The One Cowboy Ex-Player You Find It Hard to Forgive

Reverend Conehead

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Phil Pozderac - Remember that name.

This right tackle singlehandedly reversed the Dallas Cowboys 20 year dynasty.

He is the one most responsible for the firing of Tom Landry.

He opened the door for the Giant's success in the late eighties to the early nineties, launching the legendary careers of both Bill Parcells and Bill Belicek.

He unleashed the stench of losing Cowboy seasons.

Perhaps I'm exaggerating. You may even think that I'm being rather harsh......You be the judge.

I give you "The Dark Legend of Phil Pozderac".

_____________________________________________________

It's 1986 and the Cowboys have received glorious news. The U.S.F.L. has folded, meaning that the game's most dynamic RB is now free to enter the NFL and play for the team with the foresight to draft him, despite the risk of the new league succeeding. That player is Herschel Walker and the team is the Dallas Cowboys. Paired with Tony Dorsett, the Cowboys now feature a running game with the two best RB's on the planet.

The Cowboys last 20 seasons have all been winning seasons and the acquisition of Walker practically guarantees a continuation of this success. Besides getting Walker, the Cowboys are excited about their new #1 draft pick, a speedy receiver by the name of Mike Sherrard. Both Walker and Sherrard have olympic speed.

Eight games into the season the Cowboys have the #1 offense in points scored, #2 in yards. The defense is #9 in least opponent points, #7 in allowed yards.

Game #9 is against the Giants who are 6-2. The Cowboys are 6-2. After eight games the Cowboy QB, Danny White, is ranked 2nd in passer rating. The Cowboys are firing on all cylinders.

The Cowboys had beaten the Giants earlier in the season 31-28. A victory for the Cowboys would therefore give them a two game lead over the Giants. The Giants are coached by Bill Parcells, his DC is Bill Belicek.

Phil Pozderac, five year Cowboy veteran, is the starting right tackle with a propensity for being penalized. However, in this game, Pozderac takes it to a new level. In fact, as Madden notes, he is the catalyst for an NFL record for penalties in a single drive, the drive that ended up as the most important for the Cowboys that season. Phil Pozderac is the reason that Chaz Green must be listed as only 2nd place in the history of Dallas Cowboy offensive line futility.

Danny White goes down halfway through the 2nd quarter when there is a blitz from Pozderac's side. Keep in mind this is a Giant 3-4 defense. Pozderac did not adjust to the blitz. Danny White is not just lost for the game, he is lost for almost the rest of the season. Enter Steve Pelluar who actually does a pretty decent job....handing the ball to Walker and Dorsett, and passing....to Walker and Dorsett.

Now fast forward to 3 minutes left in the game:

It's 17-14 Giants and the Cowboys manage to bring the ball down to the 35 yard line. Septien is preparing for a field goal just in case. However, the Cowboys execute a perfect swing pass to Newsome who takes it down to the 6. The Cowboys are in business!.....not!.... Phil Pozdeac is flagged for holding and the play is not only erased, but it takes the ball out of field goal range.

The Cowboys fight back all the way to the Giant 25, it looks as though Septien will get his chance to at least make it an overtime game. Nope! Pozderac is flagged again for holding. Then he misses his man, Marshall, and Pelluar is sacked deep....out of field goal range again.

With 35 seconds left, the Cowboys are now without Dorsett and Walker. Dorsett aggravates a previous injury and then Walker gets beat up. The RB's are now Robert Lavette and Timmy Newsome who fight hard enough to where the Cowboys make it to the 35 of the Giants........but Pozderac is flagged a third time in this drive, this time for illegal motion.

The Cowboys were penalized 9 times for 116 yards. Six of the penalties belong to Pozderac. You can also attribute four sacks to him, one was fumbled. The Cowboys had a 150 yard advantage, almost double the first downs, ten more minutes in possession....and they lose.

