The Dallas Cowboys, now also referred to as ‘America’s Team,’ was founded in 1960. It was the first successful NFL expansion team since the collapse of the All-America Football Conference 10 years prior. As majority owner of the new team, Clint Murchison Jr. hired former Los Angeles Rams general manager Tex Schramm as president and general manager, head coach Tom Landry and player personnel director Gil Brandt as his first order of business.
A Winless First Season
At the Cotton Bowl, a few miles east of Downtown Dallas, the Cowboys played their home games beginning in 1960. As part of their first three seasons in the American Football League, they shared this stadium with the Dallas Texans (now the Kansas City Chiefs), who joined the league in the same year. With an aging roster, the 1960 Cowboys finished their inaugural season 0-11-1.
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On the Rise
With the 13th pick in the draft, the Cowboys selected TCU Horned Frogs defensive tackle Bob Lilly in their first college draft. The 1961 season also saw the Cowboys pick up their first victory in franchise history, a win over the Pittsburgh Steelers in the first game of the season. Only a year before saw the Cowboys play the Steelers in their very first regular season game. The Cowboys finished their second campaign with an overall 4-9-1 record.
Becoming Champions
In 1966, the Dallas Cowboys finished atop the Eastern Conference with their first winning season holding a 10-30-1 record. The Cowboys sent eight players to the Pro Bowl, including future Hall of Fame stars Hayes, Lilly and Renfro as well as Howley, Meredith and Perkins. In their first ever NFL Championship Game in 1966, the Cowboys faced off against the Green Bay Packers with the prospect of their first trip to the Super Bowl if they won. They were however defeated by Green Bay 34-27 by stopping the Cowboys on a goal line stand with 28 seconds remaining.
Despite the loss, the Cowboys went on to set a new NFL record for eight consecutive post-season appearances. Dallas later broke their own record with nine consecutive appearances in the playoffs between 1975 and 1983; this record was then broken by the New England Patriots between the 2009 and 2019 seasons.
Super Bowl VI
During week 6 of the 1971 season, the Cowboys moved from the Cotton Bowl to Texas Stadium. Dallas then won their last seven regular season games (finishing 11-3) before defeating the Minnesota Vikings and San Francisco 49ers in the playoffs to return to the Super Bowl after the loss the year prior. The Dallas Cowboys crushed the strong starting Miami Dolphins, 24–3, to finally bury the "Next Year's Champions" stigma.
America’s Team
The Arrival of Troy Aikman and Jerry Jones
The Cowboys suffered their first losing season in two decades in 1986 and plummeted to 3-13 in 1988. H. R. Bright, who had purchased the Cowboys from Murchison in 1984, sold the team to Jerry Jones in 1989.