Dallas Cowboys head coach Jason Garrett has told 105.3 The Fan that he is scheduled to meet with management on Monday.

“I don't know. I don't know,” Garrett said when asked about his future. “We've got a team meeting at noon, and I'm scheduled to meet with the Joneses after that.”

It's hard to imagine that Garrett will retain his job.

Widely considered to be one of the most talented teams in the NFL, the Cowboys went just 8-8 this season and saw a banged-up Philadelphia Eagles club usurp them for NFC East supremacy, claiming the division crown with a 9-7 record after beating Dallas in Philadelphia in Week 16.

The Cowboys were viewed as a darkhorse Super Bowl contender going into 2019, and they certainly played the part early on, winning their first three games in blowout fashion.

However, from that point moving forward, Dallas was one of the NFL's most inconsistent teams and struggled mightily against the stronger clubs on its schedule.

It became increasingly obvious that Garrett had begun to lose control of the locker room, and with the Cowboys floundering more and more as the season progressed, Garrett's eventual firing looked like an inevitability.

The 53-year-old initially took over as Dallas' head coach midway through the 2010 campaign after the dismissal of Wade Phillips.

Since Garrett landed the job, the Cowboys have gone 85-67 and have won three NFC East division titles, making three playoff appearances and winning two postseason games.

Dallas has won just three playoff games since the 1996-97 season and has not made it past the Divisional Round since 1995-96.