Cowboys' Best Money Players Of All Time

Doomsday101

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I would challenge this a bit. This is like saying the Chiefs' 31-20 win over the Niners in the Super Bowl wasn't exciting because the final margin ended up being eleven points. Only until near the very end of the game did the margin stretch that far. Late in the fourth quarter, the Chiefs were still trailing by three, then leading by four.

When Aikman and Dallas took on the Niners in the 1992 conference title game, the Cowboys were leading just 24-20 with just four minutes to play. Then, of course, Aikman threw that slant to Harper that greatly boosted Dallas' win prospects. But at that time, with still just four minutes to go, anything could have happened. It was most definitely an exciting, narrow, win.

The point was Aikman played some of his best football during post season or what I would call money games.
 

cern

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if i can pick just one, it would be aikman while playing on jimmy's teams. truly clutch.
 
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cowboyec

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Larry Cole and DD Lewis always seemed to be around the ball in our biggest games.
 

Tussinman

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Larry Allen 100%

During the regular season he would play at an all-pro level and then once the playoffs started he would start playing at an all decade level

He's arguably the most consistent and highest level at his position player to ever work cowboys uniform
 

OmerV

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From Wikipedia …

Staubach was one of the most famous NFL players of the 1970s. Known as "Roger The Dodger" for his scrambling abilities, "Captain America" as quarterback of America's Team, and also as "Captain Comeback" for his fourth quarter game-winning heroics, Staubach had a penchant for leading scoring drives which gave the Cowboys improbable victories. He led the Cowboys to 23 game-winning drives (15 comebacks) during the fourth quarter, with 17 of those in the final two minutes or in overtime.
 

OmerV

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like last year goob, not one win against good defenses.

3 2 1... bring in the excuses.
The team had a bad season - Dak was part of it, but not all of it. Some like to portray it that way, but that's a false narrative.
 

Captain-Crash

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yeah, Goob the Philly game was everybody's fault but daks, and losing to all the teams with average to good defense was everybody fault but dak's.
 

12+88=7

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Who threw him the ball, and did that player have clutch moments even when not throwing to Pearson?

As I pointed out earlier in the thread, the most iconic moments in Dallas history involved Pearson with different players.

You had Tony Dorsett, Clint Longley, Danny White, and of course Roger Staubach.

Roger is the greatest Cowboy ever, but Pearson is the most clutch.
 

75boyz

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As I pointed out earlier in the thread, the most iconic moments in Dallas history involved Pearson with different players.

You had Tony Dorsett, Clint Longley, Danny White, and of course Roger Staubach.

Roger is the greatest Cowboy ever, but Pearson is the most clutch.

Nice post, hard to disagree.
 

Bullflop

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Darren Woodson was long one of my very favorites. I first saw him at St. Edwards University when Jimmy Johnson was coaching. Upon my arrival on the grounds there, I spotted him and thought he might have been a lineman, due to his size. Lo and behold, it became obvious who he was, due to his last name on the back of his jersey. Biggest doggone safety I've ever seen and surely one of the most athletic as well. He always struck me as a safety who just couldn't be improved upon. If there ever was a "money" safety, Darren Woodson was it. :)
 
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xwalker

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Definition: a money player is a player who repeatedly comes through in the clutch, a playmaker, in big games, in playoffs/and/or Super Bowl,whose offensive talent could not be stopped or whose defense stuffed the opposition and/or wrecked the opposing offensive

I limit the nominations to
QB
Two WR's
One RB
One FB
One TE
Two DT's
Two DE's
3 LB's
Two safeties
Two CB's

These are my choices. I respect others' reasonable opinions.

QB ROGER STAUBACH Immediate super impact player, he took a 4-3 team to 10 straight wins and the first Super Bowl win. Captain America, Roger the Dodger, with running back skills, a great leader. Took team to 4 Super Bowls.

Two WR's Two #88's, Drew Pearson and Michael Irvin. No one else deserves to be on list other than these two. Drew: The Hail Mary, breaking the Falcons; backs in the playoffs, clutch catch after clutch catch. Always got open for Roger and Danny White. The U's Michael Irvin, the real playmaker who intimidated DB's by always getting open, always making the tough 3rd down catch and almost always pulling down those 50-50 balls. An inspiring, fiery leader, who inspired his teammates to greater heights. Two TD's in 1993 Super Bowl 1st half set the tone.

One RB #22 EMMITT, no one else, no fumbles, tough, always getting the yards. Durable, great teammate.

One FB The Moose, D Johnston, always plowed open holes for Emmitt, great pass blocker and good at receiving the ball in the flat. Tough as a MOOSE!!!

One TE Jason Witten for his longevity and his continued greatness and toughness for so many years; Honorable metions for Billy Joe Dupree, 73-83 and Jay Novacek, both of them superior players.

Two DT's Bob Lilly and Randy White, end of discussion. Lilly with his 29 yard sack in 1972 Super Bowl and sheer domination for so long. Randy White, the Manster, Hall of Famer. He destroyed the Broncos in the 1978 Super Bowl.

Two DE's HARVEY MARTIN, 73-83 and TOO TALL JONES 74-89

3 LB's Chuck Howley, a 4.6 40 LB with 3 INT's in 71 and 72 Super Bowls; Ken Norton, who destroyed in the Bills in the 1993 Super Bowl and led Boys as therir best LB in consecutive Super Bowl wins; got 3rd straight with Whiners; Lee Roy Jordan: sideline to sideline tackling machine for more than a decade, 32 INT's; On November 4, 1973, he intercepted three passes in the first quarter from the Bengals' Ken Anderson.

Two safeties Charlie Waters, as solid as any safety can be; Charlie had 412 career INT's,s eemed to as clutch as they come; also blocked many punts. Darren Woodson, the perfect safety, who never got beat deep and it seemed he never missed a tackle, clean upper echelon player his whole career.
Two CB's Two Hall of Famers: Mel Renfro and Deion Sanders; Renfro was a world class athlete who was originaly a RB, converted to safety, then to CB. No one threw the ball to his side. 52 INT's.
Deion had 53 INT's, fastest player on field, would outrun ball, tease QB's; teams would throw to the other side, except Michael Irvin who owned him.
Erik Williams.
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.
.
Somebody for 2nd place.

The only OLineman that I've seen "take over a game".
 

Hypotenoose

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☆Roger Staubach,QB
☆Drew Pearson,WR
☆Michael Irvin,WR
☆Emmitt Smith,RB
☆Robert Newhouse,FB
☆Billy Joe Dupree,TE
☆Bob Lilly,DT
☆Randy White,DT
☆Ed "too tall" Jones,DE
☆Harvey Martin,DE
☆Chuck Howley,LB
☆Lee Roy Jordan,LB
☆Mike Hegman,LB
☆Mel Renfro,CB
☆Everson Walls,CB
☆Cliff Harris,S
☆Charlie Waters,S

Perfect. On the depth chart, I’d have Novacek a very close second to Dupree.
 

DFWJC

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Novacek > Witten in playoffs

Witten should've gotten into the first down in that Seattle game....but maybe he did. They ruled a 1st down, then, in a bad omen of things to come, they overruled it. Then the new, slippery homer ball slipped into the game by Seattle, and muffed snap by a starting QB somehow playing special teams.
What a crappy sequence of events.
 
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