Is Oklahoma Opening Cowboys Stadium an Insult To Texas Football? - Bleacher

switzersflask

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Written on August 23, 2009To tell you the truth, I really cannot answer this question, but it strikes me as extremely odd that an Oklahoma team would play the first game that counts for something in the new Cowboys Stadium—extremely odd.
Not just any Oklahoma team either: It's the Oklahoma Sooners, without any doubt the most hated college football team in all of Texas.
Texas doesn't just pride itself on football—football is part of their identity. You hear it all the time: In Texas, football is a religion.
Dallas is the prototypical Texas city, where the Texas stereotypes are actually lived day in and day out. Millionaire oil tycoons and CEOs of corporate giants play golf with ranchers that usually wear 10-gallon hats. The city is burned into the American psyche thanks to the TV show that had the country asking each other, "Who shot JR?" for well over a decade after it ended.
We all understand why the game is in Dallas: money. Jerry Jones will certainly make money off the deal, and no doubt OU and BYU will both have a much bigger take than they would playing as a visiting team to one another's campuses. So financially, the game makes sense, of course.
But why Oklahoma, the biggest rival of the state as far as college football goes? Especially after what happened last season, where the Sooners were picked over both Texas and Tech in a three-way Big 12 South Division tie that eventually sent the Sooners to the National Championship game.
Could Jerry not have gotten a Texas school to open the stadium? There are eight bowl subdivision schools in Texas that I can think of right off the top of my head.
Of course, Texas is the only draw as big as OU, but my guess is that a game with Tech or A&M to start the season would sell out as well, or at least come close.
Dallas does have a lot of OU fans and has been called South or Baja Oklahoma by some of the other major cities in Texas. OU recruits the Dallas area as well if not better than anyone, including the Longhorns, but this is the Dallas Cowboys' new stadium, and if you're a fan of Texas football, that is a better reason not to allow them to open the stadium.
If the Cowboys have a few horrible seasons to start out in the new stadium, will we be talking about the Sooner Curse?
Like I said, I do not know, but having the Oklahoma Sooners open up the 1.2-billion-dollar mecca of Texas football sure seems odd to me.


http://bleacherreport.com/articles/...boys-stadium-an-insult-to-texas-football#poll
 

theogt

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Someone needs to tell the guy a game was played there last Friday night, so nobody is "opening" the stadium since the Cowboys already have.

And I think Dallas is home to as many OU grads/fans as UT.
 

switzersflask

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theogt;2903915 said:
Someone needs to tell the guy a game was played there last Friday night, so nobody is "opening" the stadium since the Cowboys already have.

And I think Dallas is home to as many OU grads/fans as UT.

I think the writer is talking about an opener that is "meaningful." Meaning a regular season game. Not a preseason scrimmage. ;)
 

LeonDixson

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switzersflask;2903912 said:
Written on August 23, 2009To tell you the truth, I really cannot answer this question, but it strikes me as extremely odd that an Oklahoma team would play the first game that counts for something in the new Cowboys Stadium—extremely odd.
Not just any Oklahoma team either: It's the Oklahoma Sooners, without any doubt the most hated college football team in all of Texas.
Texas doesn't just pride itself on football—football is part of their identity. You hear it all the time: In Texas, football is a religion.
Dallas is the prototypical Texas city, where the Texas stereotypes are actually lived day in and day out. Millionaire oil tycoons and CEOs of corporate giants play golf with ranchers that usually wear 10-gallon hats. The city is burned into the American psyche thanks to the TV show that had the country asking each other, "Who shot JR?" for well over a decade after it ended.
We all understand why the game is in Dallas: money. Jerry Jones will certainly make money off the deal, and no doubt OU and BYU will both have a much bigger take than they would playing as a visiting team to one another's campuses. So financially, the game makes sense, of course.
But why Oklahoma, the biggest rival of the state as far as college football goes? Especially after what happened last season, where the Sooners were picked over both Texas and Tech in a three-way Big 12 South Division tie that eventually sent the Sooners to the National Championship game.
Could Jerry not have gotten a Texas school to open the stadium? There are eight bowl subdivision schools in Texas that I can think of right off the top of my head.
Of course, Texas is the only draw as big as OU, but my guess is that a game with Tech or A&M to start the season would sell out as well, or at least come close.
Dallas does have a lot of OU fans and has been called South or Baja Oklahoma by some of the other major cities in Texas. OU recruits the Dallas area as well if not better than anyone, including the Longhorns, but this is the Dallas Cowboys' new stadium, and if you're a fan of Texas football, that is a better reason not to allow them to open the stadium.
If the Cowboys have a few horrible seasons to start out in the new stadium, will we be talking about the Sooner Curse?
Like I said, I do not know, but having the Oklahoma Sooners open up the 1.2-billion-dollar mecca of Texas football sure seems odd to me.


