Same shit, different day. Always blame the coaches for player greed and foibles. Dak Prescott is a coach killer. There's a reason the Chargers moved to hire Kellen Moore on the same day and it isn't because Staley (a defensive mind) is dumb.
We need to change some players. The coaches are fine. A coach can lead a player to water but can't make the player drink.
Like many players such as Matt Schaub, a player sometimes reaches a point in his career when no amount of coaching is going to coach the interceptions out of him. The best that can be done is to turn Dak into a game manager. A very expensive game manager who prevents other signings.
As much as people wanted to trash Connor Williams or Cedric Wilson, the guys who replaced them were not better, so the team got worse. A little more cash on hand could have kept them, but it's hard to do with a QB who makes millions upon millions in endorsements, but still can't see fit to learn to live on an average of 25 million per year on a long term deal while still raking in millions from endorsements.
I want to draft another QB in round 1. I don't care if it is considered a reach. Drop back a little bit and draft a QB. Hendon Hernon, McKee out of Stanford (I'm convinced the only reason McKee is not considered a round 1 prospect is the trend to running QBs). Let the QB sit a year, or half a season, to get the feel of things, then dump Dak after 2023.
People need to stop blaming the coaches. I saw Gary Kubiak struggle in Houston with a Matt Schaub, who lost it, and became an INT machine, only to go to Denver with Wade Phillips and win a Super Bowl.
But fans seem to want heads to roll. So it makes a fan feel temporarily good that the coach changed until the fan realizes "meet the new boss, same as the old boss".
Get rid of Zeke and Dak. They are done. Don't waste money on Pollard. Draft a couple of RBs in round 3 or 4. Use any money saved to sign a free agent or two who is bargain basement or on his last legs. Sing a Kyle Kosier type. Someone on the rise, not someone on the decline.