mookie1995
there's a good buck in that racket.
Re: 122 Franchises Ranked Bottom to Top:
Ix nay on the current Nelson aye
Ix nay on the current Nelson aye
11. Green Bay Packers
Top Current Players: Jordy Nelson
The sheer fact they lost to canesco and McGwire and eck should drop them to the mid 80’s
10. Pittsburgh Steelers
Hall of Famers: Jerome Bettis
8. Dallas Cowboys
Why? Self-proclaimed America’s Team, yet douchiest banbase west of Boston.
The Good. 5 Super Bowls, 8 NFC Championships (1970, 1971, 1975, 1977, 1978, 1992, 1993, 1995). 32 playoff appearances.
The Bad, The 1980’s showed the Cowboys slide from contenders to pretenders. Went a combined 4-28 in 1988 & 1989. The Dave Campo era for three 5-11 seasons in the early 2000’s. Since 1996 have 3 playoff wins, The Jacksonville Jaguars have 6.
The Ugly: The Firing of Tom Landry. The Cowboys are easy to hate, but it was hard to hate Tom Landry who was the head coach for the Cowboys first 29 seasons. Landry was the former Defensive Coordinator for the New York Giants (Vince Lombardi was the Giants Offensive Coordinator before going to Green Bay). Landry’s achievements as head coach rival few and his innovative strategies made the Cowboys contenders every year until the mid-1980’s. Starting in 1986, the Cowboys started to slip. By 1988, the Cowboys had the league’s worst record at 3-13 and the #1 pick in the draft.
In February 1989, owner Bum Bright sold the Cowboys to Jerry Jones. Jones fired Landry and General Manager Tex Schramm, so that he can hire his former college teammate at the University of Arkansas, University of Miami Head Coach Jimmy Johnson. Landry did have one year left on his contract and the quick firing was quickly criticized around the league and by Cowboy fans. Schramm was in tears, he started at the franchise’s birth just like Landry. Years later Jones, admitted that he should have handled the situation much better. While the Jones/Johnson partnership started off at 1-15 in 1989, they were in the playoffs again in 1991, and won the Super Bowl the season after that.
Where they play. AT&T Stadium, also known as “Jerry’s World”, it was originally christened Cowboys Stadium in 2009. It replaced Texas Stadium, which opened in 1971, before that the Cowboys played in the original Cotton Bowl.
Owner: Jerry Jones, probably the most controversial owner in the NFL, it not all of North American sports. Bought the Cowboys in 1989, and general manager as well, a very hands on owner who initially had success but have had problems winning in the playoffs. Jones was co-captain of the 1964 NCAA Champion Arkansas Razorbacks. While Jones is controversial, he has made himself and other NFL owners a ton of money.
Coach: Jason Garrett, his Jones’s current puppet head coach. Garrett was a backup quarterback in the 1990’s, and just finished his 7th season as head coach of the Cowboys, by far the longest tenure in the Jones era.
No one in the HoF?
No one in the HoF?
(a.k.a. Brooklyn Dodgers)
The Ugly: The move from Brooklyn. It would be easy to say that most people in Brooklyn, Walter O’Malley was as revered as Stalin or Hitler for moving the beloved bums to Los Angeles. O’Malley bought the Dodgers in 1950; he knew that Ebbets Field was small and dilapidated. The Dodgers were relatively strong in the 1940’s and 1950’s there were only so many fans that could cram inside. As fans started moving away from Brooklyn and on to suburban Long Island, there was very little parking near the ballpark.
O’Malley wanted to build a bigger ballpark in the Atlantic Yards in another section of Brooklyn. New York City Buildings Commissioner Robert Moses refused to help via eminent domain. Moses countered with offering the Dodgers city land in Queens to build a dual-use stadium for the Dodgers and the Giants. O’Malley refused saying the team is the Brooklyn Dodgers, not the Queens Dodgers.
In 1956, the Dodgers decided to play several games at Jersey City’s Roosevelt Stadium. City officials decided O’Malley was bluffing thinking O’Malley would not leave New York. By the 1950’s, air travel was more accessible than taking the train, it meant teams travel very far, very quickly. Officials from Los Angeles offered everything New York City would not offer. Buy land cheaply, have control over his own ballpark and giving him complete control over revenue. To help get approval from the National League, O’Malley convinced Giants owner Horace Stoneham to move his team to San Francisco instead of Minneapolis. Both teams moved after the 1957 season.
O'Malley's stadium plans included a retractable roof designed by Buckminster Fuller. That concept wouldn't come to fruition until over 40 years later in Toronto.