Bayless: Why Jerry Jones' team won't win

Cotton

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Why Jerry Jones' team won't win

Out-front owner has built great entertainment but not a Super Bowl winner
Originally Published: November 1, 2013
By Skip Bayless | ESPN.com

Allow me to qualify (or disqualify) myself before I say what I'm going to say about Jerry Jones ...

1. I wrote three books on Dallas Cowboys teams owned by Jones and spent hundreds of hours with him from 1989 to 1996, once even interviewing him over lunch at his Dallas estate.

2. The second book, "The Boys," undercut Jones' image among Tom Landry worshippers -- that of the "football-dumb hillbilly egomaniac from Arkansas" -- by giving him the general manager credit he deserved for helping build his first Super Bowl winner. Coach Jimmy Johnson was so outraged by the book that he told reporters I was banned from Cowboys facilities. Jones overruled, telling me I was always welcome as long as he was the owner.

3. I've often defended Jones on "First Take" as the shrewdest of businessmen and marketers with a plunger's guts … defended him as an owner/GM who did play football at a fairly high level (starting guard on Arkansas' 1964 national championship team) and who, with final say on all draft and free-agent moves, has consistently helped stock some of the NFL's most talented rosters … and defended him as an extremely likable man with a good heart and unsinkable spirit.
4. I grew up a Cowboys fan, attending my first game in 1960, the first year of their existence.

That said, I've reached this painful conclusion: I'll be surprised if one of Jerry Jones' teams ever even comes close to winning another Super Bowl. Jerry has never been as driven to win as Jimmy was and good-cop Jerry hasn't been nearly as effective after he split with as bad a cop as ever coached, Jimmy Johnson. Now, Jerry is far more ringmaster than ring winner.

Jerry has succeeded only at building the most entertaining team in sports -- too often for the wrong reasons. Year after year Jerry's Cowboys lead the league in building false hope and losing spectacularly. His Cowboys remain America's Team, in large part, because Cowboys lovers and the many, many Cowboys haters know that just when they start looking like a Super Bowl team, oh my god, did you see that?

They blow it in some astonishing way, as they did late against Denver (Tony Romo, from 506 yards passing to game-losing interception) and Detroit (Lions, 80 yards to win in the final minute). And Jerry all but applauds his team for another edge-of-seat moral victory, tells the media he saw so many positives, and backslaps his players for … for what? Putting on yet another great show?

The Cowboys fan in me is getting increasingly sick and tired of watching Jerry Jones enable his team to lose without fear. Super nice guys Romo, Jason Garrett, Jason Witten and DeMarcus Ware now lead the league in post-loss patience -- in handling tougher and tougher media questions with shrugging imperturbability -- because they aren't afraid of being held accountable by the owner.

Players know the bucks stop with Jerry, effectively their coach/GM/owner, and as long as his seats are filled and his TV ratings are through the roof and Forbes still ranks his team the NFL's most valuable, and he remains the world's best-known sports owner and the most famous figure in fame-crazed Dallas and gets to address the media in the locker room after every game (no owner or GM does that) … players will be made to feel absolutely no urgency to win.

Jerry just keeps using one of his favorite words to describe his quarterback and team -- "relevant." The Cowboys are at least as talked about now as they were when they were winning three Super Bowls in four years. Monday after Monday, today's Cowboys dominate the debate -- heck, "First Take" dedicated last Monday's first 30 minutes to their loss in Detroit (and Jerry would've been proud of our ratings).

Naturally, nuclear overreaction to Dez Bryant's sideline tirades overshadowed the fact that Dallas is now 4-4 with a defense that has fallen to dead last among 32 NFL teams and that has already allowed an NFL-record four 400-yard passers in a season (with Drew Brees and Aaron Rodgers to come). If only the owner would launch into a tirade after a loss.

I don't believe anyone in this franchise or on this team takes winning nearly as now-or-never seriously as many early '90s Cowboys did because this team's sole leader -- the owner -- has gotten lost in his mirror.

