Chattanooga Times Free Press

Cowboys entertain fans with 1st camp practice at home base

- BY SCHUYLER DIXON

FRISCO, Texas — Jason Witten has practiced in front of thousands of Dallas Cowboys fans during training camp plenty of times in his 15 seasons.

Just never a few paces and a left turn from the locker in his home away from home — team headquarte­rs, with the 12,000-seat stadium that serves as an indoor practice field for America’s Team at its posh year-old facility.

The same could be said for the 16 members of the team’s ring of honor who attended a ceremony a few hours before the Cowboys opened practice to the public at their home base for what is believed to be the first time Monday.

Dallas has held camp practices at its stadium about 35 miles to the southwest, and the Alamodome in San Antonio. The Cowboys have trained in California off and on (mostly on) since soon after their inception in 1960, including about four weeks in Oxnard this year.

While the crowd of 6,052 wasn’t quite as big as expected for this kind of first for a storied franchise, it was notable nonetheles­s.

“It really was a function that we dreamed out when we were putting The Star together,” owner and general manager Jerry Jones told The Associated Press, using the team’s name for its sprawling complex in Frisco, 30 miles north of Dallas.

“That this would be an excellent experience that so many fans in the Dallas area haven’t gotten to be part of, the training camp. We didn’t have the facilities for it.”

That was the case in the early days of the Cowboys, when they trained at a no-frills facility in Dallas until the mid-1980s. And it was still the case at the Valley Ranch complex in Irving, which was also home to Texas Stadium. Jones built $1.2 billion AT&T Stadium in Arlington, where they team moved in 2009.

The Cowboys moved into their new practice place after training camp last year, and knew it was just a matter of time before they’d be holding fullscale camp workouts in front of the home folks.

“I think it’s the neat thing about this, it sounds like that’s what it’ll be like as it moves forward,” said Witten, who rivaled quarterbac­k Dak Prescott for the loudest ovation when he emerged from the walkway leading to the field Monday. “And it’s great for the fans to get a glimpse of that.”

On that question of the future, Jones reiterated his commitment to California, and there’s little question he enjoys the visibility just a few dozen miles north of Hollywood. The Cowboys are committed to Oxnard next year, followed by a two-year option.

The local option is a good one for Carrie Himel, a 38-year-old realtor from Frisco who made plans to attend the practice soon after she heard about it.

“Because it’s the first training camp right here in our city and it’s freaking awesome that it’s right here in our backyard,” she said. “You don’t have to go to California. It’s right here. So why not?”

Emmitt Smith, the NFL’s alltime rushing leader, was among the ring of honor recipients who were recognized at the opening of a display of the 21-member group in a plaza near the indoor stadium. He said the upcoming practice would be just like ones the 48-year-old remembered from San Antonio and Oxnard.

“The only difference is now they host it in their own facility, which is great,” said Smith, who was joined by his fellow threetime Super Bowl-winning “Triplets,” quarterbac­k Troy Aikman and receiver Michael Irvin. “I think it’s pretty unique. It’s pretty special. They have the best facility in all of sports, so why not just do it here.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Dallas Cowboys fan holds up a sign during a training camp practice at the team’s headquarte­rs in Frisco, Texas, on Monday,.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Dallas Cowboys fan holds up a sign during a training camp practice at the team’s headquarte­rs in Frisco, Texas, on Monday,.

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