The Dallas Cowboys and Chicago Bears are reportedly set to interview former New York Jets head coach Robert Saleh for their opening
ESPN's Adam Schefter reported that the Chicago Bears have chosen former Detroit Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson as their next head coach and are finalizing contract details.
While they acted quickly in interviewing former New York Jets head coach and 49ers DC Robert Saleh, and Detroit Lions defensive backs coach Deshea Townsend, their search appears to have stalled. Now they’re running out of options.
The first name that drew widespread attention after McCarthy's departure was Deion Sanders. But three others are getting interviews.
With Johnson heading to Chicago and Mike Vrabel already in New England, five head coaching vacancies remain. The Jets, Saints, Jaguars, Raiders and Cowboys are still in the hunt. Johnson, who was Detroit’s offensive coordinator, agreed to become the Chicago Bears head coach on Monday, two days after the No. 1 seeded Lions lost to Washington.
FRISCO, Texas – The Dallas Cowboys interviewed former New York Jets coach Robert Saleh on Saturday ... Green Bay coach interviewed for the Chicago Bears' opening this week.
The Dallas Cowboys said they have completed an interview with Seattle Seahawks assistant head coach Leslie Frazier.
The San Francisco 49ers have targeted Robert Saleh to return to the team and fill their defensive coordinator vacancy, but his status becomes more in question as the Jacksonville Jaguars have requested a second interview with him.
The Jaguars announced Monday they have scheduled in-person interviews with three of their 10 initial candidates: Buccaneers offensive coordinator Liam Coen, Raiders defensive coordinator Patrick Graham,
The Las Vegas Raiders job is also available... and they also tried to hire Johnson... it just didn't go quite as well. Part owner Tom Brady spent "hours" on a Zoom call with Johnson last weekend, according to ESPN's Dianna Russini.
The Las Vegas Raiders missed out on Ben Johnson. Here's five more coaching candidates they can't afford to slip up on either.