Archer: Separate Jerry the owner, Jerry the GM

Cotton

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Separate Jerry the owner, Jerry the GM

April, 14, 2014

By Todd Archer | ESPNDallas.com


IRVING, Texas -- Whenever Jerry Jones speaks, you must remember there are two Jerrys.

There is Jerry Jones the owner of the Dallas Cowboys, AT&T Stadium and countless other business ventures. And there is Jerry Jones the general manager of the Cowboys.

In pumping up the 50th anniversary of the Academy of Country Music Awards that will come to AT&T Stadium next year, Jones had his owner hat on when he said the following:

“As you know, the Cowboys have not gone to the playoffs in several years. We have not gone. Yet we're the most popular TV show there is on television. We lead all teams in TV ratings, 24 out of the last top 25 shows were NFL games. And any time your Cowboys play, they're up there at the top and leading.”

In other words, the Cowboys are famous for being famous, not for what they actually do. It’s a maddening statistic that Jones always cites. There is nothing incorrect about it, but are the Cowboys popular because they play good football? Their .500 record over the last decade-plus suggests otherwise. Are the Cowboys popular because they are a team others loathe? There is probably some of that, too. Are the Cowboys popular because of the inventive ways they lose and the types of games they play? There is some of that too.

All of it adds up to a ratings bonanza and why the Cowboys, despite their record, will be on national television so much in 2014 when the schedule is released soon.

ESPN NFL columnist Ashley Fox took Jones to task for the comments over the weekend. She didn’t separate Jerry the owner from Jerry the general manager.

Most important is whether Jones can separate the two titles? He is the only owner/general manager in the NFL. Cincinnati Bengals owner Mike Brown doesn’t carry the title even if the final call is his. But Brown does not have the outside business interests of Jones. He is not trying to turn Paul Brown Stadium into a destination spot the way Jones has done with AT&T Stadium.

Of course, Jones also has had to pay off more than $700 million of the stadium since the city of Arlington’s contribution was capped at $325 million.

The sad fact for Cowboys fans is that there is never a clear-cut answer as to whether football is the No. 1 priority when it comes to how Jones operates the team. Jones will say it is and always will be, and there is no doubt he wants to win badly.

However, when Henry Melton made his free-agent visit, Jones was away from Valley Ranch tending to other business interests. Stephen Jones and Jason Garrett handled the visit and Melton signed on with the club. But how many other general managers wouldn’t be on hand when a free agent, especially one as important as Melton, is visiting? It is between none and nil.

When the George Bush Presidential Library and Museum opened last spring on draft day, Jerry Jones was there for the spectacle. How many other GMs would be there on a draft day? All of the work leading up to the draft was complete by then, but it again leads to questions about the priorities.

When the Cowboys lost 37-36 to the Green Bay Packers last season, Jones was asked on 105.3 The Fan if he worried about fan apathy.

“Not with games like the other day,” Jones said. “That’s a show, if you want to look at it that way.”

How many other GMs would look at it that way? None.

But how the Cowboys have operated this offseason might be the beginning of something different in how Jones separates the owner from the general manager. The Cowboys made difficult decisions on DeMarcus Ware, Jason Hatcher and Miles Austin. They have eschewed the big-name signings and even the Melton deal is essentially for one year and $3.5 million.

Will they be bold and move way up in the first round? It doesn’t sound like that is in their plans. They could move down and collect more selections, which would be smart. They could take the best player available approach, which would be smart too.

It will be up to Jones the general manager.
 

Cotton

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Jerry Jones' commitment for a title is strong

April, 14, 2014

By Calvin Watkins | ESPNDallas.com


Dallas Cowboys owner and general manager Jerry Jones was in Las Vegas last week talking about why AT&T Stadium is a good place to host the Academy of Country Music Awards.

The $1.2 billion palace has hosted boxing matches, basketball games, football games, bowling events, rodeos and Jones has even hinted about hosting an Olympic-styled swim meet. It’s centrally located between Dallas and Fort Worth, and is approximately a 15-minute drive to the airport.

During his chat, Jones talked about why his Cowboys are the most popular team in sports.

