Chuck Howley- Super Bowl 5 MVP. He could very well have been Super Bowl 6 MVP, I don;t think anyone could have argued against that and I'm pretty sue that winning the year before, even though the Cowboys lost, took him out of contention.
The great players make the big plays in the big games and Howley dominated in the playoffs as an outside linebacker for the Cowboys throughout the late sixties to the late 70's.
Six time Pro Bowler, five time 1st team All Pro.. In 12 seasons as a Cowboy he missed 8 games. as an outside linebacker he had 24 regular season INT's and 18 recovered fumbles. In the 1970 and 1971 Super Bowls he had a combined 3 INT's and a fumble recovery.
And yet, he is not in the Hall of Fame. Linebackers that have done far far less are in the HOF. His exclusion is the greatest injustice in the history of the NFL.
Chuck Howley was the 4th inductee in the Cowboys Ring of Honor.
Tony Tolbert - The first ever NFL draft with Jerry Jones and Jimmy Johnson yielded three central pieces to the Dynasty of the 90's. They were Troy Aikman, Daryl Johnston and Mark Stepnoski, all major participants in the Cowboy offense that won three Supe Bowls in four seasons. This was their #1, #2m, and #3 round picks.
Their 4th round pick was Tony Tolbert, a DE.
We certainly remember Charles Haley. We remember big Leon Lett who also played DE before moving to DT. We remember Jim Jeffcoat, the old veteran.
However, Tony Tolbert was the starting LDE during those dynastic years.
Tony Tolbert played nine seasons with the Cowboys from 1989 to 1997, truly the most exciting period of time in the Cowboy history. He was there for it all and I mean ALL.
Tony Tolbert never missed a single game in his career. For all nine seasons he played in every single game. Each season, his number of solo tackles for a DE was amazing.
Tolbert participated in 15 playoffs games. In 1995, a Super Bowl season, Tolbert had five sacks in the playoffs.