The Hamilton Spectator

How ’bout them broadcasti­ng Cowboys?

- SAM FARMER

They’re everywhere, former Dallas Cowboys players who now populate broadcasti­ng booths across a spectrum of channels.

From Troy Aikman at Fox to Tony Romo at CBS to Jason Witten at ESPN, three of the four network “A-teams” feature an analyst who spent his entire NFL career with a star on his helmet. The lone exception is NBC’s Cris Collinswor­th, a former Cincinnati Bengals receiver.

“They are in the brightest of spotlights (as players), everybody is following every move that those guys are making,” Collinswor­th said. “They’re pretty sophistica­ted media-type guys when they’re coming out of there. It’s a high-energy place, and a high-energy owner who’s not afraid to speak his mind, so I think it makes the players a little more forthright.

“There’s an art to not saying too much, but saying enough to where you’re still interestin­g. Some players do that really well, and it turns into a career for them.”

Toss in Jimmy Johnson, Daryl Johnston, Michael Irvin, Deion Sanders and a host of others dating to Don Meredith, an original member of the “Monday Night Football” booth, and the airwaves take on hues of blue, silver and white.

Said Brad Sham, longtime play-by-play man on the Dallas Cowboys Radio Network: “You cannot scare Tony Romo or Jason Witten or Troy Aikman with the national visibility they get when they played for the Cowboys for 10 years. They’re used to stuff happening.”

Fox’s Johnston, who won three Super Bowl rings in 11 seasons as a Cowboys fullback, said that answering questions in massive media scrums was ideal for players headed for TV careers. “Being able to answer questions postgame, especially after a loss, and being able to do it in an intelligen­t, succinct manner was kind of like on-the-job training.

“Everybody laughed because at one time, toward the end of our Super Bowl run, even our long snapper had his own TV show. There was no short supply on opportunit­y.”

Not everyone is a natural. Whereas Romo got rave reviews for his prescient pre-snap observatio­ns, Witten wasn’t as polished when he made his “Monday Night Football” debut. A go-to guy for the media during his 15 seasons, Witten was picked apart on Twitter for everything from his intermitte­nt eye contact with the camera to the snug fit of his dress shirt to occasional­ly holding the microphone too high. Tough crowd.

Johnson, who coached the franchise to two Super Bowl victories, recalls a time when the Cowboys weren’t so TV savvy.

Long before he became a fixture on “Fox NFL Sunday,” Johnson had some good TV gigs. He was part of a weekly coaches show when he was defensive co-ordinator at Arkansas in the early 1970s, and later oversaw the ad sales and production of a University of Miami football show that he said garnered him close to $400,000 a year. So when he got to the Cowboys in 1989 and saw that their local TV deal netted them a scant $10,000 a year, he couldn’t believe it. He and Cowboys owner Jerry Jones called a meeting with the Dallas station that aired the team’s weekly show.

“I pulled out the books and said, ‘Guys, really, something’s afoul here because I’ve been doing TV for quite some time, and this shows the Dallas Cowboys at $10,000?’” Johnson recalled. “They didn’t even answer. They stood up and said, ‘Evidently, you don’t want to do a first-class show.’ And they walked out. Jerry looked at me and said, ‘Well, you’re so smart, what are we going to do for a TV show now?’”

Johnson brought in his producer from Miami, “and we doubled in our first year what I had made in Miami.”

As for the local station executives that walked out on that meeting? “They got their hands caught in the cookie jar,” Johnson said. “They were making a ton of money off the Dallas Cowboys, and nobody called them on it. I don’t know if they were mad or embarrasse­d or what, but they knew they had to have a relationsh­ip with us, so we never had any negative feedback.

“They needed us more than we needed them.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Jason Witten, left, with play-by-play commentato­r Joe Tessitore, holds one of the most prominent television jobs in the sport as the lead analyst for Monday Night Football.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Jason Witten, left, with play-by-play commentato­r Joe Tessitore, holds one of the most prominent television jobs in the sport as the lead analyst for Monday Night Football.

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