Parcells talks about his time with Dallas, Jones

dbair1967

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Parcells Enjoyed Time In Dallas; Still Admires Jones’ Passion

Posted 3 hours ago

Nick Eatman DallasCowboys.com Staff Writer


IRVING, Texas – Now down to just a handful of days before the start of training camp, the questions, projections and predictions of the Cowboys’ 2013 season are starting to surface even more.

This is the time of year for that. Forecasting and finger-pointing go hand and hand. And for the Cowboys, the person that gets most of the criticism, if not the vast majority, is owner/general manager Jerry Jones.

The Cowboys have won just one playoff game since 1996 – that stat gets pointed out in just about every setting possible – and the man behind it all is Jones.

Publicly, he’s the man who fired Tom Landry. He’s the one who couldn’t get along with Jimmy Johnson and he’s the one making all the decisions – especially the wrong ones – that have prevented the Cowboys from climbing that proverbial mountain.

But according to one of the more well recognized coaches that ever worked for him, there is a big misperception to how things operate at Valley Ranch.

Bill Parcells, who is about to be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame next month, coached in Dallas four years and said his time with the Cowboys was “enjoyable.” He also spoke of that misperception between Jerry and his head coaches.

“Oh yeah, definitely. I think it’s distorted,” Parcells said. “I think there’s a definite misperception. I just think everyone thinks things are a certain way. I didn’t see it to be that way. I think Jerry is a good businessmen and a good listener. What you have to do is make sense to him. You’ve got to make sense to him. If he thinks you’re making sense, he’ll alter his opinion. I enjoyed him. I like him. I like him a lot.”

Parcells coached the Cowboys from 2003-06, putting them in the playoffs twice with three winning records. Although he decided to stop coaching the team in 2006, Parcells said he remains friends with the Cowboys’ owner to this day.

“I liked my experience there,” Parcells said. “It didn’t turn out perfect from a record-standpoint. I understand all of that. But I learned a lot and I enjoyed working there.

“Jerry and I are pretty good friends. I don’t know whether or not people know that. We talk a little bit. I wouldn’t say frequently. We talk a little bit. We talked recently. It’s good. And I’m close with Stephen [Jones], too. I enjoyed working there with the Joneses. They were supportive and tried to help.”

One of things Jerry gets criticized for the most is the way he apparently dabbles into the Cowboys’ every-day business, although as the general manager, it is certainly within his job description. Jerry is a hands-on owner and GM but according to Parcells, that passion is what drew him to the Cowboys job in the first place.

“We had some mutual friends. I was very close with Al Davis and I know Jerry was, too,” Parcells recalled. “I had a little background information from Al – not about working for the Cowboys, just about what they were trying to do. I knew he had a lot of passion for his work and his job and his organization. I could name a few organizations I don’t feel that about. The owner is just blasé about ‘if we win we win, good; if we don’t, that’s all right.’

“But Jerry isn’t like that. You want to be somewhere where it’s important to the people and certainly it’s a high-profile franchise without question. I just felt like those are the kinds of things I look forward to. I was trying to do something at a place like that. I like them. I think they’re a good group. I think they’re passionate. I think they’re trying to be successful in the business. Hey, that’s all a coach can ask for.”

If there is anyone who might be able to compare coaching situations, it would be Parcells, who led four different teams: the Giants, Patriots, Jets and Cowboys. Parcells also worked in the front office of the Dolphins.

But although the NFL doesn’t make players or coaches distinguish what team they are associated with for the Hall of Fame the way baseball does, Parcells makes it clear.

“I’m going in as a Giant,” Parcells said. “That was a place I spent 10 full years, two as an assistant and eight as a head coach. I certainly didn’t spend more than four years anywhere else. I think, identification-wise, I’m more with the Giants than any other franchise, just because of longevity.”

Parcells also says he was ahead of the time in terms of NFL coaches today. He sees coaches and players bouncing around from team to team much more than they did in the past.

