Author: Allan (Page 248 of 492)

Rock Bottom

SadFans

There are two teams in the NFL that each lost its star running back from a season before and were forced to play four different quarterbacks this year: the Dallas Cowboys, who finished 4-12 in last place in their division, and the Houston Texans, who finished 9-7 in first place in their division. Both teams faced eerily similar circumstances — I’ll equate the loss of Sean Lee with the loss of Jadeveon Clowney, even though Clowney’s more of an impact player and the Cowboys should know by now they can’t count on Lee for more than half a dozen games — but Dallas wound up with the second worst record in the league while Houston is heading to the playoffs. I haven’t seen anybody make the comparisons between the two teams. I haven’t read anybody who is recognizing the similar situations both Texas teams faced and drawing out the striking contrasts in how both teams played. I’m interested if somebody wants to break that down.

SadFanFor now, let’s just all agree that the Cowboys have reached rock bottom. By “rock bottom,” I mean in the worst possible situation; blow it up and start all over again from scratch.

Consider that in the 56-year history of the franchise, only three teams have finished with worse records. And all three of those teams were rock bottom.

In 1960, the Cowboys’ first year in the league, they were an expansion team playing without the benefit of the college draft. The team was stocked with players the other teams didn’t want. Their starting quarterback was a 5’7″ journeyman they had to coax out of retirement. New coaches. No players. They were truly starting from ground zero, nothing. And they went 0-11-1.

In 1988, Tom Landry’s last year, the Cowboys were struggling with aging former superstars and busted draft choices. Their past four number one draft picks were Billy Cannon, Kevin Brooks, Mike Sherrard, and Danny Noonan. They played Steve Pelluer, Gary Hogeboom, and Danny White at quarterback. Too Tall Jones, Michael Downs, and Everson Walls were still on this team. They entered 1988 on a string of two straight seasons with losing records. In 1984, Dallas failed to qualify for the playoffs for the first time in ten straight years. In 1986, the Cowboys string of twenty consecutive winning seasons was snapped. Yes, they won a weak NFC East in 1985, but the cracks were showing in several blowout losses that year, including crushing defeats by Cincinnati and Chicago. It was going downhill and they couldn’t stop it. And they went 3-13. Rock bottom. Sell the team. Fire all the coaches. Get rid of all the players. Start over from scratch.

That’s precisely what happened. I’ll stomp up and down all day long and rail against the way Jerry Jones handled his purchase of the team and his subsequent firing of Landry. But there’s nobody alive, starting with me, who doesn’t think it had to be done. So, in 1989 the Cowboys were truly starting over for the first time since their expansion year of 1960. All new coaches, all new players. The thing had been blown up and they were laying a brand new foundation from scratch. That team went 1-15. Cowboys v Panthers

In 2015, the Cowboys finished 4-12.

Rock bottom.

In fact, let me state again as I have so often in this space, Dallas is right now more rock bottom than it’s ever been in its history. They haven’t been to a Super Bowl in twenty years; the previous long Super Bowl drought was thirteen years. The Cowboys haven’t been to an NFC Championship game in twenty years; the previous long conference title game drought was eight seasons. And they’re no closer now than they were ten years ago. Since 1997 this team has 152 wins and 152 losses, the exact definition of mediocrity. Jason Garrett is 40-40 as the head coach. Yuk.

This year saw the Cowboys defense force only eleven total turnovers, the lowest number in the history of the NFL. Ever! Dallas finished with the second worst offense in the league this season, scoring only 17 points per game. They were tied or had the lead in the fourth quarter eleven times this season, but wound up with only four wins. That’s a lack of coaching. It’s a lack of character. It’s a lack of talent. Or will. There’s a whole lot of lack with this team.

JerryBlindIt’s time — way past time — to clean house. To blow it up. To start all over from scratch. New coaches, new players, new general manager, new ownership, new everything. Yeah, right. It appears the entire coaching staff is safe and, of course, there will be no changes in the Jones family front office. The Cowboys are under the illusion that injuries are solely to blame for the fourth worst record in the history of the team. They’re delusional. The signs are all there, and have been for many years, but they’re being ignored by the only people who can turn it around. For cryin’ out loud, they all thought they were going to the Super Bowl this year! It’s laughable!

Last year’s 12-4 record and playoff win reminds me of 1985: a division title in the middle of a whole lot of mediocrity and losing that bought those in charge a little more time, but proved to be a singular fluke in an inevitable downhill slide that can’t be reversed until everything gets blown up. The Cowboys are in much worse shape now than they were when Jerry Wayne bought the team in 1989 and fired everybody and started over from scratch. Much worse. 4-12. Not competitive. Rock bottom.

