The really sad part is he would not only get credit for hiring a brilliant football mind that brought Dallas back to greatness but would be forgiven by most of Cowboy nation for his past mistakes. He was good friends with George Steinbrenner. It boggles my mind that he had the greatest example of this staring him in the face. Steinbrenner brought the Yankees back to prominence in the late 70's after more than a decade of losing which to Yankee fans might as well be 500 years. He then became a bad reality show with firing/hiring/rehiring/firing managers especially Billy Martin and sunk to new lows when it was discovered what he did to Dave Windfield. Becoming a running joke and a disgrace humbled him enough to realize he needed to change. He allowed Gene Michaels to bring back structure, patience, and doing things the right way. Fast forward to hiring Brian Cashman and by the time Steinbrenner passed away he was loved and revered by most Yankee fans. Could he still be impatient, impulsive and an ego maniac at times? Of course. But the fact that he was smart enough to put his ego in check and bring the Yankees back to being the gold standard in Baseball brought him acclaim and adulation.
If Jerry for example promoted W. McClay to GM and he brought us back to greatness (I'm just using him as an example not saying he is necessarily the guy to do it) the fan base and the media would give Jerry tons of credit for being smart enough to hire the right guy just as he was given a ton of credit, and rightfully so for hiring Jimmy Jonson. The fact that he can't make the correlation is just baffling to me.