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Tag: Jerry Jones

  • NFL fines Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones $250,000 for ‘inadvertent’ obscene gesture

    The NFL has fined Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones $250,000 for making an obscene gesture which Jones said was “inadvertent” and meant to be a thumbs up at MetLife Stadium following a game against the New York Jets on Sunday.The news was first reported by NFL Network Insider Tom Pelissero on Tuesday and confirmed by the NFL to CNN Sports on Wednesday.In a video which was widely shared on social media, Jones could be seen giving a thumbs-up to the crowd from a box before raising his middle finger and pointing lower in the crowd while mouthing a few indiscernible words. The gesture occurred late in the Cowboys’ 37-22 road win over the Jets.Jones has until Friday to appeal the decision and, though neither the Cowboys nor Jones have yet formally done so, it is likely he will, according to Pelissero. The three-time Super Bowl-winning owner offered his explanation for the “unfortunate” fan interaction on Dallas radio show 105.3 The Fan on Tuesday.“I just put up the wrong show on the hand, but that was inadvertently done,” Jones said. “The intention was thumbs up.”When asked about the exchange, Jones said it occurred in front of Cowboys fans, not Jets fans, amidst the excitement after quarterback Dak Prescott threw a four-yard pass to Javonte Williams for Dallas’ final touchdown of the game.“There was a swarm of Cowboy fans out in front, not Jets fans, Cowboy fans,” Jones emphasized. “That was inadvertent on my part because that was right after we’d made our last touchdown and we were all excited about it.“There wasn’t any antagonistic issue or anything like that.”This is not the first time Jones has faced a fine from the league. He faced his first fine in 2008 for criticizing a referee and another in 2009 for violating an order from NFL commissioner Roger Goodell to stop executives and owners from discussing league labor issues.

    The NFL has fined Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones $250,000 for making an obscene gesture which Jones said was “inadvertent” and meant to be a thumbs up at MetLife Stadium following a game against the New York Jets on Sunday.

    The news was first reported by NFL Network Insider Tom Pelissero on Tuesday and confirmed by the NFL to CNN Sports on Wednesday.

    In a video which was widely shared on social media, Jones could be seen giving a thumbs-up to the crowd from a box before raising his middle finger and pointing lower in the crowd while mouthing a few indiscernible words. The gesture occurred late in the Cowboys’ 37-22 road win over the Jets.

    Jones has until Friday to appeal the decision and, though neither the Cowboys nor Jones have yet formally done so, it is likely he will, according to Pelissero.

    The three-time Super Bowl-winning owner offered his explanation for the “unfortunate” fan interaction on Dallas radio show 105.3 The Fan on Tuesday.

    “I just put up the wrong show on the hand, but that was inadvertently done,” Jones said. “The intention was thumbs up.”

    When asked about the exchange, Jones said it occurred in front of Cowboys fans, not Jets fans, amidst the excitement after quarterback Dak Prescott threw a four-yard pass to Javonte Williams for Dallas’ final touchdown of the game.

    “There was a swarm of Cowboy fans out in front, not Jets fans, Cowboy fans,” Jones emphasized. “That was inadvertent on my part because that was right after we’d made our last touchdown and we were all excited about it.

    “There wasn’t any antagonistic issue or anything like that.”

    This is not the first time Jones has faced a fine from the league. He faced his first fine in 2008 for criticizing a referee and another in 2009 for violating an order from NFL commissioner Roger Goodell to stop executives and owners from discussing league labor issues.

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  • With a depleted O-line and barrage of injuries, Cowboys’ ‘culture’ shines in win

    When Brian Schottenheimer took the stage in the lobby of The Star in Frisco in January to be introduced as the Dallas Cowboys’ head coach, the word “culture” was one of the first to come out of his mouth.

    Just a few months later, he was spotted on social media doing a Greek dancing routine in a room full of players and their families. It was a unique scene, but it was exactly what he was talking about.

    “It’s just being together,” Schottenheimer said in June. “We spend time in the building. When you do something outside the building, it’s different. There’s a different feeling. You’re more engaged to be around the different people. That’s what’s life is about, man.”

    Fast forward to Sunday, he needed that culture more than ever.

    On a warm afternoon in New Jersey, Schottenheimer’s Cowboys took the field without five starters and three crucial rotational players to try and get a much-needed win after a couple of weeks when his team couldn’t find one.

    Even though it was against the winless New York Jets, the lack of starters available, along with a continuous struggle defensively in the first four weeks of the season, created a reality where the Jets were favored by 1.5 points when Brandon Aubrey sent the ball downfield for the opening kickoff.

    That would be the last time that it really felt like the Jets had a chance.

    The Cowboys (2-2-1) used a big second quarter to take a 23-3 lead at halftime that would allow them to coast in the second half to a 37-22 victory. The offense was efficient in the pass game with four Dak Prescott passing touchdowns, and the run game success continued behind Javonte Williams’ 135 yards and two total touchdowns.

    Brian Schottenheimer’s ‘next man up mentality’

    Despite Dallas missing four of its starting five offensive linemen to injury, Schottenheimer’s emphasis on the “next man up mentality” and building a brotherhood throughout the offseason showed up Sunday. When the Cowboys needed a boost, they got it from within.

    “I’m just so proud,” Schottenheimer said. “We went in there with four new offensive linemen, receivers that are still learning and growing. The defense, what they did to [Jets quarterback] Justin Fields today. We talk about it all the time, it’s all about winning. And we found a way to win.”

    The defense generated five sacks on Fields after just five in the first four weeks and allowed a season-low 22 points.

    “We just leaned on our physicality and how we practiced,” defensive tackle Kenny Clark said. “That’s all we’ve been talking about. Just accountability, coming in with the right mindset, and getting better each and every day. That’s what you want to do, just get better each and every game. I’m proud of our heart and how hard we played.”

    Ownership has leaned on the off-the-field aspect of Schottenheimer’s early tenure being so impressive as to why they see wins coming for the team in the future, even if only one was in the column through four weeks. The win over the Jets continued to reaffirm that thinking.

    “This was a coaching staff win today,” owner Jerry Jones said. “I haven’t been a part of a team Band-Aided up as much as we were to come play this game. Of course, Dak played outstanding. But this was done by a lot of guys we weren’t counting on playing. I can tell you firsthand, that’s coaching.”

    Schottenheimer’s first answer in the postgame press conference didn’t see him take any credit for the win. Instead, he deferred it to the players. Prescott made it more inclusive.

    “It’s credit to these coaches, these players and this organization,” he said. “Everybody. There’s not many teams that can put four guys that don’t start into the game [on the offensive line] and feel confident about going and winning a game, especially on the road. These guys don’t see themselves as backups, as they shouldn’t. They’ve just been waiting on their opportunity.”