Jerry Jones has mastered the art of promoting himself and his team while winning all of one playoff game in the past 16 years and making the playoffs only six times in those 16 years. That lone win came at home against Donovan McNabb in his final game as an Eagle just a week after the Cowboys had beaten the same Eagles at home. The last time Jerry's team played in an NFC Championship Game was before the 1995 Cowboys won the Super Bowl.

Let this sink in: The same Jones-owned Cowboys who should've won four straight Super Bowls in the early 1990s have since then led the league in mediocrity AND celebrity. Jerry's genius: The Cowboys still attract the media coverage of a Super Bowl champ though they have missed the playoffs the past three seasons with a combined record of 22-26. Yep, they're still the Wow-boys.They're also 132-132 since 1887.

Jones built a shrine to himself -- JerryWorld, now AT&T Stadium -- which has played host to a Super Bowl, an NBA All-Star Game, a Manny Pacquiao fight and many big college games. Yet Cowboys opponents have treated it as almost a national-stage neutral site. Jerry's team is just 21-16 (counting the one playoff win) in his stadium.

It's almost as if Jerry has created more of a can't-look-away reality show than a potential championship team. The formula: Assemble just enough tantalizingly talented underachievers revolving around at least one agonizingly immature potential star who has battled off-field issues (Dez) to keep Cowboys lovers hoping for the best and haters expecting the worst. This is the NFL's version of "The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills."

Congrats, Jerry. You win … nothing.

Does Jerry need to hire a proven football man to make personnel decisions? No, Jerry has done well enough as GM -- and besides, he bought the team to run it, so fading into the background is simply not an option. No, what Jones needs more than ever is a Jimmy, a polar-opposite partner as driven to win as Jerry is to entertain.

That's why he and Jimmy Johnson blended so beautifully. Jimmy could barely contain his rage to dominate. Jimmy motivated by fear -- even his stars dreaded his win-or-else blowups. Forget the affable, chuckling Jimmy you see on Fox. On the team plane after a 1992 loss in Washington -- Jimmy's young Cowboys had blown a 17-10 lead after three quarters and lost 20-17 -- I witnessed him go psycho and tear into players (stars included) who dared to joke around in the coach section.

Result: That '92 team broke through a year ahead of schedule. Yet: The Cowboys almost certainly wouldn't have won that Super Bowl without the trade Jerry pulled off with rival San Francisco for Charles Haley (against Jimmy's better judgment). Jerry also made several smaller crucial moves that season and did an underrated job of reining in or spurring on Jimmy on draft days.
But Jimmy simply couldn't stand Jerry taking or getting a lick of credit, and Jimmy finally insulted Jerry one too many times in front of staffers. After they had won two straight Super Bowls, Jerry fired Jimmy … and hired ex-Oklahoma coach Barry Switzer, a Jerry favorite who had played at Arkansas ahead of him.

If Jerry hadn't pulled off signing Deion Sanders away from San Francisco, Switzer might not have won that third Super Bowl with a team Jimmy had taught to win. Jerry and Barry were two good cops running easily the NFL's most talented team.

I thought Bill Parcells would be Jerry's next Jimmy. But Parcells is a Jersey guy who, in his final coaching stop, never seemed quite comfortable in the Hollywood that is Dallas. Jerry forced a player on Parcells (Terrell Owens) who was more headline-maker than difference-maker. Parcells did make the playoffs twice in four years, but he lost badly at Carolina and Romo's muffed field-goal hold ended a spectacular loss in Seattle.

Now Jerry has a pet coach (Garrett), a pet QB (Romo) and a pet receiver (Dez) he defends to a pathetic fault. He bet Valley Ranch (Cowboys headquarters) on Romo with a six-year, $108 million deal including $55 million guaranteed, even though Romo repeatedly has proved to be, as my debate partner Stephen A. Smith constantly reminds me, "an accident waiting to happen." I'm convinced Jerry reinvested in Tony Oh-No in part because he's just so damned exciting to watch.

