ArcHe buys the team and instantly has success.
Wins 3 Super Bowls and is the owner of a dynasty.
Then he proceeds to spend the next 30 years tearing everything apart and destroying all of the goodwill he built up with the fanbase.
He could’ve went down as a legendary football team owner beloved by the largest fanbase in sports, but instead he seems hell bent on going out a hated and absolutely loathed villain.
I wrote something similar but years ago in the Garrett years. It basically boiled down to the fact that he was beloved for having Jimmy and winning. Any smart businessman would then try and follow the same pattern and keep it up. But he chose to alienate vs imitate. It’s bizarre.He buys the team and instantly has success.
Wins 3 Super Bowls and is the owner of a dynasty.
Then he proceeds to spend the next 30 years tearing everything apart and destroying all of the goodwill he built up with the fanbase.
He could’ve went down as a legendary football team owner beloved by the largest fanbase in sports, but instead he seems hell bent on going out a hated and absolutely loathed villain.
Great job.
I don't think that was/is his goal. It just happens that he lacks the requisite skill to build a winner and senility is now a factor,.He could’ve went down as a legendary football team owner beloved by the largest fanbase in sports, but instead he seems hell bent on going out a hated and absolutely loathed villain.
ego can be a poison. his ego couldn't stand Johnson getting more credit and all the publicity. he ruined that relationship.He buys the team and instantly has success.
Wins 3 Super Bowls and is the owner of a dynasty.
Then he proceeds to spend the next 30 years tearing everything apart and destroying all of the goodwill he built up with the fanbase.
He could’ve went down as a legendary football team owner beloved by the largest fanbase in sports, but instead he seems hell bent on going out a hated and absolutely loathed villain.
This paragraph speaks volumes about Jerry and the state of the Cowboys for the last three decades.The problem with immediate success is that it creates a perception that a person it smart and successful at everything they do.
He went to the same cross road as Robert Johnson apparently.He sold his soul for those 3 wins and now we are paying for it...
Jimmy worked miracles during the time he had control of the football team. Jerry ultimately couldn't stand it and believed he could do it just as well. He won the SB without Jimmy and that only re-enforced his thinking. It has been a total disaster.He buys the team and instantly has success.
Wins 3 Super Bowls and is the owner of a dynasty.
Then he proceeds to spend the next 30 years tearing everything apart and destroying all of the goodwill he built up with the fanbase.
He could’ve went down as a legendary football team owner beloved by the largest fanbase in sports, but instead he seems hell bent on going out a hated and absolutely loathed villain.
I'm not sure he could be any worse could he?Do you expect his kids to run the team any differently? Stephen might be worse
Yep. I've made similar posts in the past as well.Can you imagine how this would have turned out if Jones roomed with Ken Hatfield on road games for Arkansas back in the 1960s instead of Jimmy Johnson?
And the reality is that the majority of the team in ‘95 already had one or two rings from ‘92 and/or ‘93 when we won SBs with Jimmy. But oh yeah, Jerry and Barry did it their way.Jimmy worked miracles during the time he had control of the football team. Jerry ultimately couldn't stand it and believed he could do it just as well. He won the SB without Jimmy and that only re-enforced his thinking. It has been a total disaster.