    Even if Schottenheimer wants to deny it, a lot of the grit that players and the owner pointed to that was shown in the game goes right back to him. Even as the leader of the locker room, Prescott saw the effect his environment created.

    “It was evident,” Prescott said. “For those guys that don’t normally get in to play like starters, to own their roles and play at the standard we did. Staying consistent, the belief in every one of those guys, [Schottenheimer] is doing a hell of a job building this culture. He deserves a lot of respect and credit.”

    Similar game awaits next week at Carolina Panthers

    The Cowboys will make another road trip next week to take on a similarly down-on-their-luck Carolina Panthers team. Dallas is expected to get starting left tackle Tyler Guyton, starting left guard Tyler Smith and backup running back Miles Sanders back from injuries. As for starting right guard Tyler Booker, returner and wide receiver KaVontae Turpin and linebacker Jack Sanborn, question marks remain. Starting safety Malik Hooker and starting center Cooper Beebe will remain out.

    While the Cowboys try to battle back to full health, they will have one win on their belt that shows they can get it done when they’re not at full strength.

    “This team knows who we are and what we’re capable of doing,” Prescott said.

    “Our guys expected to play well, they expected to win,” Schottenheimer said. “I think that’s important, because that’s what we’re trying to build.”

    Nick Harris

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Nick Harris is the Dallas Cowboys beat reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He has experience working on the beat for DallasCowboys.com and previous work experience at Yahoo Sports/Rivals and 247Sports.

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  • Jerry Jones Sends Strong Message to Micah Parsons Before Packers-Cowboys

    Micah Parsons will make his Dallas homecoming four games into the 2025 NFL season when he and his Green Bay Packers teammates meet the Cowboys at AT&T Stadium on Sunday.

    Parsons, widely considered a generational defensive talent, was traded to Green Bay back in August.

    After failed contract negotiations, Cowboys owner Jerry Jones shipped his franchise player to Green Bay in exchange for Pro Bowl defensive lineman Kenny Clark and two future first-round picks.

    Now, Parsons gets his revenge game against the team that drafted him with the No. 12 overall pick in 2021.

    Parsons and the 2-1 Packers will face off against the 1-2 Cowboys on “Sunday Night Football.”

    Owner Jerry Jones of the Dallas Cowboys looks on prior to the game against the New York Giants at AT&T Stadium on September 14, 2025 in Arlington, Texas.

    Sam Hodde/Getty Images

    More Football: Commanders Respond to Unfortunate Injury News With Veteran Signing

    During his weekly radio appearance with 105.3 The Fan, Jones was asked about his team’s upcoming clash with Parsons.

    “I think the world of Micah. I might say I wish him well but it’s obvious I don’t this weekend in terms of Green Bay winning the ballgame,” Jones said, via The Athletic’s Jon Machota.

    “… He’s going to make some plays no matter how you play him, but when I saw (other teams) play us well with Micah in the game, and it did happen, then obviously we’ll be looking to try to run those kinds of plays (against him).”

    More Football: Commanders Announce Historic Terry McLaurin News

    The Cowboys traded Parsons to the Packers on Aug. 28, just one week before the start of the season. Jones was asked if he regrets not trading Parsons earlier in the offseason.

    “No. Not at all,” Jones said. “We needed this timing. We needed to be right here at the beginning of the season, in my mind, to get the highest value.”

    More Football: Eagles WR A.J. Brown Offers Blunt Opinion of Team’s Offense

    Through the first three games of his Packers tenure, Parsons has 1.5 sacks, five tackles and six QB hits. In his four seasons with the Cowboys, the four-time Pro Bowler and two-time All-Pro pass rusher amassed 52.5 sacks, 63 tackles for loss, 112 QB hits and nine forced fumbles.

    “I think the most important thing is Micah wanted to be a Cowboy,” Parsons’ agent David Mulugheta said earlier this month, via ESPN. “He grew up cheering for the Cowboys, wore the blue and white at Penn State, wore it in the NFL with the Dallas Cowboys. He wanted to be a Cowboy, and we did everything we could for him to remain a Cowboy.”

    Sunday’s Packers-Cowboys game will kickoff at 8:20 p.m. ET.

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  • Three Houston Texans Related Thoughts on Dallas Trading Micah Parsons

    For the second time in under a calendar year, the city of Dallas and the sports fans in that town were sideswiped by a massive, landscape-changing sports trade. Back on February 1, deep into a Saturday night, the Dallas Mavericks traded all-world forward Luka Doncic to the Los Angeles Lakers, a move that resulted in protests outside the Mavericks arena, and chants of “Fire Nico” (for Nico Harrison, Mac’s GM) inside the arena.

    This time, it was Cowboys owner (and sadly, their GM) Jerry Jones deciding that the appropriate ending to the Micah Carson’s contract stalemate was to trade Parsons to the Green Bay Packers for a couple first round picks and DT Kenny Clark. In the process, Parsons wound up with a four-year contract extension worth up to $188 million, making him the highest paid non-QB in NFL history, at $47 million per year.

    There is no need to do winners and losers for this trade. The winner is obviously David Mulugheta, Parsons’ agent with whom, for some reason, Jones decided to make this whole thing personal. Much the same way Mulugheta was able to engineer a record-breaking contract for Deshaun Watson as an adjunct to a trade, he did the same thing for Parsons, de-pantsing Jones in the process.

    Parsons’ resume speaks for itself — four time Pro Bowler, three time All Pro, 52.5 sacks in four years, and most importantly, a player whose most measurable impact was the fact that, over the past four years, the Cowboys were the league’s best defense with Parsons on the field, by EPA per play. Across 1,039 snaps, those same Cowboys immediately became the league’s worst defense by the same metric when Parsons was mot on the field.

    The Packers are now +1200 to win the Super Bowl, as they were +2200 before the trade, while the Cowboys Super Bowl odds go from +4700 to +5500.

    That about sums up the big picture angle son the deal, but I do have a few Houston Texans related thoughts after the execution of this trade. Here you go:

    If you’re having flashbacks to bad Texans trades, here are the two that should haunt you
    The DeAndre Hopkins trade and the Jadeveon Clowney trade. This Micah Parsons trade had the worst elements of both of those deals, almost as if those two trades had a baby with each other. The subpar compensation for an elite football player harkened back to the (even worse) second round pick and David Johnson that Bill O’Brien received for Hopkins, and the late suboptimal late August timing of the deal harkened back to the August 31, 2019 trade of Clowney to the Seahawks.