Last offseason, Jerry huffed and puffed and vowed "changes will be made." The scapegoat? Take-no-guff defensive coordinator Rob Ryan, whose unit had been decimated by injuries. Ryan's New Orleans defense is currently 12th of 32 teams and they're fourth in points allowed.

Jerry replaced him with the legendary Monte Kiffin, 73 -- Jerry's kind of storytelling crony. Monte did a stint at Jerry's school, Arkansas, with Lou Holtz. Yes, Kiffin's Cowboys defense also has lost some key performers, but dead last?

Who really cares? Jerry is still able to sell the illusion of hope because -- gusher luck! -- his team still leads the NFL's worst division at .500. But it isn't really based on quality. The Cowboys have lost to four over-.500 teams and beaten four under-.500 teams.

Heck, maybe his Cowboys can win it at 7-9. Wouldn't that have the country buzzing.

I'm sorry, Jerry, I can no longer defend you. You have your three rings, now you just want your three-ring circus. For you, winning playoff games is now optional and my Cowboys deserve better.

___________________________

Not a big fan of Bayless but 95% of this article is spot on. :towel
 

Smitty

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Does Jerry need to hire a proven football man to make personnel decisions? No, Jerry has done well enough as GM -- and besides, he bought the team to run it, so fading into the background is simply not an option. No, what Jones needs more than ever is a Jimmy, a polar-opposite partner as driven to win as Jerry is to entertain.
Sounds like Gus Bradley, alright.
 

Cotton

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Sounds like Gus Bradley, alright.
That's the 5% I don't agree with, Jerry absolutely does need to hire a football man to be his GM.
 

p1_

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Bayless is a dork. He happens to be right, though.
 

ravidubey

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I doubt Jerry engineered the Haley trade.

I think that may have been instigated by the 49ers in hopes of destroying the Cowboy locker room and snagging some of the extra Walker and Walsh trade draft picks. They had already foisted scrubs Dan Stubbs and Terrence Flagler on the Cowboys for 2nd and swapping 3rd round picks and thought they could reem the Cowboys again.

Jimmy managed to keep Haley from defecating on people enough to contribute to two Championships, but Haley wasn't as critical as people like to think.

Jimmy made it work. Dallas won because Jimmy knew how to coach the crazy youth and talent they had accumulated.
 

Genghis Khan

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I almost didn't click on this because of who wrote it but i'm glad I did. Props to Bayless for writing a great assessment.
 

Genghis Khan

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Sounds like Gus Bradley, alright.
I don't know about Bradley but I KNOW it's not Garrett.

I'm not going to defend Bradley because it would be pointless given his lack of success thus far but it is beyond ridiculous for you to continuously cherry pick a couple coaches here or there as if those extremely small sample size of coaches somehow shows that there aren't ANY coaches who could come in and do much better than Garrett.

Even if we don't bring up all of Garrett's coaching failures, we are coming off 2 straight 8-8 seasons and here we are sitting in the middle of a third one at 4-4, and you STILL don't want to recognize what is obvious to everyone but you and Jerry?

God damn.
 

Smitty

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you STILL don't want to recognize what is obvious to everyone but you and Jerry?

God damn.
What's not obvious to me? I've signed off on a coaching upgrade.

It's just not Gus Bradley or one of those types. I wonder when that will be obvious to you. Not until they've come here and failed, apparently.
 

Genghis Khan

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What's not obvious to me? I've signed off on a coaching upgrade.

It's just not Gus Bradley or one of those types. I wonder when that will be obvious to you. Not until they've come here and failed, apparently.
When have I ever said we should hire Gus Bradley?

We should hire someone better than Garrett? Ummm...duh?

Point you don't get is there are tons of better coaches. Seeya bye, Garrett.
 