Peace,

Allan

Maryn & Logan

Logan&MarynWeddingMy sister Rhonda’s daughter, Maryn, on Friday night became the first niece / cousin / grandchild of our next generation to get married. And I was especially honored to perform the ceremony. Maryn is one of these all-everything girls: super stud basketball player, super smart valedictorian of her senior class, super talented songwriter / singer / musician, super beautiful inside and out, and super committed to our God and his mission. Somehow, she met a guy at Harding who matches her talent for talent and heart for heart. She and Logan seem to just be made for each other. And their wedding outside Oklahoma City on New Year’s Night was a celebration of their love and a worship to the God who’s brought them together.

Needless to say, the whole Stanglin family was there to participate in the wedding, to celebrate Christmas, to ring in the New Year, and to commemorate Cassie’s (my other sister Sharon’s oldest daughter) birthday. Whew! It was a jam-packed three days, punctuated by the experience of a 4.2 magnitude earthquake early Friday morning that shook all of us out of our beds.

Logan&MarynFamilyPicBut the highlight was the wedding; that’s why we were all there. And of the twenty-or-so weddings I’ve officiated, this was by far the most special for me personally. The most emotional. And, yeah, the most nerve-wracking. There’s a lot of pressure there performing a wedding ceremony for a close family member. My voice maybe cracked three or four times during the half-hour ceremony. Before Maryn even made it down the aisle I realized I could not look at Rhonda sitting on the front pew to my right or at my own daughters sitting five of six rows back to my left. I couldn’t look Maryn in the eyes for the same reasons. Man! It was too much. So I mainly looked at Logan and at people in the crowd I didn’t know. That’s the only thing that got me through.

Logan and Maryn, thank you so much for honoring me by asking me to play such an important role in your wedding. It was a tremendous blessing to me, a great privilege that I’ll cherish always. You two make a beautiful couple. As we’ve discussed several times before, I’m most proud of the fact that you are both committed to Christian ministry and see yourselves as a ministry team brought together by God and ordained by God to bring glory to him. Logan&MarynReception

May the love of God guide your marriage and all your relationships. May the blessings of heaven crown your marriage with increasing joy and peace. And may your hearts and your lives be forever united by the grace of our Lord.

Peace,

Allan

Family and Friends

Whiteleys2015

Billy and Shannon Whiteley are old friends from our Marble Falls days. We had and raised — are still raising — our daughters together. We celebrated birthdays and high school football wins together. We worshiped together and saw in lots of New Years together. Even after we left Marble Falls in ’98 — Billy and Shannon to Lewisville and C-A and I to Memphis — we kept in close touch. When we moved back to DFW, we made it a point to see each other at least a few times every year. And, even with us in Amarillo, we still manage to spend some occasional time together.

You know friends like this. You don’t see each other for a year, but as soon as you get in the same room together, you pick up right where you left off like you’ve never been apart. That’s Billy and Shannon and their girls for us. We spent a couple of hours together today — all nine of us — at Posado’s in the mid-cities. And it was just like it was when we lived in the same central Texas county in the mid 90s. Except we’ve got gray hair and children in college.

ChristmasGirls2015These are our girls on Christmas Day in front of our fireplace in Amarillo. LittleRobbie2015

 

 

 

 

 

 

The other picture is of the pickiest eater in the history of our family trying to convince the second pickiest eater in our family to try a bite of potatoes at Carrie-Anne’s mom’s house last night. Funny.

Peace,

Allan

Live From Arlington

We made the right call, leaving Amarillo late last night and arriving at Gram’s new house in Arlington at about 3:45 this morning. The wind was raging at 30-40 mph from the north and we ran through a lot of snow between Clarendon and Childress. But after that, it was mostly rain. Talking to our friends back home, it sounds like it would have been impossible to try to make the drive today. I-40 is closed from Soncy on the west side of Amarillo all the way past the New Mexico state line and closed on the east side from Highway 287 to the Oklahoma border. You can’t get in or out right now.

GoliathFenceRight before we left, the winds tore down two fence posts and three fence panels in our driveway/back yard. I just left them there — didn’t even try. It was 24-degrees, the wind was blowing, it was dark. Ted. The way that garage area and driveway work, I’m sure the snow drifts have covered up the gaping hole.

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RandyGallowayIt’s good to be in Tarrant County today, to read the Fort Worth Star-Telegram and see my friend Randy Galloway’s last ever sports column. Randy has been writing and talking sports in Dallas – Fort Worth for 50 years. He was writing a daily column for the Dallas Morning News when I first began paying attention to sports. I was eight or nine years old, our family took the Dallas Times Herald, and I was reading Skip Bayless and Blackie Sherrod. I can’t remember when or where I first saw a Galloway column. I can’t remember what I particularly liked about it or why I began riding my bike to the 7-11 on Bruton Road to buy my own 25-cent copy of the Morning News so I could read him. But I do remember going out of my way to read Galloway.

