Cowboys, Micah Parsons and NFL
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Jerry Jones, Dallas Cowboys
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Dallas Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy said his team is on a 21-game plan in 2024. That means at least playing in a Super Bowl, if not winning one. If McCarthy doesn’t achieve this, changes are ...
As of Aug. 4 the Dallas Cowboys' odds of winning the Super Bowl, +5000, put them 18th in the league. Last season, the Cowboys finished 7-10 but failed to qualify for the playoffs. Offensively, they put up 20.6 points per game (21st in the league) while defensively conceding 27.5 (31st).
We dive into the Dallas Cowboys' 2025 NFL odds, review their offseason and preview their season from a betting perspective
The cellphone temperature read 98 degrees as Dallas Cowboys fans stood in line, which stretched from the Ford Center to the street. Jerseys, sequin shirts and the unforgiving Texas heat did not deter fans at all. When the doors opened, fans wanted a glimpse of the hottest ticket in town: the Dallas Cowboys.
The Dallas Cowboys haven’t celebrated a Super Bowl championship since the 1995 season. Every year, Cowboys Nation says it is their year. Jerry Jones hypes up his team as an unstoppable ...
In all probability, the Dallas Cowboys will be fighting to save their season when they close out the month of October with a Week 8 game at Denver. The Broncos were a 10-win team last year and made the playoffs as a wildcard.
The Dallas Cowboys are 5-1 and can score anytime. They’ve got a real shot at a title, if they can avoid costly mistakes and stay out of their own way.
Oddsmakers in Vegas have listed the Cowboys with a 15-1 chance to break their 27-year Super Bowl drought. That's the sixth best odds in the league.
The Dallas Cowboys head into the 2025 NFL season as one of the league’s most unpredictable teams regarding the playoffs and Super Bowl. Following a 7-10 finish in 2024, Dallas has undergone ...
This article was originally published on www.si.com as Tony Romo Says Jerry Jones Isn't to Blame for Cowboys’ Super Bowl Drought. As the Cowboys' decades-long Super Bowl drought drags on, former Dallas quarterback and NFL analyst Tony Romo wants people to stop pointing the finger at Jerry Jones.