How the Dallas Cowboys playoff failure shocked Troy Aikman, ruined his vacations plans
How the Dallas Cowboys playoff failure shocked Troy Aikman, ruined his vacations plans
Three-time Super Bowl winning quarterback Troy Aikman was celebrating Dallas’ designation as the
best city for sports business on Tuesday at the George Bush Library, and he wasn’t blind to the irony of
the conversation or the occasion. Aikman talked extensively about how North Texas has hosted Final
Fours, Super Bowls, and the future World Cup with great success. Even while Aikman praised Cowboys
owner Jerry Jones for his vision in constructing AT&T Stadium in Arlington, he also acknowledged that
“everything Jerry talked about and what an asset that stadium would be, really has come to fruition”.
Everything has paid off, and we’re excited for the next Super Bowl, preferably with the Cowboys playing.
Aikman knew then that he had set himself up for dreaded transition to discussion of the Cowboys’
season-ending playoff loss to the Green Bay Packers and the now 29-year gap since the last Super Bowl
title (following the 1995 season). Aikman said he was shocked as anyone that the Cowboys ended a 12-5
season with an embarrassing loss to the Packers at home in AT&T Stadium. As a football analyst,
Aikman’s season ended last weekend and had planned to be in San Francisco to watch the Cowboys face
the 49ers in this weekend’s NFC title game.
But that was before the Cowboys lost to the seventh-seeded Packers in the wild-card round. The 49ers
beat the Packers and will now face the Detroit Lions for the right to go to the Super Bowl. “Shocked,
yeah,” Aikman said. “I really anticipated Dallas would be playing in the championship game and figured
that it would be in San Francisco, so I was planning on going to the game. Didn’t book a vacation after
my season. And so I really liked this team all year long. I thought they were really talented. It’s just the
same old story, and I don’t mean that as a criticism. “It’s just when I’m asked about the Cowboys as to
why they have struggled: They’ve put together some really great regular seasons, and they just have not,
for whatever reasons, played their best football when the games matter most. That’s what you have to do.
And that’s the key to winning in the postseason and then getting to the Super Bowl. So what the answer
to that is I’m not sure.”
The Cowboys have won just five playoff games since Aikman led the franchise after three Super Bowl
titles in the 1990s. And they are 2-5 in the playoffs with quarterback Dak Prescott at the helm over the
last eight seasons, including two one-and-done postseason journeys at AT&T Stadium as the higher seed
in the past three seasons. Aikman still supports Prescott but acknowledges the natural concerns about
him and the Cowboys because of their lack of playoff success.
Prescott had an MVP-caliber season in 2023 with a league-high 36 touchdowns but played one of his
worst games against the Packers, keyed by two first-half interception as the the Cowboys fell behind 27-
0. “I do know that we all draw on our past experiences, and when we don’t have great experiences, those
then become hard to overcome,” Aikman said. “And I think that’s the challenge for Dak. The question for
him and the team isn’t so much what happens in the regular season now. It’s how are they going to play
and how is he going to play once you get into the postseason? That makes for a long year when that’s the
way it works. “But I still believe in Dak. Until you do it, there’s always those criticisms.” Aikman said he
is not surprised that Jones stayed the course with coach Mike McCarthy after contemplating making a
coaching change in the aftermath of the disappointing loss. But Aikman said there will be no do-overs
next season if McCarthy and the Cowboys don’t win. He is in the last year of his contract and will not get
an extension before the 2024 season.
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