Hubbach: Why Tom Landry died a Giants fan

boozeman

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Why Tom Landry died a Giants fan

By Bart Hubbuch

October 31, 2013 | 3:44pm



Tom Landry died a … Giants fan!

Yes, according to the widow of the legendary Cowboys coach who says in a new book that Landry was so disgusted by Jerry Jones’ treatment of him during and after his 1989 firing that he spent the rest of his life rooting for Big Blue instead of America’s Team.

According to “The Last Cowboy: A Life of Tom Landry,” by Long Island author Mark Ribowsky, Alicia Landry also claims that Jones took away the Landry family’s suite at since-demolished Texas Stadium and barred Landry’s son, Tom Jr., without explanation from continuing to buy Cowboys season tickets.

Jones’ behavior prompted Tom Landry to renew his love of the Giants — where he had served as defensive coordinator from 1954 until taking over the expansion Cowboys in 1960 — until his death in 2000.

Landry’s widow said she still cheers on the Cowboys’ NFC East rivals to this day.

“The Giants are still like family,” Alicia Landry said in a December 2011 interview, according to the book. “I still have dinner with Ann Mara [Wellington Mara’s widow] when she comes in. …The Giants never stopped being our family.”

Jones famously fired Landry after 29 seasons as coach on a golf course in Austin, Texas, shortly after purchasing the Cowboys from the late Bum Bright in February 1989.

The Cowboys had gone 3-13 in the final year of Landry’s Hall of Fame career and missed the playoffs three consecutive seasons, but Landry’s widow says the coach never got over how poorly his dismissal was handled.

Landry went to Texas Stadium just three times after being axed, but only to attend tributes to himself or former players and not as a Cowboys fan.

“He really didn’t have any dog in the hunt,” Alicia Landry said, according to the book. “A football game is good if you care who wins. He didn’t. It wasn’t his job anymore.

“That’s why I watch Giants games. I want ‘em to win so I get involved in watching their games, as did [Tom Landry]. We loved the Maras the way we loved the [family of original Cowboys owner Clint Murchison]. After [the firing by Jones], well … it wasn’t the same.”

Alicia Landry claims that, shortly after the coach was dismissed, Jones confiscated the luxury suite the Landry family had been given free by Murchison when Texas Stadium was constructed in 1971.

Shortly afterward, the book says, Landry’s eldest son was informed he would no longer be able to buy the six season tickets at the 50-yard line that he had purchased every year the stadium was open.

“It was a very nice box too, right next to the press box,” she said, according to the book. “I guess they really needed it. Whatever the reason, we didn’t have the seats.”

The Cowboys released a statement:

“Our ownership’s relationship with the Landry family has developed and grown through the years with many shared experiences celebrating the life and career of Tom Landry and his teams. There is a tremendous level of respect and admiration that the Jones family, and everyone in the organization, has for Coach Landry, his family and his legacy.”


Landry’s widow said her relationship with Jones is still so icy that she has never been to lavish AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, for a football game since Jones opened it in 2009.

“I don’t know him at all,” she reportedly said of Jones. “I really don’t. I know what he looks like. I’ve seen him a few times and we say hello to each other in a friendly way. But I don’t know him.”

There is a statue of Tom Landry outside the Cowboys’ new stadium, and several roads in the Dallas-Fort Worth area have been named after the most beloved sports figure in the region’s history.

But Alicia Landry said her late husband would not have wanted the new stadium named after him simply because of Jones.

“The bond wasn’t there anymore,” she said. “I certainly don’t care about it. … It’s not the same Dallas Cowboys. I didn’t really want the new stadium to be named after Tommy anyway.

“They call it ‘Jerry’s World,’ which is more about what it is than anything Tom Landry was.”
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No offense to Saint Tom, but is this supposed to matter? Oh noes, he went to his death bed holding a grudge?

Jerry handled the whole thing badly, but it was time for Landry to go.
 

Smitty

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If anything it's funny that, if true, all it means is that Landry basically was a mercenary who didn't really care about Dallas any more than it being a job. Just like most of these guys.
 

boozeman

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If anything it's funny that, if true, all it means is that Landry basically was a mercenary who didn't really care about Dallas any more than it being a job. Just like most of these guys.
Likely he was prideful and felt he should be able to go out on his own terms. That was his problem.

I may not like how Jerry handled it (I was furious at the time), but it was time for a change. The game had passed him by and I was excited that we were getting the hottest coach around at the time in Jimmy Johnson.

The fact that Landry held a grudge on his deathbed doesn't bother me in the least.
 

bbgun

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Landry had to go, but I can totally envision Jerry repossessing that suite because it was something of great value.
 

ravidubey

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The fact that Landry held a grudge on his deathbed doesn't bother me in the least.
He'd lost the ability to innovate. I thought his best coaching job may have been 1985, but even that was a lot of tweaks and adjustments to account for deficiencies in talent at QB and LB and age at RB, WR, and DL. The 4-0 defense was one of these changes. Offensively he shortened up patterns to accommodate Danny White's declining skills.

Statistically that offense was #1 for a while, but the best defenses just shut it down. The receivers were too slow and Dorsett had lost a step, especially late in the season and on grass. The best offenses blew up the 4-0 as the front seven lacked the power to mach up. The Bears, Bengals, and Rams OLs sodomized that defense. They were younger than the Cowboys DL, got to the second level, and humiliated the seven DB's on the field.

I think Landry had plenty of tread on the tires as a gameday coach if the damned team had any talent. Schramm and Brandt were unable to build that talent base, blowing almost every draft of the 1980's. In 1986 Herschel Walker and Mike Sherrard added a big spark to the offense, but they couldn't make up for the OL, QB, and ancient front seven. Once White went down after midseason, Dallas went into a death spiral Landry never recovered from.
 

boozeman

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I think Landry had plenty of tread on the tires as a gameday coach if the damned team had any talent. Schramm and Brandt were unable to build that talent base, blowing almost every draft of the 1980's. In 1986 Herschel Walker and Mike Sherrard added a big spark to the offense, but they couldn't make up for the OL, QB, and ancient front seven. Once White went down after midseason, Dallas went into a death spiral Landry never recovered from.
Like any coach, Landry wasn't powerless with the talent on the roster...especially the depth. Who a head coach selects to fill out the bottom of the roster matters just as much as the top.

It didn't help that Bum Bright was a cheap prick, but Landry often would have his pets and often kept players around that simply couldn't play but were disciplined and would be coachable. We had a lot of players that Johnson inherited that simply were awful and many were out of the league in a very short period of time.

As for the drafts, Brandt had some terrible drafts in the mid eighties that killed us, but his final ones gave us some important guys in Irvin, Norton, Martin, Gogan and Hennings.
 

data

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A true Cowboys fan should now be a Giants fan
 
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