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Jerry Jones: Not Planned, But Garrett Was Coordinator

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INDIANAPOLIS –Owner/general manager Jerry Jones shed some light Sunday on head coach Jason Garrett's role in the offense last year, which was greater than expected going into the season. 

Jones said it's a fact that Garrett was really the offensive coordinator last year, despite Bill Callahan having that title. The Cowboys entered the year with a plan to lighten Garrett's offensive load, but that didn't come to fruition the way they'd planned. 

"That was one of the issues," Jones said. "It was unfair to Bill, but it was the offense that we'd had since we got there and it was very difficult. That's why we had such a hard time articulating it early. That's why we made some of the switches we made during the middle of the season. All of it was just manifested by the fact that it was just very difficult for Jason to get out of that role."

Jones said Garrett ended up having "the last pencil down all the way through." The original plan and design for Callahan to call the plays and serve as the offensive coordinator changed, and Jones said Callahan was frustrated and should have been.

Jones still called Callahan "a hell of a coach" and said he'll be involved heavily in the offense this year, although the offense will focus around incoming play-caller Scott Linehan. 

"There's a difference when you're sitting in the room as the head coach and you say, 'Wait a minute, you put some salt and pepper in there,'" Jones said. "Then, after it's already been cooked and you're tasting it outside the room and you say it might need a little salt and pepper. There's a big difference. One you're involved in the cooking, and one you're not. Jason was involved in the cooking last year. That's just a fact, and everybody knows that, really, or should. That won't be the case this year, and the addition of Linehan caused that. So it will be cooked." [embedded_ad]

The explanation can get confusing, and the answers get a little more convoluted when it comes to the play-calling process between Callahan, Garrett, quarterbacks coach Wade Wilson and Tony Romo. But the bottom line is Garrett had more say in the offense than originally planned, and Jones added that Romo had the final say play-calling say.

"More importantly than anything, the guy that's ultimately calling the plays is on the football field, the quarterback, Romo," Jones said. "He's the one that's got the check outs, he's the one that's got the ability to decide the run, pass, a lot of options and not just in the red zone and not just in hurry-up, two-minute. Not just there, although he was really predominant in the red zone and really dominant in no-back, that type thing."

Jones said last year Garrett felt he needed to have more of a presence on offense than originally planned. So, when did it become apparent that Callahan wasn't going to be as involved in the play-calling as originally expected?

"That evolved as it went along," Jones said. "Again, it evolved, but you get in situations during the season that have lesser time to sit back and say, 'Wait, what are we doing here? How are we doing it?' And make no mistake about it, it was something that was being discussed, which isn't uncommon at all, vigorously in the staff rooms."

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