    Be glad that Cal McNair is your team’s owner
    I’ll bet you wouldn’t have been saying this four years ago, as the Texans were embarking on another season of Jack Easterby in the building and David Curley as the head coach, but here we are. The hires of Nick Caserio as the GM, and DeMeco Ryans as the head coach look like genius moves, and unlike Jerry Jones, Cal McNair is not going to involve himself in transactions like these. Cal cuts the checks, and then unleashes capable employees to go do their jobs, which is EXACTLY what you want from an owner.

    Will Anderson is going to be so rich
    So $47 million per year is now the high water mark for non-quarterbacks. After the 2025 season (March 2026 to be exact), Will Anderson, Jr. will become eligible for a long term, second contract. If he makes the leap in Year 3 that many expect, he might crack the $50 million per year barrier. Add in the likelihood that C.J. Stroud eclipses $60 million per year, and the salary cap calculus changes drastically for the Texans next year. One thing I can assure you — unlike Jones, Nick Caserio will not let things fester for months and months while both sides stare at each other. The Texans will try to get these extensions done quickly, as they did with Derek Stingley last March, a week after Stingley became extension eligible.

    Listen to Sean Pendergast on SportsRadio 610 from 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. weekdays. Also, follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/SeanTPendergast, on Instagram at instagram.com/sean.pendergast, and like him on Facebook at facebook.com/SeanTPendergast.

    Sean Pendergast

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  • A Special Guest — One Who Knows NFL Dynasty Euphoria. – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    Photo Courtesy of Eagles Nation on X.

    Imagine this, Philly. The Dallas Cowboys — with a fresh start once again to begin the 2025 NFL Season — not only have to commence the season in the bosom of the home of their arch rival — but from a box high above the field — Jerry Jones will get a good view of the raising of the Eagles championship banner.

    For Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie — it’s been quite a journey for his franchise to achieve prominence. After nearly two decades of being the class of the NFC — his Eagles finally advanced to the realm of sports euphoria after out-dueling New England in Super Bowl LII in 2018, advancing to the big game again in 2023, and brought the Lombardi Trophy home in Super Bowl LIX last year.

    Photo Courtesy of Wiki Commons.

    For Cowboy’s owner — Jerry Jones — the reality is much worse. There was a time when bold moves from an oil tycoon and his Head Coach from the University of Miami bundled an aging Herschel Walker in return for draft selections that would deliver them a dynasty. Thirty-five years later — the end of Jones’ dynasty with a championship in 1995 — would be the end of the best time of his ownership of the Cowboys. Since 1996 — the Cowboys have advanced to the playoffs thirteen times — never again reaching a Conference Championship Game again. In August (Jones) exchanged Parsons to the Packers in exchange for (two) 1st round picks and defensive tackle (Kenny) Clark.

    Photo Courtesy of Eagles Nation on X.Photo Courtesy of Eagles Nation on X.

    In the end — it would be the Eagles would contribute to the end of the Cowboys. Twenty-six years ago — the (Eagles) Coach Reid and Donovan (McNabb) were part of a team that opened the season in Dallas amid scorching temperatures— Troy Aikman threw a pick six to Jeremiah Trotter, went 0–5, and wound up in the hospital with a concussion. That next season would be his last. The same year at Veterans Stadium — Tim Hauck hit Michael Irvin effectively ending his career. In 2003 — Emmitt Smith’s last game with the Cowboys ended with a screen pass intercepted by Shawn Barber.

    Last season — a video surfaced of Jerry Jones being heckled at Lincoln Financial Field. This year — without Micah Parsons and a team going sideways — the trip on Thursday night could be much, much worse for Jerry.

    Tags: Andy Reid Jeffrey Lurie Jerry Jones Micah Parsons Super Bowl 54

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    Michael Thomas Leibrandt

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  • Dallas Cowboys trade Micah Parsons to the Green Bay Packers

    Micah Parsons has been traded to the Green Bay Packers, the star rusher announced on social media Thursday. 

    The Cowboys will reportedly receive two first-round picks in exchange for Parsons’ $188 million deal.

    Parsons said in a statement that it is a sad day and that he never wanted this chapter of his life to end; however, “not everything was under my control,” and he claims he never asked for anything more than fairness, only that the person he trusted to negotiate his contract be part of the process.

    “From the moment I arrived in Dallas, you embraced me and my family as your own,” Parsons said in a statement. “You made a kid from the East Coast feel right at home in Texas. Every time I pulled up to work, every time I stepped onto that field, I felt the excitement and pride of representing you. You didn’t just give me a jersey, you gave me a place to belong.”

    Parsons said North Texas will still be his home in the offseason, where he plans to continue “giving back to the community that gave me so much.”

    Parsons was present at the team’s training camp, but did not participate. At the beginning of August, the contract dispute between Dallas Cowboys owner and general manager, Jerry Jones and Parsons came to a head, with the star pass rusher demanding a trade.

     At a new conference Thursday night, Jones said he believes the team has a better chance to win now.    

    Parsons demands trade from America’s team

    In a post to his X account earlier this month, Parsons claimed he personally submitted his trade request to Cowboys executive vice president and CEO Stephen Jones.

    “I no longer want to be held to close door [sic] negotiations without my agent present. I no longer want shots taken at me for getting injured while laying it on the line for the organization our fans and my teammates,” Parsons wrote.

    The post, which includes three screenshots of a note typed out on an iPhone, includes Parsons’ side of the contract dispute. 

    Parsons wrote that he wanted to sign a contract extension as soon as he was eligible, following the 2023-24 season, but the team did not want to negotiate.

    “After the season I told my agent once again to let the team know we were open to negotiate when they met at the combine. My agent informed me I should wait for other deals to get done because the price would only go up but I didn’t care and wanted to secure myself as a Cowboy long term,” Parsons wrote.

    He said his agent was met with “radio silence.” 

    Jerry Jones on Parsons contract negotiations

    In March, Parsons said he had a meeting with Jerry Jones to “talk about leadership,” but Jones turned the conversation to his contract.  

    “Yes I engaged in a back and forth in regards to what I wanted for my contract, but at no point did I believe this was supposed to be a formal negotiation and I informed Mr. Jones afterward my agent would reach out thinking this would get things done,” Parsons wrote.

    He said when his agent reached out, he was told that a deal was “pretty much already done.” 

    Unless a player is acting as their own agent, negotiations must happen between the team and a player’s agent, according to league rules.

    In a news conference at the start of training camp, Jones answered a question about the lack of progress toward an extension by appearing to cite Parsons’ injury history as a reason for the delay.  

