Sparano's status still in question
By STEVEN WINE
AP Sports Writer
DAVIE, Fla. (AP) -- The Miami Dolphins' strange week took another bizarre turn Friday, leaving coach Tony Sparano's status still in doubt.
The Dolphins scheduled a late-afternoon
news conference to announce the retention of Sparano, but the session
was postponed 20 minutes before the scheduled start. Nearly two hours
later, the Dolphins rescheduled the session for Saturday.
A spokesman gave no reason for the postponement.
The Dolphins' cross-country courtship of
Stanford coach Jim Harbaugh ended late Thursday, and he was hired
Friday to coach the San Francisco 49ers. With Harbaugh no longer an
option, the Dolphins were expected to retain Sparano, who has one year
left on his contract.
Sparano met Friday at the team complex
with owner Stephen Ross and general manager Jeff Ireland, but there was
no announcement regarding who will coach the Dolphins in 2011.
The news conference promised to be an
entertaining exercise in damage control. While in limbo this week,
Sparano reported to work daily, even as Ross and Ireland flew to
California to get spurned by Harbaugh.
Conducting a coaching search when the
Dolphins still had a coach threatened to undermine Sparano, whose status
was already shaky because of his team's late-season meltdown. The
sequence of events also raised questions about the state of his
relationship with Ireland, which dates back eight years when both were
with the Dallas Cowboys.
The offseason has gone much like the
latter part of the season for the Dolphins, who lost their final three
games, including a 38-7 drubbing at New England in their finale last
Sunday. Ross said before the season he expected the Dolphins to reach
the Super Bowl, but instead they finished 7-9 and failed for the eighth
time in nine years to reach the playoffs.
Sparano led Miami to that lone
postseason berth in 2008, his first year as an NFL coach. He has a
three-year record of 25-23.
Received 01/07/11 07:03 pm ET