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1987 Dallas Cowboys season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
NFL team season

1987 Dallas Cowboys season
OwnerBum Bright
General managerTex Schramm
Head coachTom Landry
Home stadiumTexas Stadium
Results
Record7–8
Division place2ndNFC East
PlayoffsDid not qualify

The1987Dallas Cowboysseason was the franchise's 28th season in theNational Football League, they improved the record to 7–8 from 1986 but missing the playoffs for the second consecutive season.

Offseason

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NFL draft

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Main article:1987 NFL draft
1987 Dallas Cowboys draft
RoundPickPlayerPositionCollegeNotes
112Danny Noonan DTNebraska
239Ron Francis CBBaylor
368Jeff Zimmerman OGFlorida
495Kelvin Martin WRBoston College
5124Everett Gay WRTexas
6151Joe Onosai CHawaii
7180Kevin Sweeney QBFresno State
8206Kevin Gogan * OGWashington
9234Alvin Blount RBMaryland
10262Dale Jones LBTennessee
11291Jeff Ward PKTexas
12318Scott Armstrong LBFlorida
      Made roster    †   Pro Football Hall of Fame    *   Made at least onePro Bowl during career

Undrafted free agents

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1987 undrafted free agents of note
PlayerPositionCollege
Rich BorresenTight endNorthwestern
Anthony ColemanSafetyBaylor
Kelvin FarmerRunning backToledo
James FlowersDefensive backTexas A&M
Jeff HurdLinebackerKansas State
Herbert JohnsonWide receiverMissouri
Michael KeeLinebackerOhio State
Ron KellerKickerNew Mexico
Steve KiddPunterRice
Darryl LeeDefensive endOhio State
Scott LinehanQuarterbackIdaho
Lorenzo LynchCornerbackSacramento State
Ray PerkinsDefensive endVirginia
Brent PetersonTight endMissouri
Marty PetersonOffensive linePenn
Antonio RiceRunning backVirginia
John ShafferQuarterbackPenn State
Victor SimmonsLinebackerCentral State
Loren SnyderQuarterbackNorthern Colorado
Scott UrchOffensive TackleVirginia
Crang WallisQuarterbackChico State
Mike ZenticCenterOklahoma State

Summary

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The NFL players were unable to reach a contract agreement with the owners, as a result, a strike for the second time in six seasons after the second week of games. Unlike the last strike, the owners replaced the striking players with free agents and veteran players who were willing to cross the picket line. The NFL cancelled all games for the week of September 27 and began playing with the replacement players on October 4. The strike ended on October 15, but the replacement players played the next weekend as well. The replacement players participated in three weeks worth of games overall.

After the Cowboys began the season with a 24–13 loss to St. Louis with an upset over the defending Super Bowl champion New York Giants, the majority of the Cowboys players went on strike. Players that crossed the picket line to play with the replacement players included quarterback Danny White, defensive tackle Randy White, running back Tony Dorsett, and defensive end Ed Jones. Thanks to the veteran players and a few replacement players who would stay on with the team after the strike, the Cowboys fielded one of the better replacement teams.

The replacement Cowboys easily defeated the New York Jets and Philadelphia Eagles, with the Eagles game being of particular note. The Eagles fielded a team completely made up of replacements, and were no match for the Cowboys, who played several of their veterans throughout the game. Eagles head coach Buddy Ryan was displeased with head coach Tom Landry for doing this and afterwards made it clear that he was looking forward to playing the Cowboys in two weeks when the non-replacement Eagles returned. The following week the Cowboys missed an opportunity to take command in the NFC East when they suffered a devastating loss to the Washington Redskins. Despite playing Danny White and Tony Dorsett the entire game against a Redskins team fielded entirely of replacement players, the Cowboys came up short 13–7.

The striking players returned the following week and on October 25, even though thePhiladelphia Eagles were already assured of winning against the Cowboys 30–20, they attempted to go for a touchdown with 35 seconds left in the game. Eagles head coachBuddy Ryan wasn't happy about the strike game they lost to Dallas, when Randy White and Ed “Too Tall” Jones were still playing at the end of the game. In the rematch, the Eagles took a kneel down to run down the clock, putting the ball at the Dallas 34 yard line with 10 seconds left. On the next play, quarterbackRandall Cunningham faked taking another kneel down and threw a pass to the end zone that drew a pass-interference penalty, placing the ball on the one-yard line, from where running backKeith Byars scored with 2 seconds left for a final result of 37-20.[1] Dallas came out of the strike with a 3-2 record, but lost 4 straight games in November and December to fall out of playoff contention.

