I disagree but that's another matter.
When a person denies Barry Switzer was head coach of the Cowboys, that tells you the person probably isn't into things.......like reality.
Nice, normal people know that denial is not river in Egypt......
"Switzer resurfaced in coaching in 1994 with the
Dallas Cowboys. Switzer stepped in following the departure of
Jimmy Johnson, who as head coach had won the previous two Super Bowls. Johnson had clashed with owner
Jerry Jones and many felt that Switzer was more apt to go along with Jones' ideas. Switzer was successful with the Cowboys, going 12–4 his first season in 1994 (losing to the 49ers in the NFC Championship). However, in the game he was criticized for making two critical errors. In the first half, with the Cowboys down 24–14, he opted not to run out the clock, giving the 49ers a chance to score one last touchdown before the half ended. Later, in the fourth quarter, with the Cowboys still down 38–28 and trying to rally, he was penalized for touching an official with his hip while demonstrating what he felt had been San Francisco's
Deion Sanders committing pass interference against Dallas'
Michael Irvin—which had not been called. This ended the Cowboys' chances of a comeback.
"In Switzer's second season of 1995, the team went 12–4. Dallas won
Super Bowl XXX over the
Pittsburgh Steelers, 27–17, making Switzer one of only three coaches to win a college national championship and a
Super Bowl, the others being Johnson and
Pete Carroll.
"In August 1997, Switzer was arrested after a loaded .38-caliber revolver was found in his luggage at the
Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport. Switzer, who was returning to the team's training camp facility in Austin, said there were children at his Dallas home and he put the gun in his bag to hide it from them. He said he accidentally forgot to remove the gun from the bag before heading to the airport.
[13] Switzer pleaded guilty, was fined $3,500, and was given one year deferred adjudication. Two days later, he was fined $75,000 by Jones (equivalent to $120,911 in 2020).
[14] After a disappointing 6–10 season in
1997, Switzer resigned as head coach of the Cowboys with a 40–24 career NFL coaching record.
[2][15]"