Nearly every mock draft leading up to Thursday night’s festivities caveated their selection for Dallas at number 10 by saying “Dallas will probably trade this, BUT…” and more often than not, Dereck Lively II was the pick. It just made too much sense. The Mavericks have been bereft of high-end frontcourt talent in the front court for years, no offense to Maxi Kleber or Dwight Powell, and finished dead last in rebounding last year.
Lively, outside of the obvious number-one pick Victor Wembenyama, was the best center in the draft, and by a fairly wide margin apparently, as no other centers were drafted between Lively at 12 and the end of the first round. James Nnaji was picked at 31 by the Charlotte Hornets.
However, things started getting interesting on draft night. Denizens of NBA Draft Twitter were told to be on the lookout for a Cam Whitmore slide. Lo and behold, Whitmore was still available as the 10th pick approached. News of the trade-down that sent the 10th pick and Davis Bertans to Oklahoma City for the 12th pick had Mavericks fans pulling out their hair, but then, what do you know, Whitmore was still there at 12! A bad contract off the books and a huge talent falling into our laps! They could have their cake and eat it too! And then they took Lively.
Clearly, NBA front offices know something about Whitmore the general public does not, because the potential top-5 pick slid all the way to Houston at 20. So, with Whitmore off Dallas’ – and many other teams’ boards for reasons that will surely become illuminated – Lively was the clear, perhaps only, reasonable option. After Lively went to Dallas at 12, a run of five guards followed until Miami at 18. Unless the Mavericks were prepared to drop all the way into the 20s, the 12 pick was likely the latest they could have taken someone to help in the center spot without making an enormous reach.
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Dallas with Luka Doncic and Kyrie Irving all but assured to be the backcourt tandem and Josh Green and Jaden Hardy ready for rotation minutes, had no interest in adding another young player in the guard position. If Taylor Hendricks had slid past nine to Dallas, this would perhaps be a different conversation, but as it stands, Dallas looks to have pulled the ripcord at precisely the right time, nabbing them the guy they wanted all along and opening up roster flexibility at the same time. Flexibility that they would use later in the night to acquire Richaun Holmes and the 24th pick from the Sacramento Kings.
Champ Bailey on former teammate Deion Sanders potentially becoming the HC in Dallas
Champ Bailey discusses the possibility of Deion Sanders becoming the next head coach of the Dallas Cowboys.
Sports Seriously
The stars shine bright in Dallas.
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More often than not, it’s also how the Dallas Cowboys conduct business — the franchise searches far and wide for the biggest names in the NFL. America’s Team would have it no other way … especially in a coaching search.
After their parting of ways with Mike McCarthy, it comes as no surprise that everyone is trying to keep up with what Jerry Jones’ team will do. There’s the potential big splash (see: Colorado head coach Deion Sanders). There’s the homegrown talent, like Kellen Moore. There’s the outside-the-box pick, like Jason Witten. There’s the more conventional route, like Robert Saleh and Leslie Frazier.
The list will almost certainly grow over time as the team looks to steal headlines and, eventually, win games with their next hire. Anything goes deep in the heart of Texas, which makes for an exciting coaching search to follow.
Here’s the latest on the Cowboys’ search for a new head coach.
COWBOYS COACHING CANDIDATES: Deion Sanders among Mike McCarthy replacement options
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Cowboys head coach search rumors, news, updates
This section will be updated as interviews occur and relevant news about potential candidates becomes available.
Kellen Moore a top candidate for Cowboys’ HC
On Thursday, the Cowboys officially requested to interview Moore, the current Eagles’ offensive coordinator. He formerly held the same title in Dallas before the sides mutually agreed to part ways following the 2022 season. In the four seasons that Moore coached the offense, it finished in the top-10 three times.
Moore, undrafted out of Boise State, played for the Cowboys from 2015 to 2017 before transitioning into the team’s quarterbacks coach in 2018. He was then given the OC responsibilities from 2019 to 2022 and was a holdover from Jason Garrett’s staff to McCarthy’s.
Rapoport said Moore is considered a “top candidate” for the job and that his familiarity with the organization makes this potential partnership one to keep an eye on.