    Micah Parsons’ contract with the Cowboys

    Parsons was entering the fifth and final year of his rookie contract and has been one of the best at his position in the NFL since he was drafted in 2020. Parsons had said he expected a big payday, whether with the Cowboys or another team.

    Last month, another elite pass rusher, Pittsburgh’s T.J. Watt, signed a 3-year, $123 million contract, making him the highest-paid non-quarterback in the NFL. Earlier this year, the Browns’ Myles Garrett signed a 4-year, $160M deal, making him the highest-paid defensive player in NFL history until the Watt contract.

    CBS Texas Staff

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  • 4 Takeaways From The Premiere of Netflix’s New Dallas Cowboys Docu-Series

    Move over, America’s Sweethearts. In the opening moments of Netflix’s America’s Team: The Gambler and His Cowboys, Jerry Jones recounts the moment he turned a $100 million profit on a single oil well…

    Simon Pruitt

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  • 7 wounded in weekend shootings and a stabbing in Denver

    7 wounded in weekend shootings and a stabbing in Denver

    DENVER — It was a violent weekend in the city of Denver after seven people were wounded in three separate shootings and one stabbing incident.

    The first incident was reported on the Denver Police Department’s X feed at 4:37 a.m. Saturday. Police said one person was shot and wounded in the 3100 block of N. Downing Street.

    The victim in the Downing Street shooting was transported to the hospital with unknown extent of injuries. No arrests were made, and police said officers are working to develop suspect information.

    Denver7

    Around 11 p.m. Saturday, police were called to the 3300 block of N. York Street on report of a double shooting. Two people were shot and transported to the hospital. Their conditions are not known. Police have not reported any arrests in the case.

    About three hours later, a third shooting occurred early Sunday morning in the 2300 block of Champa Street. One person was shot and wounded. Police later reported a suspect, identified as Jerry Jones, was arrested and is facing an attempted murder charge.

    The fourth incident was reported at 4:37 a.m. Sunday and involved a stabbing in the 3900 block of N. Pecos Street. Three people were taken to the hospital with what police said appeared to be non-life-threatening injuries. Police are working to develop suspect information in the case.

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  • Jerry Jones all in on Cowboys’ Dak Prescott being a QB who can and will win a Super Bowl

    Jerry Jones all in on Cowboys’ Dak Prescott being a QB who can and will win a Super Bowl

    Jerry Jones has yet to commit to a contract extension for Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott.

    It’s in the plans but there is no timetable to get one done even though Prescott is in the final year of his contract, putting the Cowboys reality of him walking in free agency in 2024.

    But there is no step back from Jones in his belief in Prescott, who has won just two playoff games in his eight years as Cowboys quarterback.

    He not only remains all in on him being a quarterback who can lead the Cowboys to a Super Bowl but he believes the team’s hopes of winning in 2024 with a lesser team are primarily based on the presence of Prescott.

    “Because you got Dak for sure,” Jones said when asked why should fans believe in the Cowboys winning it all in 2024 when followed three straight seasons of 12-5 finishes with early playoff exits. “We think he’s great quarterback. That is really the gist of what we’re about this year. We’ve got Dak. ”

    “I think Dak will be at the top of his game. I’ve said that I do think he will improve from where he is now. I think we’ll have that.”

    Prescott is coming off season in which he led the NFL in touchdown passes and finished second in NFL MVP voting.

    He followed it up with a woeful performance in the 48-32 loss to the Green Bay Packers.

    Jones said it is not as simple as Prescott needing to play better in the playoffs, in the biggest games.

    He said the Cowboys have to have better coordination from the coaching staff as well as the players to reach their overall goal.

    He specifically pointed out the team’s suspect run defense not only against the Packers but in regular season losses to the San Francisco 49ers and Buffalo Bills.

    He thinks the addition fo Mike Zimmer as defensive coordinator in place of Dan Quinn, the new head coach of the Washington Commanders, will make a difference.

    “I hope we’re able to stop when our opponents come toward us with the running game,” Jones said. “I hope specially able to address that better. So careful not to criticize defense, as much as we think of Dan, we needed a few games, those games that Dak, quote unquote had his worst games, coincided with how we played defensive. We’ve got that in mind.”

    He also pointed to better clarity from the coaching staff in alignment and purpose.

    “I think it has to do with frankly better coordinating with the coaching, certainly and the management…relative to what you trying win games with, strategies and who you’re playing,” Jones said. “ f look back at the Pro Bowlers. Did we get the absolute best execution and and best chance to win and advance in the playoffs by using those Pro Bowlers who just happened to represent 60 percent of your salaries, did we get the most out of them to win the games? That’s a different way of saying they’ve got to do more if they’re going to get that money. Well, they’ve got to be put in position to do more, too.”

    And while Prescott has not delivered in the playoffs like Kansas City Chiefs three-time Super Bowl quarterback Patrick Mahomes, Jones doesn’t begrudge him for wanting maximize his earnings among the top players in the game.

    “I’m an American entrepreneur,” Jones said. “I get up wanting everybody to have opportunity to make more money. I live that stuff, so I’m not going to criticize anybody for making more money.”

    And Jones doesn’t hold Prescott lack of playoff success against him when it comes to contract negotiations. In his mind, just cause he hasn’t won doesn’t mean he can’t or won’t, not unlike several other quarterbacks in the league.

    “When I think of Dak, he’s one of those in the top paid that haven’t won that I think can,” Jones said. “I think there are a handful or more of quarterbacks playing who haven’t won a Super Bowl that will win a Super Bowl. I think Dak is one of them. I’m firm there.”

    Jones also is firm on wanting Prescott to considering taking team-friendly deal in continue to build the supporting cast around him in hopes of winning a Super Bowl.

    Something has to give. It’s another reason the Cowboys are having to try to win with less in 2024.

    “As you address a player like Dak, you take away from his supporting cast,” Jones said. “That’s not a sales job. Everybody realizes, if you get the bucks, someone else who can help you win doesn’t. That’s factual.”

    But Jones remains confident because of Prescott.

    “I think we’re going to be as close going in as we’ve been with the last three teams, with Dak,’’ Jones said. “With Dak. “How can you say that, you ask? Well, do you still have (CeeDee) Lamb out there? Do you still have that tight end threat? Do you still have some really good players on defense?

    “Now, can you manage to stop the run better than you did the last couple of years? It’s down to those kind of things. . .We want to get it done. I think we have been in a situation where we can get it done with less.’’

    Related stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Clarence E. Hill Jr. has covered the Dallas Cowboys as a beat writer/columnist for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram since 1997. That includes just two playoff wins, six coaches and countless controversies from the demise of the dynasty teams of the 1990s through the rollercoaster years of the Tony Romo era until Jason Garrett’s process Cowboys.

