| Dallas Cowboys Team History
  In 
                  1960, the Dallas Cowboys became the NFL's first successful new 
                  team since the collapse of the All-America Football Conference 
                  10 years earlier. Clint Murchison Jr. was the new team's majority 
                  owner and his first order of business was to hire Tex Schramm 
                  as general manager, Tom Landry as head coach and Gil Brandt 
                  as player personnel director. 
 This trio was destined for almost unprecedented success in the 
                  pro football world but the "glory years" didn't come 
                  easily. Playing in the storied Cotton Bowl, the 1960 Cowboys 
                  had to settle for one tie in 12 games and Dallas didn't break 
                  even until its sixth season in 1965. But in 1966, the Cowboys 
                  began an NFL-record streak of 20 consecutive winning seasons. 
                  That streak included 18 years in the playoffs, 13 divisional 
                  championships, five trips to the Super Bowl and victories in 
                  Super Bowls VI and XII.
 
 Dallas won its first two divisional championships in 1966 and 
                  1967 but lost to the Green Bay Packers in the NFL championship 
                  game each year. Similar playoff losses the next seasons were 
                  followed by a 16-13 last-second loss to Baltimore in Super Bowl 
                  V following the 1970 season. The Cowboys were typified as "a 
                  good team that couldn't win the big games."
 
 But they dispelled such thought for good the very next year 
                  with a 24-3 win over the Miami Dolphins in Super Bowl VI. The 
                  Cowboys were Super Bowl-bound three more times from 1975 to 
                  1978. They lost to Pittsburgh in extremely competitive games 
                  in Super Bowls X and XIII but defeated the Denver Broncos 27-10 
                  in Super Bowl XII. During their big years of the 1970s, the 
                  Cowboys were led by such future Pro Football Hall of Fame members 
                  as quarterback Roger Staubach, defensive tackles Bob Lilly and 
                  Randy White, defensive back Mel Renfro and running back Tony 
                  Dorsett.
 
 In 1967, Murchison announced that the Cowboys would build their 
                  own stadium in suburban Irving, Texas. A new Dallas pro football 
                  era began on October 24, 1971, when 65,024-seat Texas Stadium 
                  was opened.
 
 The Cowboys of the 1970s and early 1980s were known as "America's 
                  Team," an outfit that was just a step ahead of almost every 
                  other club when it came to image-enhancing promotions such as 
                  The Dallas Cowboys Newsweekly with a circulation of 100,000, 
                  sales of Cowboys souvenirs and apparel and the famous Dallas 
                  Cowboys cheerleaders.
 
 The Cowboys suffered their first losing season in two decades 
                  in 1986 and fell all the way to 3-13 in 1988. H. R. "Bum" 
                  Bright, who had purchased the Cowboys from Murchison in 1984, 
                  sold the team to Jerry Jones in 1989. Jones named former University 
                  of Miami coach Jimmy Johnson to replace Landry, who finished 
                  his career with 270 victories, third most by any coach in history.
 
 Johnson's first team won only once in 16 games but some daring 
                  trades and shrewd selections in the annual NFL draft quickly 
                  returned the Cowboys to championship status in Super Bowl XXVII 
                  in the fourth season of the Jerry Jones regime. They followed 
                  with a second straight world title in Super Bowl XXVIII. In 
                  March 1994, college coach Barry Switzer replaced Johnson as 
                  the Cowboys third head coach. The winning continued under Switzer, 
                  as the "Team of the Nineties" won its third Super 
                  Bowl in four years with a 27-17 victory over the Pittsburgh 
                  Steelers in Super Bowl XXX. In 1998, Chan Gailey replaced Switzer 
                  as the Cowboys' head coach followed two years later by Dave 
                  Campo. In 2003, Bill Parcells became only the sixth head coach 
                  in team history.
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