The Tony Romo Saga Has Ended in Retirement (For Now)
Welcome to the broadcast booth (for now), Tony Romo.
“How ’bout them Cowboys?” Once an exultation, it could now be a lament. But the current Jerry Jones era of big money and small, sad football doesn’t change a thing: the NFL franchise that oilman Clint Murchison Jr., general manager Tex Schramm, and head coach Tom Landry started at the Cotton Bowl in 1960 is right up there with brisket and the Alamo as something that nearly all Texans agree on (just ask Facebook). The very existence of Cowboys-haters, as well as Houston’s little-brother NFL frustration, merely confirms the Cowboys’ status as a state religion.
Welcome to the broadcast booth (for now), Tony Romo.
How Charlotte Jones Anderson, the chief brand officer and executive vice president for the Dallas Cowboys, helped build the organization into a $4 billion behemoth.
If Romo is released, would the other NFL team in Texas pick him up?
The Super Bowl dream may be dead this year, but there’s a lot to celebrate about the 2016 Dallas Cowboys.
Why Mexican Americans love the Dallas Cowboys.
How is this even a question?
Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo effectively conceded that the team now belongs to Dak Prescott. So what’s Romo’s next play?
It’s time to take this question seriously, Cowboys fans.
The rookie quarterback has Dallas Cowboys fans asking a tough question: Who should be the starter when Tony Romo returns?
What she said in her final interview about Tex Schramm, Jerry Jones, and the birth of the most famous cheerleading squad in history.
Brock Osweiler and Dak Prescott replaced the rotating cast of QB’s that both the Cowboys and the Texans featured last year. So how’d they do?
How sunlight streaming into AT&T Stadium may have caused the Cowboys to lose a game.
After a decade of hard-won victories and brutal setbacks, the 36-year-old quarterback—and every Cowboys fan—knows this: 2016 is the year he will write his legacy.
For Tony Romo and the Dallas Cowboys, it’s now or never.
The former Baylor coach, relieved of his duties after recommendations from a law firm hired to investigate his program’s sexual assault scandal, has been busy traveling lately.
By default, is UNT America’s college? No, but this is still a big deal.
During a sit-down interview, the ESPN reporter jumped to some big conclusions.
Jerry Jones is a brain-injury truther.
For Cowboys and Texans fans watching from home, that must sting a little.
Hard to see what could go wrong with the Cowboys Club.
The quarterback who got dumped by the Cowboys—the Cowboys!—stepped in and stepped up for the Texans Sunday night.
Greg Hardy doesn't seem sorry for his past mistakes, and that behavior is bringing the team down.
Welcome to Dallas (er, Arlington), professional women’s basketball!
After some uninspired starts from Brandon Weeden, Cowboys Nation turns its lonely eyes to, er, Matt Cassel. We've got other ideas.
They’re making crazy extra points in Midland, missing them in Austin, and needing them desperately in Dallas.
The beleaguered quarterback has essentially been hounded out of Washington by his coaches. It's time to set him free.
The Cowboys’ star wide receiver is the first football player to appear on the cover of the rock magazine since Jim McMahon back in 1986.
Learning to love—or at least respect—the Houston Texans when your heart is in Dallas.
With DirecTV, he’s five-interceptions-in-two-different-games Tony Romo. With cable, he’s arts-and-crafts Tony Romo who bakes brownie cupcakes. We’re not sure what this ad is getting at.
If the Cowboys’ top receiver makes good on his threat to sit out the start of the season, where does that leave the team?
She was 45 years old when the Cowboys were founded, and Troy has always been the star quarterback of her heart.
With the Cowboys aggressively pursuing Adrian Peterson—and with Greg Hardy already in the fold—now is a good time to consider how the NFL could try to resolve its domestic violence problem.
But they would—and did—sign Greg Hardy, the great pass rusher, who has a history of domestic violence and who spent the 2014 season suspended from the league. A SXSports panel discusses.
She welded wings onto airplanes in World War II, visited Soviet Russia to argue about airplanes, and modeled for a Lawrence Welk-affiliated clothing shop—but the most talked-about moment in her life was the day twenty years ago that Troy Aikman knocked on her door by mistake.
The Cowboys star wide receiver is the subject of some unverified rumors being reported by the mainstream sports press regarding a video that may or may not exist. How does a story with no corroboration end up being discussed everywhere?
So much for that, then.
Our schadenfreude-obsessed culture is focused on the Governor of New Jersey’s embrace of Jerry Jones and the pass interference penalty that wasn’t—but after winning their first playoff game in half a decade, the Cowboys are focused on the Packers.
The ten-win Cowboys could take the top seed in the NFC and homefield advantage in the playoffs, or they could miss the post-season all together.
Here's the shiniest new thing in Jones' collection of shiny new things.
The Cowboys fell to 6-2 in a loss that, to a lot of UT fans watching the game, still felt a little bit like a win.
If he did, he'd probably have reconsidered turning over his stadium to the NCAA for the college football championship when the Cowboys could still be hosting a home playoff game.
*Except the shoplifting running backs, declining national popularity, opponents preparing for Ebola, etc.
Are the 2014 Dallas Cowboys for real?
These days, no matter how much you love pro football, it's hard to like the NFL.
Yesterday, Davis told a radio station that she's a Cowboys fan, which led the Abbott campaign to call her a flip-flopper, in one of the sillier press releases of this campaign season.
*Practice squad member—which still makes Jerry Jones the most progressively-minded person in the NFL.
Ryan Fitzpatrick's leash just got a whole lot shorter, Tony Romo's former backup just got a whole lot richer, and Texans fans who shudder the names "Schaub" and "Carr" just got a whole lot more reasons to laugh at the potential San Antonio Raiders.
Spoiler: They tell us that the bookmakers think that the Cowboys are even less likely to be good than the Texans.
Dustin Vaughan from West Texas A&M impressed the hell out of everybody with the viral hit YouTube video that showed off his skills.
It took until the final minutes of the 2014 NFL Draft for Michael Sam—the Texas native who, as the first openly gay player to attempt to enter the NFL, made history this weekend—to hear his name called. The league, and a few prominent football players, have some growing up to