"As you know, the Cowboys have not gone to the playoffs in several years,” Jones said. “We have not gone. Yet we're the most popular TV show there is on television. We lead all teams in TV ratings. We lead, 24 out of the last top 25 shows were NFL games, and any time your Cowboys play, and they’re up there at the top and leading."

That comment has led many to believe Jones’ goals have changed, that he doesn’t care about winning anymore and all he wants to do is market his team.

Jones is right, the Cowboys are leaders in TV ratings. And those ratings are why the networks, including ESPN, want his team on late Sunday afternoon games with 80 percent of the country watching. It’s why networks want the Cowboys to play on Sunday nights and Monday nights.

Fans watch.

But it's wrong to think Jones doesn’t care about championships.

That is all he thinks about.

Every day.

While the process is flawed in getting a fourth championship ring on his finger, his commitment is stronger than ever.

Jones is committed to coach Jason Garrett -- for at least one more season -- and he feels Garrett can take his franchise on a deep playoff run.

Jones isn't one of those owners afraid to spend money. He's given huge contracts to Miles Austin, Jeremiah Ratliff, Tony Romo, Jason Witten and DeMarcus Ware over the years. He believed those players could help him win a championship.

This offseason, Garrett talked about the Cowboys needing to get younger, which produced questions regarding a rebuilding effort at Valley Ranch.

Jones said you don’t rebuild with Romo at quarterback. Retool, maybe, but not rebuild.

The Cowboys expect to reach the postseason every season. But the reality is they missed out by losing in the regular-season finale in each of the past three seasons.

Jones felt the sting of those losses and tried to fix the franchise each offseason, whether that meant firing assistant coaches, releasing top players or changing the duties of coaches and front office personnel.

He wants to win in the worst way.

You may not like how Jones runs his football business, but don't question the commitment. Jones is being honest about what the Cowboys represent: A popular NFL team that makes money. And let's be honest, that’s what the 31 other NFL owners want from their franchises.

You don't think Robert Kraft wants to make money with the New England Patriots? Of course he does.

Again, the process in which the Cowboys go about their on-the-field business may be flawed, but the way things are going off the field is just fine.

If anything, it’s the best in sports.

Please, don’t get mad at Jones for that.
 

L.T. Fan

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The Jones media relationship is a match made in heaven. The reason they love to interview him is because he will always say something stupid. In fact they count on it. If either of them would do the obvious, that being stay away from each other, then there would be no inflammatory statements to rehash and then become fan get nuts fodder. Jones isn't smart enough to stay out of their way and wouldn't if he could and meanwhile they work overtime raising worn out diatribes of "step down Jerry. It's a cleverly designed scheme that neither can back away from. So the bottom line is this dear fan, Jones is simultainously being clever and stupid and the media is willingly being used by him to generate a continual but redundant theme. One more thing. Jones profits,while the fans and media lament and that won't change as long as the status quo is in place.
 

data

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I'll separate jerry jones the owner from the GM just like we should separate Romo's pimp plays from interceptions.
 

BipolarFuk

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Guy's a fucking football loser and always will be.

Hey Jer, how you like them rings Jimmy got you?
 

Bob Roberts

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The annual "Jer reely reely wants to win and stuff" articles.

I almost thought we were beyond this.
 
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Cotton

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mcnuttz

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There's no reason to separate them, as Jones never will himself. He's got too much invested as the owner and his ego to make sound GM decisions. He doesn't give a damn about giving the Cowboys fans a winner as long as he's entertaining the hell out of America on primetime.
 

dallen

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There's no reason to separate them, as Jones never will himself. He's got too much invested as the owner and his ego to make sound GM decisions. He doesn't give a damn about giving the Cowboys fans a winner as long as he's entertaining the hell out of America on primetime.
Jerry himself says there is no reason to separate the 2 positions. So why should we give him the benefit of it when evaluating him? A good owner would do whatever it takes to win - even if it meant swallowing their pride and admitting their shortcomings
 

data

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Sounds like a girl in an abusive relationship...separate the drunk beatings and he's a really good guy when sober.
 
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