|
Rookies (1980-89)
The Dallas Cowboys are a professional American football team based in the Dallas/Fort Worth metropolitan area in North Texas. The team currently plays their home games in Irving, but they are scheduled to move to a new stadium in nearby Arlington in 2009. more...
Home
Baseball-MLB
Baseball-Minors
Baseball-Negro Leagues
Basketball-NBA
Basketball-WNBA
Boxing
College Trading Cards
Football-CFL (Canadian)
Football-NFL
Boxes, Cases
Lots
Other
Packs
Rookies (1980-89)
Graded
BGS
Other Graders
PSA
Non-Graded
Rookies (1990-99)
Rookies (2000-Now)
Rookies (Pre-1980)
Sets
Singles (1950-59)
Singles (1960-69)
Singles (1970-79)
Singles (1980-89)
Singles (1990-99)
Singles (2000-Now)
Singles (Pre-1950)
Golf-LPGA
Golf-Other
Golf-PGA
Hockey-Minors
Hockey-NHL
Olympics
Other
Racing-Indy Racing
Racing-NASCAR
Racing-Other
Soccer
Storage, Display Supplies
Tennis
Wrestling-WWE
etopps
The Cowboys are members of the Eastern Division of the National Football Conference in the National Football League, and joined the NFL as a 1960 expansion team. The team is sometimes referred to colloquially as America's Team due to its having a large fan base that lives outside its immediate local area. (The term itself is derived from the title of the team's 1978 NFL Films highlight film.) The team's national following might best be represented by its NFL record of consecutive games in front of sold out stadiums. The streak of 160 sold-out regular and post-season games began in 1990 and included 79 straight sellouts at Texas Stadium and 81 straight sell-outs on the road.
According to Forbes Magazine, the Cowboys are one of the most valuable sports teams in North America, with an estimated value of approximately $1.173 billion, behind the Washington Redskins ($1.423 billion) and the New England Patriots ($1.176 billion). They are also one of the wealthiest teams in the NFL, generating almost $250 million in annual revenue.
The Cowboys are one of the most successful teams in the history of the NFL, holding the league records for most consecutive winning seasons (20, from 1966 to 1985) and most seasons with at least 10 wins (24). The team has earned the most postseason appearances (27, as of 2004, which includes another league record of 54 postseason games, winning 32 of them), the most appearances in the NFC Championship Game (14), and the most Super Bowl appearances (8), two more than any other NFL team. The Cowboys also played in 2 NFL championship games before the NFL-AFL merger. The Cowboys became the first team in NFL history to win 3 Super Bowls in just 4 years (a feat that has been matched only once since, by the New England Patriots). They are also tied with the San Francisco 49ers and the Pittsburgh Steelers for having the most Super Bowl wins (5).
Historically, the Cowboys were particularly successful during a 30-year period from 1966 to 1996. They qualified for the playoffs 24 times (80%), played in 14 NFC Championship Games (over half of all of the conference title games played during that time), won 19 division titles, and took the field for 8 Super Bowls.
Franchise history
1960s
Originally, the formation of an NFL expansion team in Texas was met with strong opposition by Washington Redskins owner, George Preston Marshall. This was no surprise, because despite being located in the nation's capital, Marshall's Redskins had enjoyed a monopoly as the only NFL team to represent the Southern States of the US for several decades. This came as little surprise to would-be team owners, Clint Murchison, Jr. and Bedford Wynne, so to ensure the birth of their expansion team, the men bought the rights to the Redskins fight song, "Hail to the Redskins" and threatened to refuse to allow Marshall to play the song at games. Needing the song, which had become a staple for his "professional football team of Dixie", Marshall changed his mind, and the city of Dallas, Texas, was granted an NFL franchise on January 28, 1960. This early confrontation between the two franchises no doubt triggered what would become one of the more significant rivalries in the NFL, which continues even to this day.
Read more at Wikipedia.org
|
|