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  • FIFA Announces Dallas Will Host 9 World Cup Matches

    FIFA Announces Dallas Will Host 9 World Cup Matches


    The World Cup is still two years away, but Dallas is already a winner. At a press conference Sunday hosted at Arlington’s AT&T Stadium, media members, celebrities and local officials gathered to watch the official FIFA schedule announcement.

    From June 11, through July 19, 2026, the World Cup will have 104 games over 16 cities in North America, with 11 in the U.S.

    This marks the first time the men’s World Cup will take place across three different countries: Mexico, Canada and the U.S. The opening match is on June 11, in Mexico City in Aztec Stadium. The games will continue in Toronto on June 12; Los Angeles will host the first game in the U.S. also on June 12.

    This isn’t the only first. The tournament has expanded from 32 participating teams to 48.

    In a press conference that included Mavericks star Dirk Nowitzki, former Dallas Cowboy Emmitt Smith and Dallas Stars former goaltender Marty Turco, it was announced that North Texas will host the most matches of any city, nine, including one semifinal game, at AT&T Stadium on July 14. Of the 104 World Cup games, Dallas is hosting the most.

    click to enlarge

    Former Dallas Star goaltender Marty Turco was in attendance at the FIFA press conference on Sunday.

    Mike Brooks

    click to enlarge

    Basketball star Dirk Nowitzki (left) spoke about his love for a different sport: soccer.

    Mike Brooks

    “This is the biggest event in the world,” said Nowitzki, who spoke about growing up in Germany where people have “soccer in their DNA.” Nowitzki says he has watched soccer become more popular in the U.S. since English star David Beckham first made his way to LA Galaxy in the early 2000s.

    For the portion of the announcement that was televised, FIFA enlisted Kevin Hart, Drake and the
     “World’s most famous soccer Mom” Kim Kardashian, who announced Los Angeles as the first host city in the U.S.

    Suffice to say, FIFA is really trying to spur a pandemic of soccer fever, following the tradition of Latin America and Europe. The sport is having a bit of a renaissance in the U.S. with Inter Miami recruiting star players Lionel Messi and Luis Suarez. This week, FC Dallas made a landmark signing with Petar Musa in a deal worth nearly $10 million.

    Also in attendance at the Arlington press conference were Frisco Mayor Jeff Cheney, Arlington Mayor Jim Ross, Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson and Fort Worth Councilwoman Macy Hill.

    The city of Frisco, said Mayor Cheney, will be investing 100 million into the historic downtown to “show off” the city.

    “We saw the Messi impact,” said the Frisco mayor of the recent two games that brought Inter Miami to matches against FC Dallas, to record attendance.

    Beyond its cultural significance, the men’s World Cup is a major economic boon. According to a report by Forbes, FIFA brought $7.5 billion in revenue after the last World Cup in Qatar — which saw Argentina take the cup in a match of giants between Argentina’s captain Lionel Messi and previous World Cup champion France and Kylian Mbappe — of which Qatar reportedly banked $1.56 billion. Qatar, however, had reported investing $220 billion into hosting, making the World Cup a major financial loss.

    For the 2026 soccer championship, Arlington Mayor Jim Ross was asked at the press conference whether his city’s lack of public transportation may have hindered Arlington’s bid for a final.

    “If you’ve ever experienced coming in and out of here, we get people in and out as good, if not better, than any other city in the country,” said Ross. “So we do have a public transportation system. We’re just not assigned to a transit authority.”

    Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said he hadn’t been given any reasons why FIFA didn’t pick AT&T Stadium for the final. But, he pointed out, Arlington is a city that was able to support three Taylor Swift concerts, “Which is as big as the World Cup.”

    Before Sunday’s announcement, Dallas was projected to earn $300-400 million in revenue for hosting — which should cover Dallas’ rising rent for about a month. Though at the Sunday press conference, the numbers hadn’t yet been calculated to account for the economic impact of hosting nine games.

    Other host cities include Vancouver, Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Guadalajara, Kansas City, Dallas, Houston, Atlanta, Monterrey, Mexico City, Toronto, Boston, New York City, Philadelphia and Miami.

    Dallas will host its first game on June 14, with subsequent group-stage matches on June 17, June 22, June 25 and June 27. Round of 32 matches are on June 30, and July 3. The next game (round of 16) is July 6. The semifinal game in Dallas will be played on July 14.

    The final game is on July 19, at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. You can register for tickets on FIFA’s website.

    “This is fabulous,” said Cowboys owner Jerry Jones of the news. “This is easily the most significant sports event that has taken place in our region.”

    To explain to North Texans the impact of the nine games, FC Dallas president Dan Hunt offered, “It’s like nine Super Bowls.” 

    click to enlarge

    Local officials answered questions about how the World Cup will affect their cities in 2026.

    Mike Brooks

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    Several panels of speakers answered press questions about the 2026 World Cup on Sunday.

    Mike Brooks

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    A scene from the press conference at AT&T Stadium on Sunday.

    Mike Brooks

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    Dirk showed love to his new hometown of Dallas on Sunday.

    Mike Brooks

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    Cowboys owner Jerry Jones hosted the media event at “Jerry World,” Arlington’s Cowboys Stadium, where it was announced that Dallas will host nine World Cup matches in 2026.

    Mike Brooks





    Lauren Drewes Daniels

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  • Onion Sports’ NFL Divisional Round Picks

    Onion Sports’ NFL Divisional Round Picks

    Onion Sports shares its expert analysis on the teams that will come away with victory in the NFL’s Divisional Round.

    Jaguars at Chiefs

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    Jaguars: Expect Chiefs coach Andy Reid to have something special up his sleeve for this game. Unfortunately, that will just be a dozen hot dogs.

    Offensive Player To Watch: Jaguars

    Offensive Player To Watch: Jaguars

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    Zay Jones: The Jags wide receiver has the field awareness needed to witness numerous Trevor Lawrence interceptions.

    Defensive Player To Watch: Jaguars

    Defensive Player To Watch: Jaguars

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    Josh Allen: This could be a perfect opportunity for the pass rusher to pick up a loose quarterback on the ground and return it for a touchdown.

    Offensive Player To Watch: Chiefs

    Offensive Player To Watch: Chiefs

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    Patrick Mahomes: Kansas City’s star QB is expected to have his best State Farm commercial yet.

    Defensive Player To Watch: Chiefs

    Defensive Player To Watch: Chiefs

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    Chris Jones: Expect the massive defensive tackle to struggle to make it out of the Jaguars’ backfield.

