‘We did it:’ Jimmy Johnson thanks Cowboys owner Jerry Jones in Hall of Fame speech

The emotional Dallas coach thanked plenty, but also spoke about relationships, believing instead of dreaming, and using your time wisely.

When Cowboys owner Jerry Jones and coach Jimmy Johnson went through their “little transition” in 1994, famously parting ways after consecutive Super Bowl wins and a whirlwind turnaround for the league’s laughingstock, the football world waited for the two men to patch things up and recognize the other’s contributions to the rebirth of the Dallas dynasty they created.

Johnson had to wait 27 years for Jones to tell him he would at long last make the franchise’s Ring of Honor.

On Saturday night in Canton as he was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Johnson got his thank you to Jones out of the way 35 seconds after stepping to the mic.

“I guess you’re wanting to know what I’m going to say about Jerry Jones,” the 78-year-old Johnson said, after his opening remarks touched on the relationships that the sport tends to foster.

The crowd at Tom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium applauded, laughed, got quiet again… and maybe even braced themselves just a little for what might come next.

“Well… Jerry?” Johnson stalled before launching into a story.

But as he started, emotion seemed to get the best of him as he made an early stumble.

“You told me. You said, ‘We’re going to make sports history,’ before we ever bought the Cowboys–”

Quickly realizing he misspoke, Johnson poke a little fun at his goof.

“–before you bought the Cowboys, because I didn’t pay a damn cent!”

The moment broke the tension beautifully, if accidentally. The crowd’s easy laughter allowed the coach to snap back into a more relaxed storyteller mode.

“And you know what? We. We did make sports history. But not only for the Dallas Cowboys, but for the NFL. To go from the worst team in the league two years in a row to winning back-to-back Super Bowls and building a heck of a football team, we did it. And let me tell you, from the bottom of my heart, thank you, Jerry. Thank you for giving me the opportunity.”

Keeping himself on the evening’s tight schedule for speeches, Johnson chose not to list everyone that made his legendary career possible, but he emphasized that football success is always a group project. He recalled being enshrined in the College Football Hall of Fame thanks to great assistant coaches and players. He painted his inclusion in the Broadcasting Hall of Fame as inevitable only because of his producers and the other legends he shares the TV desk with.

Johnson’s football life has certainly been filled with some of the best names in the business at every level. But the man knows a thing or two about identifying talent and bringing out the best in those around him, to be sure.

“Looking back, I went and counted them up,” Johnson shared. “I coached, recruited, or drafted 13 players in the Pro Football Hall of Fame… And on top of that, I coached or broadcasted with 14 more Hall of Famers. I think I know what one looks like.”

But still pulling for the greatness of others to be fully realized, Johnson used even that humble brag to tout the Canton credentials of two former stars who have yet to get the call.

“Zach Thomas belongs up here. Darren Woodson belongs up here.”

Ever the coach, always shooting for the next plateau, the next accomplishment, the next success, the next win.

“I never really dreamed. I wasn’t a dreamer. You know, dreaming is hoping. I believed. I really believed. People say, ‘What made you think, when you were at Miami, you were going to take these inner-city kids and they were going to get an education? What made you say that you were going to get them a college degree?’ Because that’s what I talked about. I believed they were. And 90 percent of them got their college degree. That’s what I was proud of. ‘What made you think you were going to win a Super Bowl when you were 1-15?’ I didn’t dream about it; I believed that we were going to win a Super Bowl. When you believe it, I think it has something with the way you act and how you deal with people: your expectation, and you put expectations on them. Treat a person as he is, he’s going to stay as he is. Treat a person as if he were what he could be or should be, he’ll become what he could be and should be. I didn’t dream. I believed we were going to do it.”

But Johnson admitted that his unfailing belief came at a cost. His two adult sons both played football growing up; Johnson revealed he “never saw them play a down. And that’s a shame.”

In closing his remarks, Johnson referenced an idea that Wayne Huizenga once shared with him. The late Dolphins owner called it QTL.

“Quality Time Left. Think about that. I’m 78 years old, and I think about QTL all the time,” Johnson explained. “The people that you love, like my family right over there, appreciate those people. Because there will come a day you’re not going to be able to appreciate them because you’re not going to be around.”

Johnson and Jones have finally gotten back to appreciating each other, too. Seeing them together this week in Canton and knowing they’ll be together once again when Johnson’s name is hung in the palace that Jones built, maybe it’s a new chapter for the two men whose legacies will always be intertwined. Maybe now it’s destined that they’ll ride off into the sunset as friends once again, wearing their matching gold jackets.

