Cowboys great, former Super Bowl champ Herb Adderley dies at 81

The Hall of Fame cornerback is best-known for his tenure as a Green Bay Packer, but he won the last of his 6 world titles in Dallas.

Herb Adderley, a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame and one of only four men to play on six world championship teams- including one as a Dallas Cowboy- has died.

Adderley came to Dallas in 1970 as part of a trade with the Green Bay Packers. The cornerback was a key component of the Cowboys’ legendary “Doomsday Defense” that helped define the franchise in that transformative decade. His play helped lead Dallas to Super Bowl V, where they lost to the Baltimore Colts, and then again to Super Bowl VI, in which the team beat the Miami Dolphins to claim their first league title. Adderley recorded nine interceptions over the course of those two seasons.

Pete Dougherty of the Green Bay Press-Gazette writes:

“To watch [Adderley] up close, unforgettable,’ said Pat Toomay, a defensive lineman who was a Cowboys teammate for Adderley’s final two seasons in the NFL. “Never have I seen such grace. And he could just hang, hang, hang. It was like he was in slow motion. He’d go up and up and up, and hang and hang and hang, and then bat down the ball or pick it.”

But Adderley’s success in Dallas was largely overshadowed by his unhappiness with coach Tom Landry’s system, which mandated that players execute their assignments to the letter, even when they were counterintuitive to the player’s instincts or what actually transpired during action.

In his book The Dallas Cowboys: The Outrageous History of the Biggest, Loudest, Most Hated, Best Loved Football Team in America, author Joe Nick Patoski relays a story about Adderley receiving Landry’s ire after batting away a potential scoring pass during a 1972 game.

“Herb, you’ve got to play the defense like everybody else!”

“You mean I’m supposed to let a guy run by me and catch a touchdown pass?” Adderley protested.

“Yes, if that’s what your keys tell you to do!”

“No,” Adderley argued, “I don’t play that way.”

“Then you won’t play at all. Stay or leave; I don’t care.”

Landry benched the four-time All-Pro and traded him to the Rams after the season.

Outspoken against the often-poor treatment he received in the still-segregated South, Adderley all but disavowed his tenure with the Cowboys. He preferred instead to associate his career solely with the team that he won five championships with, the team that put him in their Hall of Fame in 1981.

“I’m the only man with a Dallas Cowboys Super Bowl ring who doesn’t wear it,” Adderley was quoted as saying later in life. “I’m a Green Bay Packer.”

He had been inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame the year prior and is still considered one of the greatest cornerbacks to ever play the game.

Herb Adderley was 81 years old.

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Legendary NFL coach Don Shula had several Cowboys connections

On the passing of the legendary Miami Dolphins coach, Cowboys Wire remembers some of the many connections he shared with his Dallas rivals.

Don Shula, the NFL’s all-time winningest coach, has passed away at the age of 90. Shula stands atop that particular leaderboard with 347 wins, 328 of them coming the regular season. The vast majority of those victories came during Shula’s historic tenure with the Miami Dolphins, from 1970 through 1995.

As coach of one of greatest teams of that era, Shula shared several connections with the Cowboys of the 1970s, ’80s, and early ’90s. Shula’s Dolphins met the Tom Landry-coached Cowboys in Super Bowl VI following the 1971 season. It marked the first time the two storied franchises ever met on the field. Dallas won the title game by a 24-3 score; it would be the last game Miami would lose for over 600 days, as Shula helmed the Dolphins to the only perfect season in NFL history in 1972.

Landry and Shula spent much of their respective careers being compared to one another. While Landry is often credited with being one of the architects of the 4-3 defense, Shula helped pioneer the 3-4 scheme. Both men won a pair of Super Bowls and remained with their team for over a quarter-century. Landry sits fourth on the list of all-time winningest NFL coaches behind Shula, George Halas, and Bill Belichick.

Shula played in the NFL for seven seasons. He was a defensive back, as was Landry. And the two icons shared a connection even then.

Shula went 6-2 against Dallas over his career as Dolphins coach. Perhaps the most memorable head-to-head meeting took place on Thanksgiving Day 1993, when a freak winter storm socked Dallas. The turf at Texas Stadium was a slippery, snowy mess, thanks to the famed hole in the roof. After Cowboys defensive tackle Leon Lett muffed a blocked field goal as it skittered away, Shula sent out his field goal unit for a second kick attempt and stole a last-second win.

Prior to his long stint in Miami, Shula also coached the Baltimore Colts from 1963 to 1969 and went 1-1 against Dallas over that period.

A few months later, Shula was one of the first persons to learn of the 1994 firing of Cowboys coach Jimmy Johnson. Johnson happened to pass Shula in a hotel hallway just after hearing of a Jerry Jones interview in which the owner expressed his desire for a new coach in Dallas.

“I think I’ve just been fired,” Johnson himself told Shula.

Shula retired after two more seasons on the Dolphins sidelines, and was replaced by Johnson, who, coincidentally enough, had also taken over for Landry in Dallas.

David Shula, son of the legendary coach, served as Cowboys offensive coordinator- under Johnson- in 1989 and 1990.

Don Shula was enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1997.

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