When I started roofing houses with Glen Burroughs in the 8th grade, we listened to Galloway’s “Sports at Six” every evening on WBAP. Randy Galloway kept us entertained during the stretch run of those hot fourteen hour days on those roofs. He knew the players and the owners, he hung out in the locker rooms and clubhouses, he told great stories and painted vivid pictures. He wasn’t doing three minute sportscasts like Verne Lundquist and Dale Hansen, he was doing a three hour talk show! And I loved it. Brad Sham was my hero — I very much wanted to be the next play-by-play man for the Cowboys. But while Brad’s “Sports Central” show on KRLD was just as insightful and inside-ful as Randy’s, I always found Randy to be more entertaining. He told it like it was, just the way he saw it. And he wasn’t afraid to stir things up.

During the early stages of my mediocre radio career, I was blessed to meet Randy on the sidelines at Cowboys training camps and in the press box at Rangers games. He came on as a guest on my shows any time I ever asked. Always accessible. Always open. Always generous. Very generous. And supportive. Helpful. I felt like I had arrived when Randy Galloway knew me and called me by name.

My first official gig in Dallas radio was filling in for Chuck Cooperstein’s “Midnight Run” show on WBAP when he was doing NHL playoff games on national radio. Ted Sorrells got me that job and, a few months later, the interview with KRLD where I finally landed. The “Midnight Run” was the sports talk show right after Galloway’s. Sitting in the break room with Galloway and Ted in-between our two shows and sharing ideas about sports and life with this legend is a career highlight for me.

RandyGalloway2The moment Galloway became a friend, though, was about halfway through the 2003 Cowboys football season. I got myself into a fairly heated argument with Bill Parcells during a very public press conference following a Monday night game in Seattle. I was asking questions about a couple of two-point conversion attempts from the night before, Parcells was talking all around my questions, and I wasn’t getting the answer I needed. I pressed and, as Parcells does, he resorted to insults and name-calling and condescending behavior, questioning my football intelligence, my professionalism, and my motives. I was nervous to be in an argument with the coach of the Dallas Cowboys with all the recorders and cameras rolling. But I was there to do my job. My heart was racing as we went back and forth, but I held my ground. At one point in the proceedings, Parcells abruptly ended things, turned to Jennifer Engle, a Star-Telegram columnist, began to answer her question, and then sharply turned back towards me. “Did you get what you needed?!? Did you get your quote?!?” I said, “I’m not looking for a quote, Coach, I’m looking for a straight answer.” He snorted a final insult and our nearly four-minute exchange had concluded.

Immediately following the press conference, I was overwhelmed with reporters and cameramen congratulating me on standing up to the Big Tuna. You stood up to him! No one’s done that yet! You’re the first one!

I went to the locker room to interview a few players before leaving Valley Ranch for my own show that started at 3:00pm. And my media counterparts couldn’t stop talking about what had happened during the Parcells presser. I started to get nervous. Ric Renner told me he was going to air the whole thing from start to finish on Fox Sports Southwest. What had I done? Was this bigger than I realized? I remember getting into my truck and hearing Galloway’s voice on ESPN Radio taking my side and defending me and my actions in that press conference. Before I even got out of the Valley Ranch parking lot, he was already talking about it. He was replaying the audio from our “incident” and defending me. “I know Allan Stanglin,” he said. “Allan’s a good friend of mine. He was doing his job. He didn’t have any evil intent. He wasn’t trying to stir anything up. He was asking legitimate questions about inconsistencies in the coaching decisions during the game. This is all on Parcells.”

I’ve thanked Randy many times for that. It meant the world to me that he called me his friend and that he defended me and the way I went about my job.

Randy Galloway is a wonderful columnist, a terrific talk show host, and a fabulous human being. I consider it a great privilege to have worked with him and around him, a true blessing to know him. And an honor to call him a friend.

Peace,

Allan

Fleeing Goliath

GoliathStormOur family travel plans to DFW and OKC have changed a bit. Instead of leaving after church tomorrow, we’re leaving as soon as Whitney gets off work, at about 9:30 tonight, and heading down to Arlington. With winter storm Goliath a mere three or four hours away, we’re getting out while we can. Every church in the Texas panhandle has canceled Bible classes and worship assemblies tomorrow, including Central, and the predictions are calling for some roads and highways being closed in all directions. The winds are already gusting at over 50 miles per hour and the temperature is dropping. I hate leaving when the exciting weather is just now getting here. We’re going to miss potentially the third or fourth largest single snowfall in the history of Amarillo and all the craziness that goes with it. But we’ve got two Christmases and a wedding waiting for us down state. We gotta go.

Have everything dug out for us when we get back.

Peace,

Allan

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