San Diego Union-Tribune

GARRETT HAD HIS MOMENTS WITH COWBOYS

- BY JEFF MILLER Miller writes for the L.A. Times.

Giants offensive coordinato­r Jason Garrett, former head coach of the Dallas Cowboys, is among the potential candidates for the Chargers’ coaching job.

As the Chargers search for a new coach to replace Anthony Lynn, The L.A. Times will examine candidates the team plans to interview. This is the second in series of appraisals of the contenders, along with thoughts from L.A. Times NFL writer Sam Farmer:

Jason Garrett

Current job: New York Giants offensive coordinato­r

Age: 54

Credential­s: Garrett spent 9½ years as Dallas’ coach, compiling a regular-season record of 85-67 and winning three NFC East titles. (The Chargers haven’t finished first in the AFC West since 2009.) He had less success in the postseason, going 2-3 and never advancing beyond the divisional round.

Humble beginnings: As an undrafted free-agent quarterbac­k, Garrett spent a season on the developmen­tal squad of the New Orleans Saints. He was then released and returned to Princeton, his alma mater, to be an assistant coach for one season. Garrett eventually played in the World League and the Canadian Football League before carving out an eight-year career as an NFL backup.

One man’s view: “Let me tell you, no one in this country has earned the right to say ‘I’m a Jason Garrett man’ more than me. I am his man. And we want the very same thing. And that’s for our players to play at their very best, and we want his staff to coach at their very best.” — Dallas owner Jerry Jones, via NFL Network, six weeks before dismissing Garrett in January 2020

Did you know: Garrett comes from a football family. His father, Jim, spent more than 30 years in the NFL as a coach and scout. He has one brother, John, who is the coach at Lafayette College and another, Judd, who was a long time offensive assistant and worked in scouting for the Cowboys.

Sam Farmer’s take: Garrett’s a supersmart Princeton guy who might not be the f lashiest hire, but he’s never going to embarrass you. He was in the pressure chamber in Dallas, where everything is exaggerate­d — you’re either Super Bowl bound or the worst coach on the planet, depending on the week. Game management was the knock on him early in his career, but he got better at that. He was instrument­al in the developmen­t of Tony Romo and Dak Prescott, and he’s won a lot of games, even though his team never made it past the divisional round of the playoffs. Some people act as if he’s Rich Kotite or the like, but Garrett is a really good coach and can hold the attention of the room, whether it’s talking to a group of players or team owners.

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Jason Garrett

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