The Cowboys were up and down the rest of the season, following another victory over the Giants with a loss to the woeful Detroit Lions. The Cowboys squandered a 5–4 record down the stretch with a 4-game losing streak, sandwiching heartbreaking losses to the Vikings and Redskins with an embarrassing home loss to the Falcons. After the Falcons game, Cowboys owner Bum Bright questioned coach Landry's play-calling, and Cowboys team president Tex Schramm said of the loss, "this is probably the lowest I've been in my career." The Cowboys rebounded in the last two games, however, defeating the Los Angeles Rams and the St. Louis Cardinals, and eliminating both from the playoffs in the process. Danny White coached the Cowboys for a brief period during the Rams game when there was a threat against Tom Landry's life. Landry returned shortly from the locker room and coached the rest of the 29–21 Dallas victory.

Running back Herschel Walker had another terrific season, leading the Cowboys in rushing and receiving, and leading the NFL in yards from scrimmage with 1606, while former star running back Tony Dorsett posted career lows in rushing yards with 456. Quarterback Danny White struggled with turnovers throughout the season, and was replaced by Steve Pelleur late in the season. The Cowboys offensive line had trouble with pass protection again, allowing 52 sacks, while the receiving corps was mediocre, with Mike Renfro leading the way with 662 yards on 46 catches. Defensively, the Cowboys really struggled against the pass, finishing 27th in passing yards allowed, despite posting 51 sacks and 23 interceptions. The Cowboys were solid against the run, finishing 6th overall and only allowing 3.5 yards a carry.

NFL replacement players

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After the league decided to use replacement players during the strike, besides hiring a new team (referred by the media as "Rhinestone Cowboys"), Dallas forced veterans likeRandy White,Ed "Too Tall" Jones,Danny White andTony Dorsett, to cross the picket line to avoid losing their contract annuities (delayed payments).[2][3]

This strategy backfired, as there have been several interviews with former players mentioning that this caused a rift inside the team that lasted for years, and that it was one of the main reasons for the franchise's decline during the Eighties decade.[4][5]

1987 Dallas Cowboys replacement roster

Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Roster

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1987 Dallas Cowboys final roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists

Rookies in italics

Schedule

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Weeks 4-6 were played withReplacement players

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordGame SiteAttendanceRecap
1September 13atSt. Louis CardinalsL 13–240–1Busch Stadium47,241Recap
2September 20atNew York GiantsW 16–141–1Giants Stadium73,426Recap
3September 27Buffalo BillsCanceled - Players' Strike
4October 4atNew York JetsW 38–242–1Giants Stadium12,370Recap
5October 11Philadelphia EaglesW 41–223–1Texas Stadium40,622Recap
6October 19Washington RedskinsL 7–133–2Texas Stadium60,415Recap
7October 25atPhiladelphia EaglesL 20–373–3Veterans Stadium61,630Recap
8November 2New York GiantsW 33–244–3Texas Stadium55,730Recap
9November 8atDetroit LionsL 17–274–4Pontiac Silverdome45,325Recap
10November 15atNew England PatriotsW 23–17(OT)5–4Sullivan Stadium60,567Recap
11November 22Miami DolphinsL 14–205–5Texas Stadium56,519Recap
12November 26Minnesota VikingsL 38–44(OT)5–6Texas Stadium54,229Recap
13December 6Atlanta FalconsL 10–215–7Texas Stadium40,103Recap
14December 13atWashington RedskinsL 20–245–8RFK Stadium54,882Recap
15December 21atLos Angeles RamsW 29–216–8Anaheim Stadium60,700Recap
16December 27St. Louis CardinalsW 21–167–8Texas Stadium36,788Recap

Division opponents are inbold text

Standings

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NFC East
WLTPCTDIVCONFPFPASTK
Washington Redskins(3)1140.7337–19–3379285W1
Dallas Cowboys780.4674–45–7340348W2
St. Louis Cardinals780.4673–57–7362368L1
Philadelphia Eagles780.4673–54–7337380W2
New York Giants690.4003–54–8280312W2

References

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  1. ^"Ryan Gets Revenge in the End". RetrievedApril 21, 2018.
  2. ^"Striking Back In Time". RetrievedApril 21, 2018.
  3. ^"NFL Strike Rosters". RetrievedApril 21, 2018.
  4. ^"Open wound: Player strike put strain on Cowboys' unity in '87". RetrievedApril 21, 2018.
  5. ^"A Divisive Time, The 1987 Strike Caused Frustration For Cowboys Veterans". RetrievedApril 21, 2018.
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