottenheimer replaced Mike McCarthy, who recently departed after five seasons. McCarthy (49-35) led the Cowboys to the postseason three times, getting just one victory. McCarthy also produced three consecutive 12-win seasons.