By Mike Reiss and Todd Archer
ESPNBoston.com, ESPNDallas.com
After 11 seasons with the New England Patriots, strength and conditioning coach Mike Woicik could be headed back to the Dallas Cowboys, sources told ESPNDallas and ESPNBoston.
Woicik is scheduled to fly in to Dallas Wednesday to talk to the Cowboys.
Woicik is the only player or coach with six Super Bowl rings, having won three with Dallas (1992, '94-95) and three with Patriots (2001, '03-04). He was the Cowboys strength coach from 1990-96 before spending the next three years in New Orleans. The Cowboys were 89-38 during his seven seasons, including 12 playoff wins.
A Massachusetts native, he joined the Patriots in 2000 when Bill Belichick took over as coach.
Woicik's contract with the Patriots was set to expire after the 2010 season, according to sources, and the sides have not reached an extension. That has opened the door for him to land elsewhere. Woicik has a connection with Cowboys head coach Jason Garrett, as Woicik was the strength coach in Dallas during Garrett's first four seasons as a backup quarterback with the club.
Patriots spokesman Stacey James could not confirm Woicik's contract status.
Woicik, 54, was named the NFL's Strength Coach of the Year in 1992 and 2004 by the Professional Football Strength and Conditioning Society.
Joe Juraszek has been the Cowboys' strength and conditioning coach since Woicik's departure, reuniting with Barry Switzer and continuing through the tenures of Chan Gailey, Dave Campo, Bill Parcells and Wade Phillips.
He missed most of the second half of the 2010 season with what was described as a "personal illness situation," according to the team. His assistant, Tony Ollison, took over the bulk of the work in Juraszek's absence.
Todd Archer covers the Cowboys for ESPNDallas.com. Mike Reiss covers the Patriots for ESPNBoston.com.
ESPNBoston.com, ESPNDallas.com
After 11 seasons with the New England Patriots, strength and conditioning coach Mike Woicik could be headed back to the Dallas Cowboys, sources told ESPNDallas and ESPNBoston.
Woicik is scheduled to fly in to Dallas Wednesday to talk to the Cowboys.
Woicik is the only player or coach with six Super Bowl rings, having won three with Dallas (1992, '94-95) and three with Patriots (2001, '03-04). He was the Cowboys strength coach from 1990-96 before spending the next three years in New Orleans. The Cowboys were 89-38 during his seven seasons, including 12 playoff wins.
A Massachusetts native, he joined the Patriots in 2000 when Bill Belichick took over as coach.
Woicik's contract with the Patriots was set to expire after the 2010 season, according to sources, and the sides have not reached an extension. That has opened the door for him to land elsewhere. Woicik has a connection with Cowboys head coach Jason Garrett, as Woicik was the strength coach in Dallas during Garrett's first four seasons as a backup quarterback with the club.
Patriots spokesman Stacey James could not confirm Woicik's contract status.
Woicik, 54, was named the NFL's Strength Coach of the Year in 1992 and 2004 by the Professional Football Strength and Conditioning Society.
Joe Juraszek has been the Cowboys' strength and conditioning coach since Woicik's departure, reuniting with Barry Switzer and continuing through the tenures of Chan Gailey, Dave Campo, Bill Parcells and Wade Phillips.
He missed most of the second half of the 2010 season with what was described as a "personal illness situation," according to the team. His assistant, Tony Ollison, took over the bulk of the work in Juraszek's absence.
Todd Archer covers the Cowboys for ESPNDallas.com. Mike Reiss covers the Patriots for ESPNBoston.com.