I believe you.Manster68 said:Hostile,
I know I am right. The game was played on Nov 9, 1980. It was about 26 months before the Minnesota finale of the 1982 season.
True but that run is a top 5 run in the history of the league and the legacy of that game. Besides we balance that loss with the Hail MaryHostile said:You do remember we lost that game right?
Prior to that loss Dallas had never lost a game that Tony D went for 100+ and I think only lost 3 in his entire career here.
It still couldn't be a favorite game for me because the wrong team won.jterrell said:True but that run is a top 5 run in the history of the league and the legacy of that game. Besides we balance that loss with the Hail Mary
I was a young kid and didn't die with wins and losses back then but that play was all I remembered all year. Everyone wanted to emulate that run, tip toeing up the sideline(edge of the grass by the concrete). It was that and running around behind the line of scrimmage setting up a deep throw a la Staubach.
jterrell said:Haley was absolutely crazy in general.
Teammates didn't talk to him.
He was scary intense.
He didnt do interviews because reporters were scared of them.
In the end tho, he did his job here.
In San Fran the stuff he did to get traded is legendary to the point it was copied in some movies.
He did detail a fairly serious addiction to painkillers in his book, All the Rage.
HeavyHitta31 said:Maybe, but he was the jackass that proved to be the final piece of our championship puzzle.
mperfection said:How in the world can anyone who calls himself a "true" Cowboys fan not like Charles Haley? In my opinion (and this opinion can be greatly substantiated by statistical results from the '92 defense), Charles Haley was the final piece of the Super Bowl puzzle in 1992. No Charles Haley in '92 - no Super Bowl in January '93. Period!
LaTunaNostra said:Ahh, thanks JT.
Just your ordinary, run-of-the-mill, everyday, personality-challenged great defensive lineman.