Analysis: Looking into Mike Tomlin, Pete Carroll or Mike McCarthy is a bit like looking at a history book and the Bears should be trying to find someone on the
Personally, we are torn on the idea. McCarthy doesn’t bring a lot of innovation to the table in terms of scheme but one big edge he has over Tomlin is his willingness to let his offensive and defensive coordinators implement their systems rather than run what he wants.
Johnson suggested that the Steelers and similarly stale Dallas Cowboys should swap Tomlin for Mike McCarthy. To shake things up. At the risk of hyperbole and with all due respect to the “Music City Miracle,” that would be one of the biggest lateral moves in NFL history.
The Dallas Cowboys appear to be preparing to keep head coach Mike McCarthy, although no announcement on a new contract has been made yet. McCarthy's current deal is set to expire on January 14. If the Cowboys,
Jimmy Johnson, Jerry Jones’ Super Bowl-winning coach from the 1990s, popped on Fox Sports on Sunday to propose a swap: Mike Tomlin to Dallas. Mike McCarthy to Pittsburgh. Wouldja?
Steelers coach Mike Tomlin might not be appreciated by certain members of the sports media and even some Steelers fans, but one pundit would love nothing more than to have Tomlin coach his favorite NFL team next season,
Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin has a strong response to rumors the Chicago Bears -- or other teams -- may want to trade for him.
The Fox analyst and former Cowboys Super-Bowl winning coach proposed a radical concept to help galvanize the stagnant Dallas and Pittsburgh franchises.
With just two days until time runs out on Mike McCarthy‘s contract as head coach of the Dallas Cowboys, team owner Jerry Jones has yet to extend a new offer McCarthy’s way. Is Jones’ delay in making a decision on McCarthy’s future a calculated one?
Upsets this weekend by the Rams and Commanders could put the NFC title game in Los Angeles next weekend, after the NFL moved an opening-round playoff game to Arizona.
It was a sequence that perfectly captured the Pittsburgh Steelers’ desultory first-round playoff loss to the Baltimore Ravens on Saturday night, and also the desultory, mediocre reality that has surrounded the Steelers for a decade now.