Having concluded his second round of interviews with the Baltimore Ravens and Atlanta Falcons and presumed to be the front-runner for both vacancies, Cowboys' Offensive Coordinator Jason Garrett returned to Dallas on Wednesday evening to mull his future. Sources told ESPN.com that Garrett, who spent several hours meeting with Atlanta officials earlier in the day, was huddling with Dallas owner Jerry Jones on Wednesday night. Garrett met with the Ravens on Monday night and part of the day Tuesday before flying to Atlanta for a follow-up session. Jones is expected to be very persuasive in attempting to convince Garrett, who has been an assistant coach in the league for only three seasons, to remain on the Cowboys' staff. There have been reports that Jones has vowed to match any offer from another team. But that will probably be impractical if either Baltimore or Atlanta offers a deal in the range of $3 million annually which is more than the Cowboys are paying incumbent Head Coach Wade Phillips. The Cowboys could offer Garrett a substantial raise and the tacit promise that he will eventually succeed Phillips within the next couple years.