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Jones Sticks By Coordinators, Talks Garrett Contract

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MOBILE, Ala. – The Cowboys' coaching staff roaming the sidelines at the Senior Bowl will look familiar.

Owner/general manager Jerry Jones said nothing has changed with his coordinators and "there's nothing there at all" regarding potential changes. He added that he plans on all the coaches still under contract staying aboard.

"The status of it is nothing," Jones said. "The status is the contracts that are there, everybody's here. That's the way you ought to read it, not anticipate anything. I wouldn't anticipate a thing."

Jones stuck by Jason Garrett throughout the 2013 season and even after the end of a third straight 8-8 season, but the Cowboys' head coach is entering the final year of his contract and it doesn't appear that deal will be extended hastily. Jones said he hasn't had any thought about that at this point in the year.

"I don't pay any attention to lame duck status, what you call lame duck status," Jones said. "I don't have that term, because I don't know that there's such a thing. We've got huge, a lifetime, of work ahead of us over the next few weeks. To even consider that needs anything more than an agreement to do this year is not a big thing to me. It's just too much takeaway from what we're trying to do right now, which is just get cranked up for '14."

Then again, that doesn't mean he's lost belief in his head coach or that the pay day won't come. He said he wants to be there when it does happen.

He gave, and has continued to give, Garrett multiple years to develop his system and get it in place. The same may be going for his coordinators with another year to make adjustments.

"I had a guy tell me one time how to be successful, that no human can be right over 50 percent of the time on any decision, but it's the ones that cut their bad ones off quick and let their good ones run long (that work out)," Jones said. "That's hard to do. That's hard to accept quickly to cut a bad decision off quick.

"We all know the adage of the gold miner that walked away and the other one that took one more swing and hit the pick and found the gold stream. So, you don't want to quit. It's easier said than done to let your mistakes go short and your good decisions long."

It's getting close to decision time with many veteran Cowboys players and staff members. Most of the focus this offseason has centered on defensive coordinator Monte Kiffin and offensive coordinator Bill Callahan, who don't appear to be going anywhere.

Jones said he doesn't have to convince people on staff that it's a good decision to keep Kiffin. He only had to convince "the man in the mirror."

"Did we discuss and get input on a lot of things? Absolutely," Jones said. "But what we did not do is have a big debate or management session regarding Monte Kiffin. We didn't do that. That decision was made last year.

"When you look at the fundamentals of a Monte Kiffin and you look at the fundamentals of his work and you look at what he is and you look at the fact that you decided scheme wise that you liked that competing in the NFL today, then that weighs you from cutting that short. The answer is I didn't want to cut it short over on defense and some of the same principles are true with cutting it short on Jason, on going on when I talk about I want to be here for the pay day, and this is pay day time for Jason."

Everything appears to be status quo regarding the coaches still under contract in Dallas, from the head coach down to the assistants.

At some point this offseason, the focus will begin to turn to the contracts of players. But Jones said the team isn't working on any restructures yet and it's too early at this point in the year to focus on that. 

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