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Cowboys’ Johnson, rest of Class of 2020 to wait for Hall of Fame induction

Dallas Cowboys greats Jimmy Johnson and Cliff Harris have their Hall of Fame enshrinement dreams pushed back even further.

It’s official: the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s 2020 class will have to wait even longer for enshrinement. The cancellation of the first exhibition game of the year between the Dallas Cowboys and the Pittsburgh Steelers was announced Thursday morning and is set to be made up next year; it was only a matter of time before this news followed.

The class that was to be the biggest in the NFL’s storied history, with 20 players, coaches, and contributors slated to receive the famed bronze bust split into two ceremonies, will have to wait even longer for their moment in the sun.

For the Cowboys, two greats are affected. The first is former head coach Jimmy Johnson, the architect of the ’90s dynasty that resulted in three world championships. Johnson, of course, ended up with just two of those rings before his relationship with owner Jerry Jones soured and became untenable. The other is safety Cliff Harris, who played in five Super Bowls throughout the 1970s, won two of them, and was a member of the All-Decade team.

Harris was one of two positional players of the All-Decade team that had yet to receive the call from Canton. The other, of course, is wide receiver and the original 88, Drew Pearson.

Johnson’s pro coaching career lacked the length that many Hall of Fame coaches enjoyed. He lasted just nine years and won only 80 games.

The wait for a gold jacket has been long overdue for both Dallas legends. Now the wait will be just a little longer.

ESPN: Cowboys-Steelers Hall of Fame game canceled

The network’s Adam Schefter is reporting that the NFL has canceled the Hall of Fame Game, scheduled for August 6 in Ohio, due to COVID-19.

Football fans have watched cautiously as the COVID-19 pandemic directly impacted all of the major sports other than their own. Apart from forcing the draft to go virtual, closing down team facilities for most of the offseason, and eating into the window for things like unofficial workouts and rookie minicamps, the global health crisis had not permanently claimed anything of substance from the NFL as it prepared for the 2020 season.

But now the first game has been taken off the schedule.

ESPN’s Adam Schefter is reporting that the league has scrapped the annual Hall of Fame Game, which had been set to take place August 6 in Canton, Ohio between the Cowboys and the Steelers.

Ohio’s governor had already gone on record as saying that playing the game in an empty stadium was a distinct possibility. As recently as June 16, he said of the scheduled game, “It would be very dangerous to do it today.”

Steelers defensive end Cam Heyward told the Tribune-Review that he felt playing the game under current conditions was a bad idea, saying, “We talk so much about safety. Why would we want to expose two teams to an extra game a week early?”

The NFL has agreed with that assessment, given that the country saw a new single-day record for new coronavirus cases just this week.

The Cowboys and Steelers will apparently now kick off the 2021 preseason in next year’s Hall of Fame Game, according to Shcefter’s sources.

The accompanying enshrinement ceremony, which was to include the induction of Cowboys coach Jimmy Johnson and Steelers coach Bill Cowher, will also move to next summer.

Teams are scheduled to report to their facilities on July 28, but, according to Schefter, “there has been no definitive word from the NFL about whether that will happen.” Whether the Hall of Fame Game’s cancellation affects when the Cowboys players report to training camp is unknown. There was some speculation that the Cowboys and Steelers might be allowed to report earlier to allow coaches time to prepare their rosters for the game.

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Broncos legend Randy Gradishar a finalist for 2020 Pro Football Hall of Fame class

Broncos linebacker Randy Gradishar is among the finalists for the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Former Denver Broncos linebacker Randy Gradishar is among 38 finalists for a special Centennial Slate 2020 Pro Football Hall of Fame class. Former coach Dan Reeves (who coached in Denver from 1981-1992) is also a finalist.

Gradishar was a key member of the Broncos’ defense from 1974–1983. During that time, Gradishar earned seven Pro Bowl nods and Defensive Player of the Year honors (1978). He helped Denver’s famous “Orange Crush” defense lead the Broncos to the Super Bowl in 1977 and is a member of the team’s Ring of Fame.

The Hall of Fame’s selection committee has put together a list of eight coaches, 10 contributors and 20 senior finalists for next year’s class. Of those finalists, 15 members will be selected to be enshrined in Canton, Ohio.

In addition to those 15 members, five modern-era players will be part of the 2020 Pro Football Hall of Fame class. Safeties Steve Atwater and John Lynch are among the modern-era semifinalists. Earlier this year, late owner Pat Bowlen and cornerback Champ Bailey were part of 2019 class.

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