    Giants at Eagles

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    Eagles: Jalen Hurts and the Eagles have what it takes to bring a small dollop of joy to Philadelphia citizens’ otherwise bleak, empty lives.

    Offensive Player To Watch: Giants

    Offensive Player To Watch: Giants

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    Daniel Jones: The quarterback has a bright future with his next team.

    Defensive Player To Watch: Giants

    Defensive Player To Watch: Giants

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    Dexter Lawrence: The Giants colossal nose tackle will rely on his flexibility and athleticism, which allow him to change direction at least once per game.

    Offensive Player To Watch: Eagles

    Offensive Player To Watch: Eagles

    Image for article titled Onion Sports’ NFL Divisional Round Picks

    Jason Kelce: The Eagles’ Pro Bowl center is reportedly practicing a knuckleball hike

    Defensive Player To Watch: Eagles

    Defensive Player To Watch: Eagles

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    Ndamukong Suh: Though playing as a backup, the veteran Suh is hoping he still has a few more dirty plays left in him.

    Bengals at Bills

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    Bengals: After Week 17’s suspended matchup, Cincinnati will be eager to get revenge on Damar Hamlin.

    Offensive Player To Watch: Bengals

    Offensive Player To Watch: Bengals

    Image for article titled Onion Sports’ NFL Divisional Round Picks

    Joe Burrow: Pretty much just needs to go out there and not throw 20 picks to go down as the best quarterback in Bengals history.

    Defensive Player To Watch: Bengals

    Defensive Player To Watch: Bengals

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    Eli Apple: The feisty cornerback will do whatever it takes to be dragged into the end zone while clinging to Josh Allen’s back.

    Offensive Player to Watch: Bills

    Offensive Player to Watch: Bills

    Image for article titled Onion Sports’ NFL Divisional Round Picks

    Stefon Diggs: Buffalo’s wideout has shown the ability to make seemingly impossible catches, rending the delicate fabric of our so-called “reality” and plunging NFL fans into a horrid abyss of unfathomable madness.

    Defensive Player To Watch: Bills

    Defensive Player To Watch: Bills

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    Tremaine Edmunds: The middle linebacker is the heart and soul and lower intestine and trachea and stapes bone of the Bills defense.

    Cowboys at 49ers

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    49ers: San Francisco has better defenders, a more explosive offense, and it’s just really gratifying to see Jerry Jones absolutely fucking miserable.

    Offensive Player To Watch: Cowboys

    Offensive Player To Watch: Cowboys

    Image for article titled Onion Sports’ NFL Divisional Round Picks

    Dak Prescott: He has the kind of arm that can ruin the hopes and dreams of any Cowboys fan.

    Defensive Player To Watch: Cowboys

    Defensive Player To Watch: Cowboys

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    Micah Parsons: Keep a close eye on the Dallas linebacker, who is a dual threat as a pass rusher and a player who can turn completely invisible for multiple quarters.

    Offensive Player To Watch: 49ers

    Offensive Player To Watch: 49ers

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    Brock Purdy: Luckily for San Francisco, Brock Purdy has zero professional experience with losing and barely comprehends the concept of defeat.

    Defensive Player To Watch: 49ers

    Defensive Player To Watch: 49ers

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    Nick Bosa: Expect Bosa to come out strong on every play in order to sack Dak Prescott before he has the chance to throw a pick.

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  • Cowboys owner Jerry Jones ordered to take paternity test

    Cowboys owner Jerry Jones ordered to take paternity test

    A judge has ordered Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones to take a paternity test as part of a legal dispute with a 26-year-old woman who claims the billionaire is her biological father.

    A Texas judge issued the order for genetic testing Thursday in a paternity case brought by Alexandra Davis, who previously alleged in a separate lawsuit she was conceived from a relationship Jones had with her mother in the mid-1990s.

    Attorneys for Jones did not immediately respond to requests for comment Friday, but said in court filings that they intend to appeal the decision. 

    One of Davis’ lawyers, Andrew Bergman, confirmed the decision, but did not immediately offer any other comment. In March, Davis sued Jones in Dallas County, asking a judge to void a legal agreement she said her mother, Cynthia Davis, reached with Jones two years after she was born. The 1998 settlement allegedly said that Jones would support them financially as long as they didn’t publicly say he was Alexandra’s father — something the married owner of the Cowboys denied.

    Davis dropped that case in April, saying that she would instead seek to prove that Jones is her father. She filed the paternity case that month.

    On Thursday, Associate Judge T. Jones Abendroth wrote that “after careful consideration” she would grant Davis’ motion to have Jones undergo genetic testing.

    The 80-year-old Jones and his wife, Gene, were married in 1963. They have three children, and all have front office roles with the Cowboys. Jerry Jones is the team president and general manager.

    Davis’ original lawsuit claimed that Jones “pursued” Cynthia Davis, who was also married at the time, after they met while she was working for American Airlines out of Little Rock, Arkansas.

    Their settlement allegedly called for Jones to pay Cynthia Davis $375,000 and for Alexandra Davis to receive a “certain monthly, annual and special funding” from a trust until she was 21, as well as lump sum payments when she turned 24, 26 and 28.

    Jones also made headlines recently after news outlets, including North Dakota’s CBS affiliate, reported about a controversial 1957 photo Jones was spotted in that was taken outside a high school where a group of white students appeared to be blocking a group of Black students from entering the school. Jones said he showed up to see what was going on and not to participate in the mob.

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  • In Dallas suburbs, Friday Night Lights make way for cricket

    In Dallas suburbs, Friday Night Lights make way for cricket

    FRISCO, Texas (AP) — With the ornate spires of the Karya Siddhi Hanuman Temple anchoring the skyline behind them, a cricket batsman and bowler eyed each other across a brown grass field. Amid gusty winds, players waiting to bat watched intently from nearby bleachers.

    No, this is not a scene in India, where cricket became a national obsession after arriving on the wings of British colonialism. Try North Texas, where Friday Night Lights have made way for weekend afternoons on the pitch.

    Welcome to the new Lone Star State, where cricket matches, a Hindu temple and Indian grocery stores co-exist with Christian churches, cattle ranches and Jerry Jones’ Dallas Cowboys empire. More than a decade of expansion has given the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex the largest Asian growth rate of any major U.S. metro area, in the nation’s fastest growing state. According to U.S. Census Bureau figures, Indians account for more than half the region’s Asian population boom, with the Dallas suburb of Frisco alone experiencing growth to rival Seattle and Chicago.

    While some Texans still bleed football, these days a growing number bleed cricket.