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MORE: Troy Aikman rips Cowboys for parting with Mike McCarthy: ‘Not a real plan’
Deion Sanders would ‘almost certainly’ accept Cowboys’ job if offered
Sanders was initially believed to be a long shot, but the noise is getting too loud to ignore. Jones is reportedly enamored with the idea, according to Werder, meaning the rumors will continue to swirl until the search is over. NFL Network’s Jane Slater reported Thursday that Sanders approached Colorado’s athletic director, Rick George, on Tuesday about additional money for NIL and his staff, but was met with resistance. Sanders, who played for the Cowboys, previously said he had no interest in coaching in the NFL. That seems to have changed in recent weeks.
Robert Saleh to interview this week
Saleh, the former Jets coach, is set to interview for the Cowboys’ job this week. The former 49ers’ defensive coordinator seems likely to land a job for 2025, whether that is as a coordinator or head coach.
Cowboys request interview with Seahawks’ Leslie Frazier
Frazier is also slated to interview for the Dallas gig. He comes with plenty of experience, serving previously as the head coach in Minnesota and more recently as the Buffalo defensive coordinator before spending last season in Seattle.
Jason Witten was seen as potential heir apparent to Mike McCarthy
Witten was reportedly floated as a potential heir apparent in negotiations with McCarthy, who opted to pursue other opportunities, according to Slater. Jones thinks very highly of Witten, but it’s unclear whether he will be a head coaching candidate. The former Cowboys’ tight end doesn’t have any NFL or college coaching experience, but has been the head coach at Liberty Christian in Argyle, Texas, since 2021.
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Cowboys coaching candidates
Here is a look at who the Cowboys have interest in or requested to interview thus far:
Colorado Buffaloes head coach Deion Sanders “would almost certainly accept” an offer from Jerry Jones to become the next head coach of the Dallas Cowboys, according to veteran NFL reporter Ed Werder.
And not only is Coach Prime apparently interested, but people around the coach are encouraging him to take the position and that Jones is also “enamored” of the idea, Werder added.
Sanders appeared to emerge as a candidate to become the Cowboys’ next head coach after it was revealed he and Jones spoke about the position in a recent phone call.
That call became public shortly after the Cowboys and former head coach Mike McCarthy agreed to part ways, and Fox Sports reported that there was mutual interest between Prime and America’s Team.
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For his part, Sanders did confirm the phone call took place and that he was intrigued by the conversation he had with Jones and at the idea of leading the Cowboys franchise.
“To hear from Jerry Jones is truly delightful and it’s intriguing,” Sanders said to ESPN.
“I love Jerry and I believe in Jerry. After you hang up and process it and think about it, it’s intriguing. But I love Boulder and everything there is about our team, the coaches, our student body, and the community.”
Amid all the speculation and rumors, there’s still nothing set in place between the two.
Despite all the talk, the Cowboys and Sanders have not scheduled an official in-person interview about the position, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter.
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But “the conversations will continue,” Schefter noted on ESPN.
“Deion said to me he’s intrigued with the job, and clearly, Jerry Jones is intrigued, too. Those two men know each other so well. They don’t have to have a lot of conversations,” Schefter said.
While everyone is busy intrigued by the idea, the Cowboys have been setting up formal interviews with other candidates not named Deion Sanders to replace McCarthy.
Still, the prospect of Prime returning to Dallas is too interesting to not entertain.
Especially considering a cryptic message Schefter says he received from a high-level NFL exec.
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“I can’t help but think of, about 16, 17 months ago, I had an NFL general manager call me up and said, ‘I want you to write this down right now: the next head coach of the Dallas Cowboys is going to be Deion Sanders. Take it to the bank because of the respect that exists between Deion Sanders and Jerry Jones and vice versa,’” Schefter said.
Sanders has stated repeatedly that he intends to stay with the Colorado program and help build it back into a national contender.
So far, that project has gone well after he improved from his 4-8 debut in 2023 to a 9-4 effort in 2024 that saw the Buffaloes briefly in the Big 12 title picture late in the season.
Key to that effort was the play of eventual Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter, the two-way player at defensive back and wide receiver.
Sanders’ own sons were also prominent in that improvement: his son, Shedeur, quarterbacked the team to one of the nation’s most productive offenses.
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And another son, defensive back Shilo, was also an important piece of that puzzle.
But now all three of those players are getting ready to leave Colorado and enter the NFL Draft, where they’ll all be highly-coveted prospects for teams to choose from.
And while Sanders said that he intends to stay at Colorado, he did also leave a hint that there’s one exception he would take into consideration.
“The only way I would consider, is to coach my sons,” he told Good Morning America. “Not son. Sons.”
The apparent interest between Sanders and Jones could suggest there’s another exception the coach would consider, but until anything happens, it’s all just talk.
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