Eatman: Where Does Ware Rank Among Cowboys Greats?

Cotton

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4) Where Does Ware Rank Among Cowboys Greats?

Posted 1 hour ago
Nick Eatman
DallasCowboys.com Staff Writer





IRVING, Texas
– As the Cowboys focus on the offseason, training camp is just days away.

Coming off two straight 8-8 campaigns and three full years removed from the playoffs, the Cowboys have plenty of question marks surrounding them as they prepare for the 2013 season.
As we count down the days to camp, the writers of DallasCowboys.com will take a different question each day that is hovering over this team.

With just four days until the Cowboys take the field in Oxnard, Calif., today’s question centers onDeMarcus Ware closing in on the team’s sack record and where that might put him among the franchise’s best players.

4) Where Does Ware Rank Among Cowboys Greats?

Barring any significant injury – and if 2012 showed us anything it’s that it takes a lot more than just an average injury to sideline DeMarcus Ware – at some point early this season the Cowboys will have a new all-time sack leader.

The late Harvey Martin has held that distinction since he retired in 1983, sitting at the top of the charts with 114 sacks. Ware currently has 111, meaning he needs just four more sacks this year to surpass Martin as the Cowboys’ all-time leader.

Officially, according to the NFL, Ware already holds the mark because the league didn’t start registering sacks as an official stat until 1982. But the Cowboys have kept the correct stats and Martin has had the lead for 30 years. That will likely change this season, considering Ware hasn’t been held under double-digit sacks since his rookie year of 2005.

So when that happens, what will it mean for Ware’s legacy with the Cowboys? Will it even change at all?

Martin holding the club’s sack record hasn’t been enough to land him a spot in the Ring of Honor. Many pundits believe Martin is the biggest snub of the Tom Landry era and is the most deserving to get into the Ring. However, Ware is seemingly a lock for the Ring of Honor when his playing days are done.

But even if he never plays for a championship team, is it possible for Ware to be considered one of the best defensive players in Cowboys history? Stats-wise, he’ll be more accomplished than Bob Lilly or Randy White and Martin. But those guys have Super Bowl rings.

Just how far does Ware have to stretch the sack record to overlook his lack of team success? Then again, Ware turns 31 next month. He still has a few good years in him and who knows what the Cowboys will do as a team over the next few seasons.

With four sacks, Ware will be considered the very best Cowboys player to rush the quarterback. But just how many sacks will he need to be considered the best defensive player in franchise history?

Sticking with our numerical journey to training camp, let’s take a closer look at the number 4:


  • DeMarco Murray had just four rushing touchdowns last season to lead the team. Kevin Ogletree also had four receiving touchdowns, which ranked him third behind Dez Bryant (12) and Miles Austin (six).

  • The only player drafted No. 4 in franchise history was Scott Appleton, a defensive tackle in 1964. Appleton never suited up for the Cowboys, who traded his rights to the Steelers.

  • Only four players have donned the No. 4 for the Cowboys: Mike Saxon, Toby Gowin, Micah Knorr and Shaun Suisham.

  • Isaac Holt is the Cowboys’ all-time leader in blocked punts with four, all occurring in a four-year span from 1989-92.

  • Dennis Thurman and Dexter Coakley are tied for the most interception returns for touchdowns in team history with four each.

  • Bob Hayes (1970) and Terrell Owens (2007) are the only two players in Cowboys history to record four touchdown catches in a game.
 

ravidubey

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Ware's legacy is marred by the Cowboys lack of playoff appearances during his career.

Harvey Martin was the co-MVP of a Superbowl. Too Tall Jones changed the way teams played Dallas in the postseason. Ware? I think back on his career and the signature moments are fading into the same obscurity as the relatively low significance of the games in which he was dominant.

Besides a (very) few unbelievable players like Barry Sanders, Dan Marino, Randy Moss, and T.O., football immortality is achieved in the playoffs. Because of that, Ware doesn't penetrate the upper echelon of Cowboy greats.
 

Carp

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Comparing him to Marino is a pretty good comparison. Puts up huge numbers, but really has nothing to show for it.
 

boozeman

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He's going to need a SB or something to put a capstone on his career. What is funny is that almost all the great pass rushers of all time have that, save guys like Deacon Jones. But he at least was a bad ass, not a guy who would help up a QB Greg Ellis-style.
 
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