Stephen A. Smith has embraced needling the Dallas Cowboys and their fans as a recurring bit and the franchise has provided him ample opportunity to do so in recent years. The face of ESPN pushed quite hard for the Cowboys to hire Deion Sanders but Jerry Jones instead opted to go the very boring route with Brian Schottenheimer.
Stephen A. Smith was on ‘First Take,’ criticizing Jerry Jones’ hiring of Brian Schottenehimer as Dallas Cowboys head coach.
Jones has been making mistakes left, right, and center lately. His most recent head coaching hire, Brian Schottenheimer, was not well-received by the greater NFL world, but especially not by the Cowboys faithful, as Dominique Foxworth pointed out.
According to Smith, Sanders could significantly impact the Cowboys' 2025 fortunes in a positive way. He issued a championship prediction for Dallas should Sanders end up getting the nod from owner Jerry Jones in the wake of Mike McCarthy 's exit from the team.
Stephen A. Smith calls out Jerry Jones after the Cowboys settled on Brian Schottenheimer to be the team's new head coach.
The team announced Friday night that former offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer will be the tenth head coach in Cowboys history.
An optimistic Brian Schottenheimer, 51, introduced as coach of the Dallas Cowboys on Monday, told reporters "the objective and the main thing is we want to win the Super Bowl," and he told ESPN's Todd Archer that he believes the club can win "quickly.
Because he's LeBron James's son, though, Bronny was a topic on First Take on Wednesday, providing the opportunity for Stephen A. Smith to make a fatherly request.
Bronny James got his most playing time of the season on Tuesday night, but struggled mightily against the Philadelphia 76ers, causing a rant from Stephen A. Smith.
In a recent episode of First Take, Stephen A. Smith has asked Lakers star LeBron James "as a father" to put a stop to Bronny James playing in the NBA.
The Dallas Cowboys hosted the introductory press conference for newly appointed head coach Brian Schottenheimer, but several comments from Stephen and Jerry Jones were sour notes.
Brian Schottenheimer says he's “ready” to be coach of the Dallas Cowboys after a long career as an NFL assistant