http://bleacherreport.com/articles/...boys-stadium-an-insult-to-texas-football#poll

Maybe Texas, A&M and Tech all turned him down. I doubt there was any competition from the Texas teams. Who knows? You go with the players, not the onlookers.
 

theogt

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switzersflask;2903916 said:
I think the writer is talking about an opener that is "meaningful." Meaning a regular season game. Not a preseason scrimmage. ;)
Or he could mean the first game by a college team. Or he could mean the first game by a football team with a QB whose first name is Sam.

Regardless, competitive football has been played. No one else is "opening" the stadium.
 

switzersflask

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theogt;2903927 said:
Or he could mean the first game by a college team. Or he could mean the first game by a football team with a QB whose first name is Sam.

Regardless, competitive football has been played in the stadium. No one else is "opening" the stadium.

Read the article.

it strikes me as extremely odd that an Oklahoma team would play the first game that counts for something in the new Cowboys Stadium—extremely odd.
having the Oklahoma Sooners open up the 1.2-billion-dollar mecca of Texas football sure seems odd

OU is opening Jerry's world to regulation football, period. There have been concerts and preseason ballgames, but nothing like a season opening football game.
 

theogt

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switzersflask;2903933 said:
Read the article.
Holy cow, dude. I read the article. And I'm telling you, the stadium has been "opened."
 

switzersflask

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theogt;2903937 said:
Holy cow, dude. I read the article. And I'm telling you, the stadium has been "opened."

Oh, I'm sorry. I didn't know Dallas has already kicked off the regular season.
 

switzersflask

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casmith07;2903934 said:
Troy Aikman's home is in Oklahoma. OH THE HUMANITY.

If I'm not mistaken, he was born in California and moved to Henrietta, Ok.

lol I know what you're saying though.
 

Chocolate Lab

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theogt;2903937 said:
Holy cow, dude. I read the article. And I'm telling you, the stadium has been "opened."

If it hasn't been, what was that thing we went to last Friday night?

And like you said, I bet there are as many OU fans as UT fans in Dallas.
 

RoadRunner

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switzersflask;2903940 said:
Oh, I'm sorry. I didn't know Dallas has already kicked off the regular season.

A contest was played between two professional teams, that fans paid admission fees to see. The stadium has already had its first contest.
 

switzersflask

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Chocolate Lab;2903946 said:
If it hasn't been, what was that thing we went to last Friday night?

And like you said, I bet there are as many OU fans as UT fans in Dallas.

Regulation football, friend. Regulation football. Regular season football. You know, the kinda games that matter.
 

theogt

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switzersflask;2903940 said:
Oh, I'm sorry. I didn't know Dallas has already kicked off the regular season.
If that's your definition of "opening" the stadium, then obviously you disagree with the author as well.
 

switzersflask

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RoadRunner;2903948 said:
A contest was played between two professional teams, that fans paid admission fees to see. The stadium has already had its first contest.

So did that game go down in the standings for the NFC East? And no, I'm not talking about preseason standings. lol
 

switzersflask

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theogt;2903951 said:
If that's your definition of "opening" the stadium, then obviously you disagree with the author as well.

You're pointing out the headline and refusing to acknowledge the story.
 

theogt

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switzersflask;2903949 said:
Regulation football, friend. Regulation football. Regular season football. You know, the kinda games that matter.
Why limit it to regulation football? Why not regulation futbol? Oh, that's already been played there as well.

You might now be starting to see my point about the QB named Sam. You can limit your definition of "opening" to any number of factual situations.

It doesn't matter, one way or the other, because the Dallas Cowboys were the first team to play (American) football in the stadium and that's all anyone should care about.
 
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