    “In ’98, I came to the U.S. Then I stopped playing cricket because I didn’t have any availability here. Down the road four or five years later, I saw somebody playing cricket in Plano,” said Kalyan “K.J.” Jarajapu, a temple volunteer watching the Frisco-sponsored cricket league match. “I never imagined that there would be cricket for sure or there would be a cricket world like I saw back home in India here in (metro) Dallas.”

    The share of Asians among the foreign-born in the U.S. has risen recently, from 30.1% during the 2012-to-2016 period to 31.2% in the 2017-to-2021 period, as the share of immigrants from Latin America and Europe has fallen, according to the American Community Survey.

    Immigrants from South Asia believe they’ve found the best of East meets West in Frisco and other Dallas suburbs. They’re living a new and improved American dream, with access to their preferred houses of worship, authentic food and a community radio station. But the dream also comes with painful realities about racism, pressure to balance two cultures and the mental health challenges of finding your way in an unfamiliar world.

    Named in 1904 after the St. Louis–San Francisco Railway, Frisco, 30 miles (50 kilometers) north of downtown Dallas, started as a train stop and an agricultural hub. Today, it’s a global technology force. Companies including Toyota, FedEx and Goldman Sachs have drawn job seekers from afar, including a pipeline of IT workers from the tech hub of Hyderabad, India.

    Combine good jobs with reputable schools, affordable housing and warm weather, and the formula for growth is set.

    Texas-based disciples of Sri Ganapathy Sachchidananda Swamiji came together in 2008 to purchase a 10-acre (4-hectare) plot in Frisco and build a modest Hindu temple. Within three years, it was hosting hundreds of worshippers.

    Jayesh Thakker, a temple trustee and joint treasurer for the India Association of North Texas, said they raised enough money to build a 33,000-square-foot (3,065-square-meter) temple in 2015. Nearly 30 artisan workers came on special visas to ensure every detail honored Indian Hindu architecture.

    “They built it first as an American structure and then they ‘Indianized’ it,” Thakker said.

    New housing and schools soon followed. Laxmi Tummala, trustee and temple secretary, is also a realtor. Many of her clients settle for less just to live nearby.

    ″‘All that other stuff I wanted, it doesn’t matter if it’s going to put me 25 minutes or 30 minutes away. I want my kids to have this exposure,’” Tummala said.

    Immigrants aren’t the only newcomers. Between 2015 and 2019, more than 17,000 people flocked to Frisco and surrounding Collin County from Dallas County and more than 8,000 from nearby Denton County, according to the Census Bureau.

    Outside Texas, the biggest sources of new Collin County residents were Los Angeles and Orange counties in California, with 1,600 residents and 1,000 residents respectively.

    But almost 6,000 new residents in the area came from Asia.

    The Islamic Center of Frisco has benefited, too. Its board is planning to more than double the size of the 18,000-square-foot (1,672-square-meter) mosque by 2024. With more than 3,500 people attending prayers and 460 children attending Sunday School, the board moved to acquire more space in 2019.

    Azfar Saeed, the center’s president, remembers that nearly two decades ago only 15 people came to pray in a 400-square-foot (37-square-meter) shopping center suite on any given day.

    “At that time, nobody knew Frisco. People were like, ‘Where are you going?’” said Saeed, who was born in Pakistan. By 2010, “people just started moving right and left here.”

    The pandemic brought another shift. Suddenly, people from California or Chicago were able to work remotely but live elsewhere. Houston saw a tremendous influx of Asians in the last decade, with the second-highest growth rate after Dallas among major U.S. metros.

    “The moment people went remote it felt like people were like, ’OK, I have a tiny house in California for $800,000 and I can buy a mansion here in Texas. Let’s go,’” Saeed said, chuckling.

    Where there is a large Asian population in the U.S., anti-Asian hate seems inevitable. In August, a woman’s racist rant against four Indian American women in Plano was caught on video. The unprovoked attack escalated as she hit and threatened to shoot them. She was later arrested.

    The incident caught the attention of people in India thanks to social media. South Asian groups here attended meetings with local law enforcement.

    “It was very sad and it was surprising,” said Tummala, the temple’s secretary. “But we definitely don’t take that and say ‘OK, everybody in Texas is like that.’”

    Some have found outlets for talking about their struggles, including on the region’s only South Asian radio station.

    The app-based Radio Azad, in Irving, was started by Azad Khan in 2011, five years after he immigrated from Pakistan. The station broadcasts music and current affairs. Multiple languages are represented, including Urdu, Hindi, Arabic, Farsi and Telugu.

    As the area population has grown, so has Radio Azad’s listenership, which numbers in the hundreds of thousands.

    The anonymity of call-in radio shows on Azad — which means freedom in Hindi and Urdu — has allowed for difficult questions. Nearly three years ago, CEO Ayesha Shafi started monthly mental health segments, and listeners embraced them. They’ve tackled assimilation, bipolar disorder and domestic abuse.

    “You can talk about issues that you’re facing and actually hear somebody who’s like you, who understands where you’re coming from and will actually listen,” Shafi said.

    Depression rose to the forefront after the murder-suicide of a Bangladeshi family in April 2021 in Allen, roughly 10 miles (16 kilometers) east of Frisco. Two adult brothers fatally shot their parents, sister and grandmother before taking their own lives. One brother had written on Instagram of dealing with depression since 2016.

    “As parents, we find that anxiety has become so common and it’s not happening to just anybody’s kids,” Shafi said. “As we created awareness, as we shared our shows … they would realize, ‘Omigod, this is happening to our kids.’”

    Reena Yalamanchili dealt with the feeling of not belonging as a child, despite being born in the U.S. The 17-year-old, whose family lives in nearby Coppell and attends the Frisco temple, remembers kids making fun of the lunch her mother made.

    “It kind of made me feel embarrassed about my mom’s cooking, or like Indian food or my culture in general,” Yalamanchili said. “Obviously, I don’t feel like that anymore.”

    She thinks most children grow out of those attitudes, and there is strength in numbers.

    “There’s a lot of people in the same boat as me,” she said. “There’s a lot of shared traditions.”

    Everywhere you look, South Asian cultures are merging into the Texas zeitgeist. The movie theater in Frisco shows films in Telegu, Tamil and Hindi, while at Tikka Taco in Irving, diners can get tacos stuffed with tandoori chicken, lamb or paneer tikka.

    Sometimes Indian politics spill into the Dallas suburbs. Scores of people joined protests this week outside Frisco’s City Hall on behalf of Christians in India who claim a Frisco-based group supports Hindu nationalists threatening their churches.

