1- 2 hours pregame
On Sunday, October 2, 2011, the Detroit Lions defeated the Dallas Cowboys at Cowboys Stadium, 34-30. The Lions trailed the Cowboys, 27-3, early in the third quarter.
In early 2006. The stadium opened in time for the Cowboys' 2009 season.
The last time it happened was on December 15, 2013, and the game turned out to be a wild and unpredictable affair. Playing without injured quarterback Aaron Rodgers, Green Bay won the game at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas by the score of 37-36.
The primary reason the Dallas Texans of the AFL moved to Kansas City in 1963 was its inability to keep pace with the Dallas Cowboys of the NFL.
Regular season schedules are not released or created until after the Super bowl has been played.
Tex Schramm, who was the Cowboys' president and general manager from 1960 to early 1989.
The team joined the National Football League as a 1960 expansion team. The team was first known as the Dallas Steers, then the Dallas Rangers. On March 19, 1960, the organization announced that it would be called the Cowboys.
Mark Stepnoski was the Cowboys center from 1989-1994 and came back to the team to play from 1999-2001.
Tex Schramm never owned the Dallas Cowboys. He was the team's president and general manager from 1960 to early 1989. But he literally was as powerful as an owner. For years, he operated the football program with little or no interference from the Cowboys' original owner, Clint Murchison.
The defense in the early 1970s was known as "Doomsday." The defense in the late 1970s was called "Doomsday II."
Yelberton Abraham Tittle, who was born in Marshall, Texas, was an early Cowboys killer. As a member of the San Francisco 49ers (1960) and the New York Giants (1961-64), he was on the winning team five times in eight games against Dallas. Between November 11, 1962 and October 20, 1963, Tittle threw 13 touchdown passes in three contests against the Cowboys. His best game against Dallas was on December 16, 1962 at Yankee Stadium when he tied an NFL record with six touchdown passes in a 41-31 Giants victory.
It was a crowd-pleasing pregame performance at Texas Stadium in the early 1990s by defensive back Kenneth Gant, whose nickname was "The Shark."