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Deuce

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That's the 5% I don't agree with, Jerry absolutely does need to hire a football man to be his GM.
Sure he does, but Bayless is also right that stepping back isn't an option.

But he's also right in the type of coach this team needs to be successful. It's what I alluded to in another thread last week. A coach who can kick ass in the locker room and force the team to respect him while working hand in hand with Jerruh. It's our only hope.

Maybe it could be a Gus Bradley, maybe not. He's 8 games into his career as a HC. But after 3+ seasons I know for a fact it isn't Garrett.
 
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Deuce

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When have I ever said we should hire Gus Bradley?

We should hire someone better than Garrett? Ummm...duh?

Point you don't get is there are tons of better coaches. Seeya bye, Garrett.
I've mentioned Bradley a few times because he was a young up and coming DC that I liked. He built that Seattle D into a tough, hardnosed unit that gets after the QB.

He may fail spectacularly in Jacksonville, though I don't know that that would be completely his fault with their situation.
 

Cotton

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Sure he does, but Bayless is also right that stepping back isn't an option.

But he's also right in the type of coach this team needs to be successful. It's what I alluded to in another thread last week. A coach who can kick ass in the locker room and force the team to respect him while working hand in hand with Jerruh. It's our only hope.

Maybe it could be a Gus Bradley, maybe not. He's 8 games into his career as a HC. But after 3+ seasons I know for a fact it isn't Garrett.
Stepping back absolutely is an option. He just refuses to accept it.
 

bbgun

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and who, with final say on all draft and free-agent moves
If he's referring to the 1990s, that contradicts Jimmy. If he's referring to the present day, that contradicts Hos.
 
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Deuce

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Stepping back absolutely is an option. He just refuses to accept it.
He refuses to accept it which means it's not an option. Jerry owns the team so he makes the options. He isn't offering that one.

So, all we can do is look for the best possible scenario which I think getting rid of Garrett and bringing a Jimmy-like coach in is.
 

Cotton

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If he's referring to the 1990s, that contradicts Jimmy. If he's referring to the present day, that contradicts Hos.
And, who are you going believe? Huh?!

That's what I thought.
 

Cotton

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He refuses to accept it which means it's not an option. Jerry owns the team so he makes the options. He isn't offering that one.

So, all we can do is look for the best possible scenario which I think getting rid of Garrett and bringing a Jimmy-like coach in is.
We said this same thing with like 5 other coaches.
 

boozeman

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He refuses to accept it which means it's not an option. Jerry owns the team so he makes the options. He isn't offering that one.

So, all we can do is look for the best possible scenario which I think getting rid of Garrett and bringing a Jimmy-like coach in is.
Egg shells.
 
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Deuce

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We said this same thing with like 5 other coaches.
We have, but look at the track record during that span. Of all the coaches hired, only one has history of that kind of mentality and he's the only one that had any success at building a team. We just ran out of time with him because of age and energy. Find a younger coach with a similar mentality and we have a chance.
 

Cotton

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We have, but look at the track record during that span. Of all the coaches hired, only one has history of that kind of mentality and he's the only one that had any success at building a team. We just ran out of time with him because of age and energy. Find a younger coach with a similar mentality and we have a chance.
So, it seems that hiring a a strong willed young coach is about as likely as Jones stepping back.
 

Texas Ace

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The Cowboys fan in me is getting increasingly sick and tired of watching Jerry Jones enable his team to lose without fear. Super nice guys Romo, Jason Garrett, Jason Witten and DeMarcus Ware now lead the league in post-loss patience -- in handling tougher and tougher media questions with shrugging imperturbability -- because they aren't afraid of being held accountable by the owner.
Right the frick on.

That is exactly why I was 100% behind Dez's sideline blow up because for ONCE, someone on that team actually looked mad about choking a game away.

The other guys are pretty much numb to it which is why they don't really show any type of emotion. They're ok with it.
 
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