The Standard Journal

Cowboys took control in the ‘90s as sport grew

- By Dave Campbell AP Pro Football Writer

Here’s a look at the 1990s, the NFL’s eighth decade:

After going 19 years without adding any teams, the NFL became the first major profession­al sports league in North America to reach the 30-franchise mark when the Carolina Panthers and Jacksonvil­le Jaguars joined in 1995 for $140 million expansion fees. That evened the six divisions at five teams apiece.

The Buffalo Bills, Indianapol­is Colts, Miami Dolphins, New England Patriots and New York Jets made up the AFC East. The AFC Central experience­d the most significan­t shift, when the Jaguars joined the Cincinnati Bengals and Pittsburgh Steelers. The Cleveland Browns moved to Baltimore to become the Ravens the following year. The Oilers departed Houston in 1997 for Tennessee, adopting the Titans nickname in 1999. Cleveland struck an agreement with the league to retain Browns records, colors and other keepsakes and rejoin the league as the 31st team. The Denver Broncos, Kansas City Chiefs, San Diego Chargers and Seattle Seahawks found new hotels for their annual road game against the Raiders, who fled Los Angeles in 1995 for the franchise’s roots in Oakland.

The Rams did the same that year, leaving the country’s second-largest city without a team, and landed in St. Louis to make the San Francisco 49ers the only club west of the Rocky Mountains in the not-so-aptly named NFC West that the Panthers were assigned to as new Sun Belt rivals of the Atlanta Falcons and New Orleans Saints. The tradition-rich NFC Central stayed steady with the Chicago Bears, Detroit Lions, Green Bay Packers, Minnesota Vikings and Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Arizona Cardinals, who broadened their name in 1994 beyond Phoenix

to reflect their residence in the desert city’s sprawling suburbs, were the geographic outlier in the NFC East with the Dallas Cowboys, New York Giants, Philadelph­ia Eagles and Washington Redskins.

On their way to finishing 1-15 in 1989, the Cowboys made one of the most lopsided trades in pro sports history by sending running back Herschel Walker to the Vikings for a bundle of high draft picks and serviceabl­e players that accelerate­d a dynastic resurgence in Dallas. Behind their Hall of Fame trio on offense, quarterbac­k Troy Aikman, running back Emmitt Smith and wide receiver Michael Irvin, the Cowboys won Super Bowls after the 1992, 1993 and 1995 seasons.

The NFC took eight of the 10 championsh­ips during this decade of dominance. The 49ers won one with Steve Young at quarterbac­k, after moving on from fourtime Super Bowl winner Joe Montana. The Packers, behind three-time NFL MVP Brett Favre, finally passed the Cowboys and Packers and hoisted the trophy after the 1996 season. Their repeat bid was thwarted by John Elway and the Denver Broncos, whose back-to-back titles were the only ones that went to the AFC.

The Buffalo Bills, buoyed by Thurman Thomas carrying the ball and Bruce Smith harassing the passer, sure had a case to be the team of the ’90s, but they infamously lost four straight Super Bowls to the Giants, Redskins and Cowboys, twice. The Rams came out of nowhere, just like their former grocerybag­ger and Arena Football League quarterbac­k Kurt Warner, to win it all after the 1999 season.

The star power at quarterbac­k was never higher. As Montana, Elway, Jim Kelly (Bills) and Dan Marino (Dolphins) wound down their Hall of Fame careers, fellow enshrines Aikman, Favre and Young came into their own. Warner and Warren Moon (Oilers, Vikings) were also Hall of Famers who stood out during that decade.

As the passing prowess increased around the league, wide receivers like Jerry Rice (49ers), Cris Carter (Vikings) and Tim Brown (Raiders) helped take statistics for that position to new levels. Running backs were still highly valued, mostly durable and especially productive, with Emmitt Smith leading the list that included peers like Thomas, Barry Sanders (Lions) and Marshall Faulk (Rams). Reggie White (Packers), Derrick Thomas (Chiefs) and Bruce Smith led a big wave of star pass rushers.

Johnson won the first two titles with the Cowboys. Levy, though he never got that ring, led the Bills to four straight AFC championsh­ips. Mike Holmgren took over the Packers in 1992 and steered one of the NFL’s all-time winningest franchises back to greatness. Their fiercest division rival of that decade was the Vikings, who were a perennial playoff team under Dennis Green’s guidance. Green’s defensive coordinato­r, Tony Dungy, became the main man for the Buccaneers in 1996 during an era when opportunit­ies for black head coaches began to increase. Mike Shanahan’s offense turned running back Terrell Davis loose and helped send Elway out a winner with those for two titles the Broncos.

Jan. 3, 1993: Moon and the Oilers built a 35-3 lead in Buffalo in the third quarter of their wild card round playoff game, only to watch the Bills storm back with five straight touchdowns, four of them scoring passes by backup Frank Reich, who had taken over recently for the injured Kelly. The Bills won 41-38 in overtime and the next two games on the road to reach their third of those four straight Super Bowls.

Jan. 17, 1999: The Vikings team that set what was then the all-time record for most points in a season rode a resurgent Randall Cunningham at quarterbac­k and a game-changing rookie wide receiver in Randy Moss to a 15-1 record in 1998, reaching the NFC championsh­ip game as a heavy favorite at home against the Falcons. They were on the verge of a 10-point lead just before the 2-minute warning at the Metrodome, when Gary Anderson kicked a 38-yard field goal wide left, his first miss of the season. The Falcons tied the game and won in overtime to reach their first Super Bowl.

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 ??  ?? In this 1995 file photo, 49ers’ quarterbac­k Steve Young runs over San Diego’s Darrien Gordon for a first down during the first quarter of Super Bowl XXIX at Joe Robbie Stadium in Miami.
In this 1995 file photo, 49ers’ quarterbac­k Steve Young runs over San Diego’s Darrien Gordon for a first down during the first quarter of Super Bowl XXIX at Joe Robbie Stadium in Miami.
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