QUINIX Sport News: Mike McCarthy comes out looking like the winner in split from Cowboys

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McCarthy had some flaws, but what he managed to get from his Dallas teams despite significant obstacles makes him look better than Jerry Jones.

In most years, they left the Dallas Cowboys richer — but also worse for wear when it came to the NFL’s appetite for their next head coaching job.

Chan Gailey. Dave Campo. Wade Phillips. Even Jason Garrett. All capable. Maybe able to wrangle a second head coaching shot in a less-than-ideal situation. Most ended their careers stranded on the same island of rejection, branded as better supporting actors than leading men. Tom Landry and Barry Switzer never coached in the NFL again after getting axed by Jerry Jones; Landry because he was too old, Switzer because he was too unpredictable.

Two left with their coaching stars intact, if not slightly enhanced. Jimmy Johnson for being the architect and driver of the last Cowboys mini-dynasty. And Bill Parcells for going into retirement with a winning record, while also leaving behind a masterfully developed Tony Romo at quarterback.

Mike McCarthy, despite his flaws, exits Dallas in the latter class — leaving the Cowboys better off than he arrived.

That’s what I heard after making calls across the league about McCarthy. Largely only positive opinions that credit a head coach who notched three straight 12-win seasons, sandwiched between two years when his centerpiece quarterback suffered consequential season-ending injuries in 2020 and 2024. All while the Cowboys were often bargain shoppers in free agency, with his team owner-general manager regularly waxing about the operation — sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse, and sometimes for the demonstrably odd or anecdotally confusing.

If anything, McCarthy leaves Dallas as the good soldier. The guy who sat through seemingly every season-opening news conference in Oxnard under a subtle cloud — or sometimes not so subtle — questioning what might happen if this was another season the Cowboys didn’t take the big step forward. The guy who had to figure out ways to reinvigorate Ezekiel Elliott as a short-yardage running back, elevate Dak Prescott from a mid-level starter to an MVP candidate in 2023, and squeeze every last ounce from an accomplished offensive line that was fading faster than anyone realized.

ARLINGTON, TEXAS - DECEMBER 09: Dak Prescott #4 and Dallas Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy talk prior to the game against the Cincinnati Bengals at AT&T Stadium on December 09, 2024 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images)ARLINGTON, TEXAS - DECEMBER 09: Dak Prescott #4 and Dallas Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy talk prior to the game against the Cincinnati Bengals at AT&T Stadium on December 09, 2024 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images)
A season-ending hamstring injury sidelined Dak Prescott and limited Mike McCarthy’s ceiling in Dallas in the 2024 season. (Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images)

None of this is meant to imply McCarthy was a great coach in Dallas. He almost always had rosters stocked with good players, including the 2022 and 2023 teams, which should be counted among the best since the franchise’s heyday under Jerry in the 1990s. McCarthy did good things and bad.

He went 1-3 in the playoffs and never consistently balanced out the offense with a running game when it mattered most. Surely he’d like some play-calls and botched moments in game management back. Maybe the clock expiring in regulation without a play against the San Francisco 49ers in the 2022 season’s divisional round of the playoffs. Definitely the curb-stomping loss to the Green Bay Packers in the 2023 season’s wild-card round, which might haunt him forever.

While you could argue that some did more with less over the past five years, few put up a fight the way he did with extended starts from backup quarterbacks Andy Dalton and Cooper Rush. They went a combined 13-10 under McCarthy in situations when the Cowboys easily could have fared far worse. And nobody in the league operated so steadily in the middle of a team owner-driven circus, which featured Jerry doing things, or saying things or getting caught up in the middle of things that had other organizations shaking their heads in disbelief. To the point that “I feel for Mike,” was a regular part of the league discourse about McCarthy’s stint in Dallas.

In the bigger picture, this is what has McCarthy walking out of Dallas as a winner. He went in as a recycled head coaching hire who was almost universally panned in 2020, then got the Cowboys back onto a winning track that made a Super Bowl window at least attainable … even if it was never seized upon in his tenure. Now he departs Dallas as a genuinely coveted high-end asset on the head coaching market. Under the ownership of Jerry, only Jimmy Johnson accomplished that kind of exit.

Impressively, McCarthy accomplished it without public acrimony, despite Jones refusing to let McCarthy speak to the Chicago Bears until his contract had officially expired — which now looks borderline petty, and might have been used as a tool by Jerry to make it look to players like Prescott and Micah Parsons that Jones was interested in retaining his head coach right up to the end. That would be a dubious suggestion now, of course. If Jones had any real interest in keeping McCarthy, he could have accomplished before riding him into a lame duck season, or at least swiftly moving to secure McCarthy after the Cowboys’ season ended. Instead, Jones put on a song and dance about how impressed he was that the locker room was continuing to fight for McCarthy even when there was nothing left to play for but pride. All of which made Jerry’s life only more complicated when both Prescott and Parsons backed a McCarthy return that, unbeknownst to them, was not in the plans.

 

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