    On a more festive front, Hanuman Temple now collaborates with the City of Frisco for Holi, an annual Hindu festival also known as the Festival of Colors. Celebrants daub each other with vividly colored powders. The temple also organizes food donations, health fairs and other community services.

    “We don’t want to just be here and be isolated,” Tummala said.

    You can find a Diwali celebration in several Dallas suburbs around October or November. The biggest holiday of the year in India, the commemoration of light over darkness was celebrated by more than 15,000 people in Southlake’s town square. Police even wrote a script for officers doing security to explain its significance if anyone asked.

    “Five years ago, they wouldn’t have known what it was at all,” Shafi said.

    Southlake Mayor John Huffman, who spoke at the event dressed in traditional Indian clothing, believes close to a fifth of the crowd were non-Asians. He credits its success to the Southlake Foundation, a nonprofit started in 2019 by Kush Rao, who immigrated from India. The organization oversees cultural events and community service activities such as trash clean-up and free lunches for city staff.

    “I feel like they’re setting the bar in a lot of ways and saying, ‘We’re going to give back to the Public Works Department not because we’re getting anything in return but because we appreciate what they do for the city,’” Huffman said. “They have been very intentional about telling their fellow South Asians to get out and engage in the community.”

    Back in Frisco during Diwali, blocks of homes near Hanuman Temple twinkled with lights through the pouring rain. Hanuman Temple’s majestic pyramidal gateway glowed red. And dozens of families didn’t let the wet weather stop them from worshipping and chanting mantras to deities.

    Cricket fan Jarajapu, directing cars in the water-logged parking lot, wasn’t surprised so many came.

    “I have seen the transformation of Frisco city,” Jarajapu said. “It has become very vibrant with diversity, culture and especially a lot of Asians. I’m very proud to be living in Frisco.”

    ___

    Associated Press video journalist Noreen Nasir contributed to this story.

    ___

    Terry Tang is a member of The Associated Press’ Race and Ethnicity team. Follow her on Twitter: @ttangAP

    ___

    Schneider reported from Orlando, Florida. Follow Mike Schneider on Twitter: @ MikeSchneiderAP

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  • While Daniel Snyder Must Go, It’s Perhaps Time to Give the Washington Commanders Owner His Due

    While Daniel Snyder Must Go, It’s Perhaps Time to Give the Washington Commanders Owner His Due

    The New York Post reported last week that actor Matthew McConaughey has expressed interest in joining one of the ownership groups set to bid for the NFL’s Washington Commanders. McConaughey is one of many celebrities said to be so inclined.

    All of this is very telling. And it paradoxically speaks well of Daniel Snyder, the present owner of the Commanders.

    About Snyder, there will be no defense of his ownership here. To say he failed is a waste of words. Before Snyder purchased the team for $800 million in 1999, the three-time Super Bowl winning Redskins were one of the NFL’s premiere franchises. Under Snyder they sunk to one of the League’s laughingstocks. The Wall Street Journal’s Jason Gay took to referring to them as “the Washington Sadness Machine.” Gay’s description speaks loudly to how NFL ownership in total failed itself and its fans for allowing Snyder to remain an owner for as long as they have.

    To the above, some will yell “property rights” on the way to saying that the team is Snyder’s, and Snyder’s only. That’s not true. The NFL is a collective in a sense. While the teams are individually owned, major sources of revenue (television, most notably) are earned collectively. This is important with Snyder in mind. The Redskins’ decline under him wasn’t just bad for the team and its fans. It was bad for the League. When a major franchise like the Redskins/Commander is thriving, logically the League in total gains. That’s why owners are said to have the right to force owners to sell. The view here is that they should exercise this right more frequently and should have forced a sale by Snyder long ago.

    Of course, that’s all in the past. Who knows why, but Snyder is thankfully exploring a sale of the team, and some speculate he’ll fetch $7 billion. Expected bidders include centi-billionaire Amazon
    AMZN
    founder Jeff Bezos, along with all manner of celebrity types including Jay-Z who would like to join Bezos. Which once again speaks well of Snyder. Think about it. And in thinking about it, consider the League that Snyder bought into. It wasn’t the NFL you know today.

    To develop a sense of what Snyder bought into requires traveling back in time to 1989. It was then that the Dallas Cowboys were put up for sale. Many of the suites at Texas Stadium were empty at the time, as were seats in the stands. Cowboys legend Roger Staubach tried to put an ownership group together but couldn’t generate enough interest. An unknown by the name of Jerry Jones ultimately risked his whole fortune earned in insurance and oil on the Cowboys. What’s important about his $150 million purchase is that few, including his investment bankers, thought his buying decision wise.

    Five years after Jones bought the Cowboys, Bob Kraft paid $172 million for the New England Patriots. Chump change now, but at the time Kraft greatly feared the wrath of his late wife, Myra. All of which brings us back to Snyder.

    He again paid $800 million for Redskins in 1989, but the fact that it was Daniel Snyder buying the Redskins speaks volumes. It does because an unknown like Snyder likely couldn’t buy an NFL team in 2022.

    To see why, consider yet again Jones, Kraft and Snyder. Who had heard of any of the three before they entered the NFL club? Which is the point. That they all became owners in what is now known to be one of the world’s most exclusive Clubs hopefully reminds readers of how just how far the NFL has come.

    Jones, Kraft and Snyder were able to enter the NFL when they did precisely because the NFL’s perceived future between 1989 and 1999 wasn’t nearly as grand as it is today. When teams went up for sale back then, the list of Forbes 400 style bidders was limited to non-existent. That’s plainly why Jones, Kraft, and Snyder are owners today. While not members of the Forbes 400 when they entered the NFL club, they became 400 members as the value of their purchases soared.

    It’s a reminder that awful as Snyder has been, he should at least be credited for seeing an NFL future in 1999 that few saw. We know this because realistically the first any NFL fan had heard of Jones, Kraft and Snyder was respectively in 1989, 1994, and 1999. Since the NFL wasn’t the NFL, all three had a shot at ownership of what they couldn’t own if bidding today. And we know why they couldn’t enter the Club today.

    They couldn’t because in 2022, the NFL is the NFL. While unknowns could purchase teams back in the ‘80s and ‘90s, nowadays people on the short list of world’s richest people are interested in entering the Club, as are celebrities whom the world’s richest will allow in as minority owners as a way of creating buzz.

    Stated simply, the NFL has more than arrived. And while Daniel Snyder didn’t live up to what the NFL became, give him his due for taking a big risk. Some of the richest men in the world and celebrities are lined up to join the NFL club in 2022. Snyder is an owner now, and among the richest men in the world now because the world’s richest weren’t interested in the NFL twenty-three years ago.

    John Tamny, Contributor

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