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Will Jones hold true to his word and not fire Phillips?

Owner can't be trusted

Kevin Van Valkenburg

Baltimore Sun

Never trust an oil man to tell you the truth. Not in business, in politics, and especially not in matters pertaining to football.

Of course there is a chance Jerry Jones will still fire Wade Phillips before the season ends. He can argue otherwise until his face lift is blue, and I'm still not buying it.

True, the Cowboys' season is pretty much toast. And despite what every fantasy wonk or ESPN analyst — most notably former players like Keyshawn Johnson — are saying, this team isn't that good. It never was that good. It's a collection of talented individuals, not a team, and some people still don't understand the difference.

But at some point, Jones is going to realize he's paying Phillips to fail in public, and it's tarnishing the Cowboy star. He'll show Phillips the door, then give Jason Garrett a chance to steer the sinking ship into port.

kvanvalkenburg2@tribune.com

No reason to wait

Tom Housenick

Morning Call

First, Jerry Jones never should have hired Wade Phillips. Phillips is a good defensive coordinator, but he's not a head coach. Second, Jones never should have made any promises about sticking with Phillips until this season ends. Third, Jones should have fired Phillips the minute last Sunday's game with the Vikings ended. A lack of discipline is obvious.

Phillips was 48-37 as an NFL head coach prior to coming to Dallas. He is 34-19 with a wealth of money and players at his disposal. Yet, only one playoff win for the Cowboys during his tenure. If he were coaching in many other NFL cities, that would be OK.

But leading America's Team, those are reasons to be fired.

Now.

thousenick@tribune.com

Coach's job is safe

Sam Farmer

Los Angeles Times

Jerry Jones is true to his word on this. He's not going to fire Wade Phillips, even if the Cowboys continue to circle the drain. Jones has never fired a coach during the season, and he isn't going to do so as the NFL heads into the fog of labor uncertainty.

First, there's the money issue. As wealthy as Jones is, he hates more than anything the idea of paying a guy not to coach. Phillips was getting about $3 million per year, and recently signed an extension that's believed to pay him closer to $4 million. Jones isn't going to let that slide. What's more, there's not a viable replacement on the staff.

The way the Cowboys' offense has struggled has done nothing for offensive coordinator Jason Garrett, who has lost his luster with that franchise.

You can expect Phillips as Dallas' coach until there's some resolution to the labor dispute.

sfarmer@tribune.com

No benefit canning him

Dan Pompei

Chicago Tribune

Wade Phillips doesn't have to be checking under his office doors for pink slips until January because there really is no benefit in firing him now. Assuming Phillips is gone, his long-term replacement likely will not be an in-house hire.

Jerry Jones will probably look to make a splashy hire, and he won't be able to do that until the offseason unless he can somehow lure one of the rock star broadcasters back to the sidelines. The labor issues and the potential for a work stoppage also make it beneficial for owners like Jones to wait before making coaching moves because delaying a hiring means delaying writing checks.

The other issue Jones has to consider is interim head coaches rarely have any more success than their predecessors.

dpompei@tribune.com

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