Dallas Cowboys

Cowboys have had some memorable Monday nights

Richie Whitt
Written by Richie Whitt

With 80 starring roles, only the Miami Dolphins have appeared on Monday Night Football more than the Cowboys.

With that quantity has come quality.

The Cowboys are 47-33 all-time on Monday nights entering tonight’s game at the New York Giants. Here’s hoping this one turns out better than last year’s post-Amari Cooper trade flop at home against the Tennessee Titans.

Who knows, maybe we’ll get a classic that cracks this Top 10:

 

10, Oct. 25, 2010 — Giants 41, at Cowboys 35. The Cowboys take a 20-7 lead thanks to a 93-yard punt return by rookie Dez Bryant. But in the second quarter Giants linebacker Michael Boley sacks Tony Romo, the quarterback breaks his collar bone, and Dallas’ season spirals to 1-5 on its way to 1-7 and the firing of head coach Wade Phillips.

9, Sept. 19, 2005 — Redskins 14, at Cowboys 13.  On an emotional night when Troy Aikman, Emmitt Smith and Michael Irvin are inducted into the Ring of Honor at Texas Stadium, Santana Moss ruins the party with two long touchdown catches in the final 3:46.

8, Sept. 2, 1996 — Bears 22, Cowboys 6. With Michael Irvin suspended and Emmitt Smith carted off on a stretcher, the Cowboys fail to score a touchdown for the first time in 70 games. It was the beginning of the beginning of the end of the dynasty.

7, Sept. 4, 1995 — Cowboys 35, at Giants 0. Emmitt Smith bolts 60 yards for a touchdown on the season’s first handoff and rushes for 163 yards to stun the Meadowlands and catapult a Super Bowl season.

6, Sept. 7, 1992 — at Cowboys 23, Redskins 10. Issiac Holt blocks a punt on the game’s first possession and the Cowboys whip Mark Rypien and the defending Super Bowl champs. It was the beginning of the beginning of the dynasty.

5, Sept. 8, 1986 — at Cowboys 31, Giants 28. Teaming in Dallas’ Dream Team Backfield with Tony Dorsett, a heralded newcomer named Herschel Walker hurdles his way to the winning 10-yard touchdown with 1:16 remaining.

4, Sept. 15, 1997 — at Cowboys 21, Eagles 20. Dallas survives when Philly holder Tom Hutton bobbles the snap on Chris Boniol’s 22-yard field-goal attempt with :04 remaining. That, like, never happens. Right, Tony Romo?

3, Sept. 15, 2003 — Cowboys 35, at Giants 32. Head coach Bill Parcells gets his first win in Dallas after his team blows a 15-point fourth quarter lead, only to be bailed out by Quincy Carter’s passing, Antonio Bryant’s clutch receiving and seven field goals by Billy Cundiff, including a 52-yarder to force overtime and the game-winner from 25.

2, Sept. 5, 1983 — Cowboys 31, at Redskins 30. Trailing 23-3 at halftime, Danny White rallies Dallas to an electrifying season-opening win at old RFK Stadium behind three second-half touchdown passes, two to Tony Hill and the game-winner to Doug Cosbie with 1:49 remaining.

1, Oct. 8, 2007 — Cowboys 25, Bills 24. It’s the first  MNF game in Buffalo in 13 years and one of the wildest finishes in the Cowboys’ 60-year history. The Cowboys trail 24-13 entering the fourth quarter because of six Tony Romo turnovers (a fumble and five interceptions, two returned for touchdowns). Romo hits Patrick Crayton for a short touchdown, but Terrell Owens is stripped of a two-point conversion pass to leave Dallas trailing 24-22 with :20 remaining. After a carom off Sam Hurd, Cowboys tight end Tony Curtis then recovers an onside kick. Rookie Nick Folk boots a 53-yard field goal at the gun for a dramatic win, only to have Buffalo call the last-millisecond timeout. But on the second go, Folk is good again. Whew.

 

 

About the author

Richie Whitt

Richie Whitt

Richie has been a multi-media fixture in Dallas-Fort Worth since his graduation from UT-Arlington in 1986. His career has been highlighted by successful stints in print, radio and TV and during his 30+ years he's blabbed and blogged on events ranging from Super Bowls to NBA Finals to World Series to Stanley Cups to Olympics to Wimbledons and World Cups.

As a reporter/columnist for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram 1986-2004, Whitt won numerous local, state and national awards and in 1993 co-authored a book on the Dallas Cowboys – The ‘Boys Are Back. As a sports columnist for the Dallas Observer 2005-2012 he continued to garner recognition and hardware for his cover stories and in 2008 debuted his Sportatorium blog. While at 105.3 The Fan 2009-2013, he hosted an afternoon drive-time talk show while also expanding into the role of emcee for public and private events, hosting a nightly segment on TXA 21 and co-hosting Cowboys’ pre-game shows on the team’s flagship station. In 2012 Whitt was named one of America’s “Hot 100” talk-show hosts by Talkers magazine.

A true Texan born and raised in Duncanville, Whitt has remained active in the Metroplex via everything from serving on the North Texas Make-A-Wish Foundation’s Communications Board to serving as Grand Marshal of Dallas’ annual Greenville Avenue St. Patrick’s Day Parade.