“I was a product of what you see around the league now,” Parcells said. “When I first came into the league, the league wasn’t as transient in nature – players or coaches. Coaches stayed at one place and players stayed in one place. But with free agency and different ownership, the dynamic of the industry has changed a little bit. It’s become more transient in nature. You see a guy like Mike Shanahan … he’s a head coach in three different places. You see more of that than what you used to. It’s just the nature of the business. It’s a little more volatile and a little more transient. Change is a little more on the forefront than it was 30 years ago.”

Parcells showed he was never one to avoid change. He actually embraced it. And while he’s gone through many stops along the way, his time in Dallas gives him fond memories.

Although the Cowboys might have several problems facing them as they head into this season, there are many pundits who believe the GM might be the biggest issue.

There is one soon-to-be-inducted Hall of Fame coach who would disagree.
 

boozeman

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I am so fucking sick of hearing about his "passion.

That is about all anyone can say when asked about him.

I would rather have someone say...hey...that Jerry...he knows what it takes to win

But nobody has, can or ever will.
 
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I am so fucking sick of hearing about his "passion.

That is about all anyone can say when asked about him.

I would rather have someone say...hey...that Jerry...he knows what it takes to win

But nobody has, can or ever will.


It's like you got a fat friend.

And that fat friend has all his friends convinced he wants to lose weight. He gets so excited about the idea of being skinny. Reads all sorts of health books. Always looking into new diet fads, etc. Even has a treadmill he'll get on.

His friends would say... man... that guy is passionate about weight loss. He really wants to lose weight.

Meanwhile... friend eats a box of Twinkees and chugs Mountain Dew Big Gulps every meal of the day.
 

boozeman

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It's like you got a fat friend.

And that fat friend has all his friends convinced he wants to lose weight. He gets so excited about the idea of being skinny. Reads all sorts of health books. Always looking into new diet fads, etc. Even has a treadmill he'll get on.

His friends would say... man... that guy is passionate about weight loss. He really wants to lose weight.

Meanwhile... friend eats a box of Twinkees and chugs Mountain Dew Big Gulps every meal of the day.

It is more like you have a fat friend you are really trying to set up on a date and the person asks what are they like?

"Well, they have a nice personality".

Basically Parcells is saying that Jerry's not an asshole. I would prefer an asshole that he professionally respected.
 

boozeman

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Bill Parcells says he regrets leaving one team... but it wasn't the Cowboys


Staff reports

Published: 25 June 2013 01:33 AM

Updated: 25 June 2013 01:33 AM



There aren't many coaches who accomplished more than Bill Parcells. During a career that spanned more than four decades, Parcells won 183 games, earned a pair of Super Bowl rings and earned an induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.


But the former Cowboys coach still has some regrets. In fact, Parcells told USA Today's Jim Corbett that he laments the way he left one of four NFL teams for which he served as head coach. But it wasn't the Cowboys.


"I regret leaving New England . Had we done things differently ... " Parcells told Corbett. "I had a good young team there. I hated to leave that team, because I knew what we could do."


Parcells helped turn the Patriots from one of the league's worst franchises into a Super Bowl contender during his four-year tenure from 1993 to 1996. But Parcells, who was known for wanting control of virtually every aspect of his teams, clashed with team owner Robert Kraft and eventually left to become the head coach of the New York Jets in 1997.


"I was absolutely too headstrong. And he might have been a little headstrong, too. I think both Kraft and myself, retrospectively, would have done things a little differently."

Parcells spent four seasons with the Cowboys, coaching them to the playoffs twice -- once in 2003, and again in his final season in 2006. Parcells' last NFL game as a head coach was the Cowboys' infamous wildcard loss in Seattle when Tony Romo bobbled the hold on a potential game-winning field goal attempt.
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So if he liked Jerry, liked Stephen, why does he not regret leaving?
 
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So if he liked Jerry, liked Stephen, why does he not regret leaving?

Exactly. And we had a good young team in Dallas too. Went 13-3 the next year.

Fact is, Jerry was very good to Parcells financially. It does Parcells no good to talk bad about his former boss. Hell, I haven't heard Parcells talk bad about anyone of his previous employers or even coaches since he's retired.

