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Michael Strawn's avatar

Several notes on Staubach:

He won 85 regular season games, 11 playoff games, reached four Super Bowls and won two, was a 6-time Pro Bowler (including all 5 of his final seasons) despite not being established as THE starter until his age 31 season. It's unfathomable to think what he might have accomplished if he'd either played football out of college or if Landry hadn't been so reluctant to make him the starter.

Also, Mike didn't mention that once Landry made the decision to go with Staubach over Morton in the 1971 season the Cowboys, 4-3 at the time and headed toward nowheresville, went 10-0, outscoring opponents 260-95 (avg of 26 - 9). The team went from mediocre to absolutely unstoppable (they won their three playoff games by a combined score of 58-18).

Further, the next season Staubach suffered a severely separated shoulder in pre-season by - get this - attempting to tackle a defender returning an INT during a pre-season game. That kind of stuff happened all the time back then; unthinkable now. The injury put Staubach down for most of the reg season (he threw 20 passes in mop up duty). Morton played well enough but then again crapped the bed in the playoffs and was relieved by Staubach. Down 15 points, on the road, to the 49ers midway through the 4th quarter, Staubach engineered his signature comeback win that, finally, made him THE established starting QB of the Dallas Cowboys.

Oh yeah, and after winning the Heisman, fulfilling his Naval duties, winning two Super Bowls, being named SB MVP and being a first ballot NFL Hall of Famer, he started a construction company after he retired.

He would sell his company with offices around the world for $700M in 2008.

I don't believe in "heroes" who haven't been deeply involved in my life (like my parents). But Staubach comes about as close as there is. Watch any teammate or even opponent talk about Staubach and you won't hear a single bad word.

Oh, and to the poster asking about Clint Longley. What happened is Longley has his "Mad Bomber" TGiving moment vs the Redskins in 1974. THe next season they brought in Danny White to compete for backup QB. Longley didn't like it and took out his frustrations by sucker punching Staubach, who slammed his face/head on a bench in the lockerroom. Lot of blood allegedly. Staubach was ready for revenge and the story goes Longley ran out to the parking lot, jumped in his car and was never seen again.

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Michael Strawn's avatar

Also, I just can't let an Eagles fan slander my team like this without comment:

"But we can all agree that a very borderline call went against the Cowboys, something which never happened, not a single time (that this lifelong Eagles fan can recall) from 1970 through 1995."

The litany of Cowboys gutpunch losses in the playoffs is lengthy and sobering. MANY include ridiculous calls that make you wonder:

In Super Bowl V the Cowboys outgained the Colts by 115 yards, forced 7 turnovers, allowed only 69 rushing yds on 31 attempts and somehow lost. Why? Because a Cowboys fumble on the Colts goalline was awarded to the Colts despite no Colts having ever even touched the ball AND a 75-yard TD pass for the Colts tipped off multiple players, including what appeared to be a Colts player, which under rules of the day would have nullified the play.

In SuperBowl X, between Dallas and Pittsburgh, the Steelers were assessed zero penalties, despite engaging in such actions as throwing opponents to the ground ten seconds after a play ended. The Steelers were the most penalized team in the NFL that season.

SuperBowl XIII:

1. Phantom DPI on Benny Barnes is key play in Steelers TD drive despite Barners: having his back to the receiver; being between the receiver and the QB and never putting his hands on the receiver.

2. An illegal motion penalty wipes out a sack of Bradshaw on 3rd-and-10 that would have pushed Steelers out of FG range. On ensuing play, Franco Harris runs for a 35 yard TD on a play where the key block is delivered to Charley Waters by the referee.

I'm not bitter, honestly. It's not like I can cite this stuff from memory because it's been seared into my DNA and I'm helpless to forget it. Nope, not at all.

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