The loss combined with White's injury puts the Cowboys in a slow excruciating tailspin The following week Pelluar is the new starter and he is harassed by the Raider line to the tune of 5 INT's. The Cowboys are penalized 9 times. Pozderac contributes to this stat. The Cowboys lose by 4 points while again leading in yardage and 1st downs.

the Cowboys go on to lose 5 of their last 6 games and end up 7-9, the first losing season in 21 years, the first of three losing seasons that culminate in the sale of the team to Jerry Jones and the subsequent dismissal of Tom Landry.

Meanwhile, the Giants go on to defeat the Commanders in the NFC championship game and then defeat the Broncos to win the 1986 SB.

After the 1987 season Phil Pozderac retired during the strike after only 6 seasons, citing emotional stress.

___________________________________________________________________

*facepalm* I remember that '86 team showing so much potential and then throwing it away on penalties. I didn't realize that Pozderac was the culprit of so many. Uhg. I wish he had never been on the team. He was a bum.
 

OmerV

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CowboysZone ULTIMATE Fan
I know.

I kinda hoped that my post was sarcastic enough to indicace this.

Yes, they tried their best, I suppose. So what? I'm bored. This thread was just another way of recognizing, as a fan, the opposite cirumstances of a playmaker breaking out and contributing to the history of the Cowboys. For every Aikman there is a Laufenberg. For every Mel Renfro there is a Dwayne Goodrich. For every plasticman there is an OmarV.....lighten up, I'm joking.
I have to apologize to you. I started writing before reading your full post. I’ve given others a hard time for doing this in the past, but I was guilty in this case. My bad
 

Corso

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Why should I forgive a guy for playing a game?

Maybe I should never forgive myself over that one hand of poker where I should have gone all-in.
I'm a terrible person and I should be flogged into unconsciousness at least once a month.
 

NorthoftheRedRiver

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Three players are on my list:

1) Jackie Smith - at the very top
2) Phil Pozderic - because he broke Tom Landry's heart (I had a team photo on my office wall back then and cut Pozderic out of the photo with an xacto knife.)
3) Demarco Murray - because the Pokes and fans fully invested in him and he chose to walk to the Eagles

Leon Lett's Miami blunder can be forgiven and is outweighed by years of good play and good effort.
 

Blake

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This is the correct answer

He single-handily cost us a trip to the SB in 2007

Romo got weak in the knees down the stretch, then sealed the team's fate with another 4th quarter pick.
 

WillieBeamen

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Everyone's favorite scapegoat for a terrible post season QB.
Same winning percentage as Dak in the postseason

giphy.gif
 

plasticman

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Jason Garrett.

One singular shining moment on Thanksgiving as a player parlayed into 10 years of misery and disappointment as HC. The guy is a choking loser and that's how his team played no matter the wealth of talent Jerry tried to arm him with.

That's funny.

Yeah, I suspect that Emmitt's 32 carries for 133 yards with 2 TD's and 6 receptions for 95 yards played a minor role in the Cowboys victory that day.....not taking anything away from Garrett. You would have to say he did his job, he didn't screw it all up. We just can't let it morph into a "Jason Garrett saved the day" story.

Nine of Jason's 15 completions were to the RB's. He was 8-18 in the first half. every player had to chip in, Harper and Irvin both had long TD catches that required some nifty running.

I like Jason Garrett, he is an ex-Cowboy and he wasn't a slacker for the Cowboys as a player. When it comes to coaching, he was stubborn when it came to his pass happy no balance offense, he lacked the intuitive ability to make crunch time decisions and he didn't stand his ground when he disagreed with the Jones's. He should have walked after his first contract when his philosophy was tampered with, that would have made him seem more principled. Still. I wish him the best when the Giants are not playing the Cowboys.
 

plasticman

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I have to apologize to you. I started writing before reading your full post. I’ve given others a hard time for doing this in the past, but I was guilty in this case. My bad
There you go being all conscientious and thoughtful again. No biggie, all fun.
 

mrmojo

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Phil Pozderac - Remember that name.