His being complimentary of Jerry means nothing.
 

boozeman

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Exactly. And we had a good young team in Dallas too. Went 13-3 the next year.

Fact is, Jerry was very good to Parcells financially. It does Parcells no good to talk bad about his former boss. Hell, I haven't heard Parcells talk bad about anyone of his previous employers or even coaches since he's retired.

His being complimentary of Jerry means nothing.

Plus you simply don't bad mouth a very powerful NFL owner. It is not only unprofessional...it is not very smart.
 

dbair1967

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Bill Parcells says he regrets leaving one team... but it wasn't the Cowboys


Staff reports

Published: 25 June 2013 01:33 AM

Updated: 25 June 2013 01:33 AM



There aren't many coaches who accomplished more than Bill Parcells. During a career that spanned more than four decades, Parcells won 183 games, earned a pair of Super Bowl rings and earned an induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.


But the former Cowboys coach still has some regrets. In fact, Parcells told USA Today's Jim Corbett that he laments the way he left one of four NFL teams for which he served as head coach. But it wasn't the Cowboys.


"I regret leaving New England . Had we done things differently ... " Parcells told Corbett. "I had a good young team there. I hated to leave that team, because I knew what we could do."


Parcells helped turn the Patriots from one of the league's worst franchises into a Super Bowl contender during his four-year tenure from 1993 to 1996. But Parcells, who was known for wanting control of virtually every aspect of his teams, clashed with team owner Robert Kraft and eventually left to become the head coach of the New York Jets in 1997.


"I was absolutely too headstrong. And he might have been a little headstrong, too. I think both Kraft and myself, retrospectively, would have done things a little differently."

Parcells spent four seasons with the Cowboys, coaching them to the playoffs twice -- once in 2003, and again in his final season in 2006. Parcells' last NFL game as a head coach was the Cowboys' infamous wildcard loss in Seattle when Tony Romo bobbled the hold on a potential game-winning field goal attempt.
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So if he liked Jerry, liked Stephen, why does he not regret leaving?

He regrets leaving there because its the last time he was relevent as a HC
 

dbair1967

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So if he liked Jerry, liked Stephen, why does he not regret leaving?

Gee I dunno, maybe because he was old and burned out beyond recovery and knew it was time to go out to pasture?

Jerry went all in to get Parcells for two reasons 1) state of the team was pathetic after three yrs of Campo and 2) needed new stadium support from community

Parcells took the job because he wanted the money, and saw fool with said money coming.
 
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But you can't tell me Parcells saw this team go 13-3 the next year, and how good Romo played during that season, and not think that he potentially passed on another chance at a SB.

He must've really grown tired of Jerry to not regret that opportunity.
 

boozeman

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But you can't tell me Parcells saw this team go 13-3 the next year, and how good Romo played during that season, and not think that he potentially passed on another chance at a SB.

He must've really grown tired of Jerry to not regret that opportunity.

That and I think he had worn on Jones too. He got hired to get the stadium just drunk Jerry slurred.

They used each other to get what they wanted.
 

ThoughtExperiment

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I think it was a combination of age and Bill's naturally wandering nature. I believe him when he says he didn't know if he had the energy to put everything he had into another year. I also believe a big part of it was his eye towards marketing himself. He always had a knack for getting out while the getting was good. If he had his doubts about how good that team and maybe Romo really was, he probably didn't want to risk a step back. Might not be able to land the 5 mil per year overseer job he got in Miami if that team had leveled off or even gone backwards.
 
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Jerry was on his best behavior when Parcells was in town. So Parcells may not be the best guy to ask.

I gotta believe that Jerry meddled much more before and after Parcells' time in Dallas.

(Somehow I doubt that Jason Garrett fired his own brother.)

Also, I think it used to be quite true that Jerry really wanted to win. I'm not sure he still wants it as badly now.
 

cmd34(work)

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Funny how Bill left once Jerry started overriding him on personnel decisons.

Just weird timing I guess?
 
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