Did ESPN Just Fire Jason Garrett Before The Cowboys Did?

FRISCO - On Thursday night, ESPN's Ed Werder issued a fairly innocuous-but-truthful tweet that is reflective of notes and updates that dozens of media people covering the Dallas Cowboys have also issued: The meetings phase (is) expected to conclude soon with Garrett not part of organization.''
Source: #Cowboys Jerry Jones and Stephen Jones have moved slowly and with “abundance of care and respect” for Jason Garrett. That phase expected to conclude soon with Garrett not part of organization. Next phase to involve candidate interviews will begin quickly thereafter.
— Ed Werder (@WerderEdNFL) January 3, 2020
There is little argument there. Werder doesn't scream out that this is an "exclusive'' because he knows it isn't. The "expectations'' have been that Dallas and its decade-long head coach would part amicably and those "expectations'' have been in place since the Week 16 loss to the Eagles and those "expectations'' have been even more firmly in place as this week, Garrett has said "goodbye'' to dozens and dozens of co-workers at The Star.
As @1053SS @BryanBroaddus and I said this am on @1053thefan : #Cowboys players exit interviews could be more time-consuming than usual. (Goodbyes). And source tells me Garrett/Jones meeting is 'this afternoon' (backed up from orig. just-after-noon hour) https://t.co/NoQ0CtzhVz
— fishsports ✭ (@fishsports) December 30, 2019
But ESPN editors have taken the Werder tweet and molded it into something else entirely, a claim that they know the Cowboys are firing Jason Garrett. In fact, in this headline: "Cowboys to move on without Jason Garrett, source says'' ... they even claim to have a "source'' that not even Werder claims to have.
But that’s not even close to what Werder tweeted. And he didn't tweet it for the same reason I and other media people covering the Cowboys didn't tweet it:
It is, as of yet (I'm writing this now at 4 a.m. CT Friday) simply not true.
NFL Black Monday for #Cowboys Coaches? Premature Reports of Firings Are 'B.S.' https://t.co/8nfN8quZU8 pic.twitter.com/h2pSudYxxg
— fishsports ✭ (@fishsports) December 30, 2019
"It's gonna be true'' is not the same as reporting that "it's already happened.'' (Ask young DFW TV guy Mike Leslie, who learned a hard lesson when he irresponsibly reported on Monday that Garrett and his entire coaching staff had been fired - which was not only untrue but also impossible, because none of the involved parties had even met yet.)
Werder wrote on Thursday night that "Jerry Jones and Stephen Jones have moved slowly and with ‘abundance of care and respect’ for Jason Garrett.'' This, of course, you already know if you read this space (or follow colleagues like Bryan Broaddus and Jane Slater and Werder; the "respect'' theme has been written in cement since Sunday night following Dallas' Week 17 finale.
Fish Column: 'I Am About Change': Jerry Jones Casts An Eye Toward the #Cowboys Future https://t.co/FRXeUqz8zN pic.twitter.com/iY7Pj3qtHU
— fishsports ✭ (@fishsports) December 30, 2019
But the final and official decision to release Garrett? I'm not sure the reported Thursday "Final Meeting 3.0'' ever even happened as I am told not all of the principals were at The Star on Thursday. Meanwhile, I've done my best to tamp down the idea of Garrett moving into the front office by explaining the hierarchy there as it involves Will McClay.
#Cowboys Coaching Carousel: If Garrett 'Fails Up,' What Happens to Will McClay? https://t.co/XlUqt3qOBb pic.twitter.com/tlNT0buiTg
— fishsports ✭ (@fishsports) January 2, 2020
And at 10:22 p.m. Thursday, Slater (obviously responding to the ESPN editors' breathless "scoop'') checked in with a truth:
And at this hour no one has confirmed that a conversation has transpired with Jason Garrett to suggest ANY final decision. Players said he said “goodbye without saying goodbye” Monday. It’s been a strange week folks. It’s like it’s going to happen but no word yet that it has. https://t.co/3BGQ9Pqd2Z
— Jane Slater (@SlaterNFL) January 3, 2020
Why has ESPN taken Werder's perfectly responsible tweet and twisted it into something it isn't? Somewhere between "an honest mistake'' and "a desperate grab for a thick slice of 'America's Team' click-bait pie,'' I suppose.
It will become true on Friday or on Sunday or on Tuesday. But it's not yet true that the Cowboys have dismissed Jason Garrett. Slater and Broaddus and you and I and Werder and ESPN all know that.
It's ESPN's customers who don't.

Mike Fisher - as a newspaper beat writer and columnist and on radio and TV, where he is an Emmy winner - has covered the NFL since 1983 and the Dallas Cowboys since 1990, is the author of two best-selling books on the Cowboys.
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