This right tackle singlehandedly reversed the Dallas Cowboys 20 year dynasty.

He is the one most responsible for the firing of Tom Landry.

He opened the door for the Giant's success in the late eighties to the early nineties, launching the legendary careers of both Bill Parcells and Bill Belicek.

He unleashed the stench of losing Cowboy seasons.

Perhaps I'm exaggerating. You may even think that I'm being rather harsh......You be the judge.

I give you "The Dark Legend of Phil Pozderac".

_____________________________________________________

It's 1986 and the Cowboys have received glorious news. The U.S.F.L. has folded, meaning that the game's most dynamic RB is now free to enter the NFL and play for the team with the foresight to draft him, despite the risk of the new league succeeding. That player is Herschel Walker and the team is the Dallas Cowboys. Paired with Tony Dorsett, the Cowboys now feature a running game with the two best RB's on the planet.

The Cowboys last 20 seasons have all been winning seasons and the acquisition of Walker practically guarantees a continuation of this success. Besides getting Walker, the Cowboys are excited about their new #1 draft pick, a speedy receiver by the name of Mike Sherrard. Both Walker and Sherrard have olympic speed.

Eight games into the season the Cowboys have the #1 offense in points scored, #2 in yards. The defense is #9 in least opponent points, #7 in allowed yards.

Game #9 is against the Giants who are 6-2. The Cowboys are 6-2. After eight games the Cowboy QB, Danny White, is ranked 2nd in passer rating. The Cowboys are firing on all cylinders.

The Cowboys had beaten the Giants earlier in the season 31-28. A victory for the Cowboys would therefore give them a two game lead over the Giants. The Giants are coached by Bill Parcells, his DC is Bill Belicek.

Phil Pozderac, five year Cowboy veteran, is the starting right tackle with a propensity for being penalized. However, in this game, Pozderac takes it to a new level. In fact, as Madden notes, he is the catalyst for an NFL record for penalties in a single drive, the drive that ended up as the most important for the Cowboys that season. Phil Pozderac is the reason that Chaz Green must be listed as only 2nd place in the history of Dallas Cowboy offensive line futility.

Danny White goes down halfway through the 2nd quarter when there is a blitz from Pozderac's side. Keep in mind this is a Giant 3-4 defense. Pozderac did not adjust to the blitz. Danny White is not just lost for the game, he is lost for almost the rest of the season. Enter Steve Pelluar who actually does a pretty decent job....handing the ball to Walker and Dorsett, and passing....to Walker and Dorsett.

Now fast forward to 3 minutes left in the game:

It's 17-14 Giants and the Cowboys manage to bring the ball down to the 35 yard line. Septien is preparing for a field goal just in case. However, the Cowboys execute a perfect swing pass to Newsome who takes it down to the 6. The Cowboys are in business!.....not!.... Phil Pozdeac is flagged for holding and the play is not only erased, but it takes the ball out of field goal range.

The Cowboys fight back all the way to the Giant 25, it looks as though Septien will get his chance to at least make it an overtime game. Nope! Pozderac is flagged again for holding. Then he misses his man, Marshall, and Pelluar is sacked deep....out of field goal range again.

With 35 seconds left, the Cowboys are now without Dorsett and Walker. Dorsett aggravates a previous injury and then Walker gets beat up. The RB's are now Robert Lavette and Timmy Newsome who fight hard enough to where the Cowboys make it to the 35 of the Giants........but Pozderac is flagged a third time in this drive, this time for illegal motion.

The Cowboys were penalized 9 times for 116 yards. Six of the penalties belong to Pozderac. You can also attribute four sacks to him, one was fumbled. The Cowboys had a 150 yard advantage, almost double the first downs, ten more minutes in possession....and they lose.

