Former Vol Jason Witten lands head coaching job | Rocky Top Insider

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Former Vol Jason Witten lands head coaching job

NBC’s Dan Patrick mentioned the day after Jeremy Pruitt was fired that he had heard Jason Witten’s name as a possible candidate for Tennessee’s vacant head coaching position. Well, Patrick was partially correct.

After retiring from the NFL following 17 seasons with the Dallas Cowboys and Las Vegas Raiders, Witten has agreed to become a high school head football coach at Liberty Christian in Argyle, Texas.

Witten passed on several NFL and major college football opportunities as an assistant coach to opt to coach at the school his children attend, according to ESPN reporter Todd Archer. He intends to sign a one-day contract with the Cowboys in March once his contract with the Raiders expires.

“Faith. Family. Football,” Witten said in a statement released by the school. “In this next chapter, it is important to me to be the best father and husband I can be, while making a positive impact in the community and share the wisdom I’ve accumulated over the years to positively impact the next generation.”

“I am very excited about Jason coming on board and joining the Liberty Christian coaching staff,” Liberty athletic director Johnny Isom said. “We have an extremely talented, hard-working group of coaches and he will undoubtedly prove to be a wonderful addition. The football program will be in great hands under his leadership and I cannot wait to see the impact that he will have on the lives of athletes.”

Witten first retired following the 2017 season and spent 2018 as ESPN’s Monday Night Football analyst, but he opted to return to football and play for the Cowboys in 2019. He spent this past season with the Raiders, the only year of his career not spent in a Dallas uniform.

No tight end in NFL history has played more games than Witten’s 271, and only Hall of Famer Tony Gonzalez has more receptions and yards at the position. Witten was named to the Pro Bowl 11 times, tied for the most in Dallas history. In 2012, he was named the NFL’s Walter Payton Man of the Year.

Witten is the Cowboys’ all-time leader in receptions (1,215) and yards (12,977) and is second in touchdown catches (72). He had four 1,000-yard seasons, and in 2012 he set the record for catches in a season by a tight end (110). He played in a team-record 255 games, including a franchise-record 245 starts, missing just one game in his career because of a broken jaw as a rookie.

The Elizabethton, Tennessee native was a third-round pick in the 2003 NFL Draft following a three-year career with the Vols. Witten left Tennessee ranked third all-time among the school’s tight ends with 68 career receptions and fourth all-time with 797 receiving yards. He caught seven touchdown passes.

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2 Responses

  1. You don’t have bad games as a team when you have a great leader. A leader will do whatever and however much it takes to get his team motivated. You have to love the game and understand that it is is the greatest game ever. Love your teammates and know them as well as you know yourself. You have to put the right personal on the floor for whatever the situation calls for. Attitude encompasses a lot but the right one will never let you down. I know talent is a great assist but talent with the right attitude will always make a major impact when it comes to close games along with great leadership. One thing I’ve never seen is consistently great teams without a great point guard. You cannot win championships without one. I know all this is simple information but doing simple things correct makes the game simple. Never said any of this is easy just very important for success. I’m sure I left some things out. This is is just me thinking off the top of my small brain.

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