The loss combined with White's injury puts the Cowboys in a slow excruciating tailspin The following week Pelluar is the new starter and he is harassed by the Raider line to the tune of 5 INT's. The Cowboys are penalized 9 times. Pozderac contributes to this stat. The Cowboys lose by 4 points while again leading in yardage and 1st downs.

the Cowboys go on to lose 5 of their last 6 games and end up 7-9, the first losing season in 21 years, the first of three losing seasons that culminate in the sale of the team to Jerry Jones and the subsequent dismissal of Tom Landry.

Meanwhile, the Giants go on to defeat the Commanders in the NFC championship game and then defeat the Broncos to win the 1986 SB.

After the 1987 season Phil Pozderac retired during the strike after only 6 seasons, citing emotional stress.

___________________________________________________________________
Holding #75...
 

Beaker42

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Troy Hambrick : )... Not that he cost the Cowboys anything, but thinking he was better than Emmitt and could fill his shoes easily. I know Parcells was a component of Emmitt no longer being there, but I would have rather Emmitt finish up the 2 years here. I think Parcells would have figured out quickly even a 34 year old Emmitt would be a better option. Then the next season there would be no reason to bring Eddie in.
I vote for Julius Jones over Hambrick. Jones was a POS who we took over Steven Jackson. We suck at drafting in the 2nd round.
 

dogunwo

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Pete Hunter. Was actually a solid option for safety but was too infatuated with cornerback to accept it. Would have probably avoided the revolving door at FS ever since.
 

Kingofholland

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I vote for Julius Jones over Hambrick. Jones was a POS who we took over Steven Jackson. We suck at drafting in the 2nd round.

Hard for me to dislike Jones, even though he's a reminder of passing on Steven Jackson. His first 3 seasons weren't bad, but unfortunately it started a trend of promising rbs coming in and going out fast. Julius Jones, then Marion Barber, then a 1st rounder spent on Felix Jones, then Demarco Murray. Almost all those guys except McFadden had several exciting years but fell off a cliff fast and it was hard to find consistency. I do love Barber, even though they gave him a bad contract, but all this could have been avoided had they just drafted Steven Jackson. Don't hate the players though, hate the draft decision maker. Clear as day Jackson was BPA and filled a need.
 

Flamma

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Super Bowl 5 - Craig Morton, pathetic. 12-26-127-1TD-3INT....The 127 yards passing was actually his best performance of the three playoff games that postseason. He could throw long but he had zero touch and absolute zero escapability

Super Bowl 13 - Jackie Smith, no explanation needed.

1990 season - Babe Laufenberg. The Cowboys had their own destiny in their hands when they peaked late in the 1990 season, Jimmy Johnson and Jerry Jones's second.

Too young to remember Super Bowl V. The Jackie Smith drop hurt at the time, but that wasn't the reason the Cowboys lost that game. So I got over it. As far as Babe goes, It was a disappointing end to a season, but the Cowboys weren't good enough to go anywhere that season. Again, easily forgotten. And besides, the Cowboys could have still made the playoffs had the Rams beaten the Saints in the last game of the season.

Danny White, he broke my heart as a boy when fumbling the ball in the ‘82 NFC Championship. It’s the only time I’ve ever cried after a Cowboys loss. The Catch was absolutely shocking. Yet, Pearson catching the 30 yard pass from White, getting to the 49’ers 45, seemed like we might just snatch victory from the jaws of defeat. I was too young to remember Staubach, other than the night I became a Cowboy fan, watching the 1979 SB. Yeah, Danny broke my heart that night at Candlestick. He’ll always be one of my favorite Cowboys, but not sure the sting from ‘82 will ever go away.

This was a killer. Had that WR O'Donnel was it? He dropped a 3rd and 6 pass at the 49ers 40 yard line for a first down with about 5 minutes left. Had he not dropped that pass, there would be no "the catch". Danny White did the same thing Tom Brady did in 2001, but I guess there was no tuck rule to save White. What offensive lineman screwed the pooch on that play? I'd be more angry at him.

Patrick Crayton :facepalm:

This hits the spot! I'm still mad at this guy.
 
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