The Greatest Owner in The History Of The NFL, “Jerry Jones”, tells The Greatest Coach in COWBOYS HISTORY, “Jimmy Johnson”, he’ll be inducted into Cowboys Ring of Honor

The Greatest Owner in The History Of The NFL, “Jerry Jones”, tells The Greatest Coach in COWBOYS HISTORY, “Jimmy Johnson”, he’ll be inducted into Cowboys Ring of Honor
The wait is finally over.Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones told former coach Jimmy Johnson that he will be inducted into his team’s Ring of Honor, 27 years after Johnson’s acrimonious exit from Dallas and two days before Johnson’s formal induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.Jones joined Johnson on Fox’s broadcast ahead of the Hall of Fame game to tell the coach in person:

It took some coaxing for Jones to make an official announcement, but that gave Johnson time to prepare a perfect zinger:

Jones: “He will be in the Ring of Honor.”

Johnson: “While I’m alive?”

Learning of significant honors while on the air is becoming something of a habit for Johnson, as he was surprised with news of his Hall of Fame enshrinement during a halftime show last year.

Jimmy Johnson and Jerry Jones reconcile

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The history between Jones and Johnson is well documented: Jones buys the Cowboys in 1988, Jones hires his Arkansas teammate Johnson, Johnson leads the team to two Super Bowls as his and Jones’ relationship degrades, the two agree to part ways in 1993, Johnson takes over the Miami Dolphins, Jones hires Barry Switzer, another Arkansas teammate.

Johnson’s final resume with the Cowboys: an 80-44 record (despite going 1-15 his first season) with two Super Bowl wins, three playoff berths and the Herschel Walker heist.

The hurt feelings from that saga ended up lasting decades. Jones blasted Johnson for “disloyalty” in one 2014 profile, while Johnson said his old friend and boss came off like a “rich a**hole.”

The pair have seemed to reconcile in recent years. They reunited for the Cowboys’ 25th Super Bowl anniversary in 2017 and Johnson was on hand for Jones’ own Hall of Fame enshrinement. Just last month, Jones made an emotional admission that he had “f***ed it up” with Johnson.

Johnson still hadn’t been recognized on the Cowboys’ Ring of Honor, which features 19 players, two executives and one other coach (Tom Landry). That will soon change, and there may be no more hatchets left to bury.

Jimmy Johnson jabs Jerry Jones over Cowboys Ring of Honor induction: ‘While I’m alive?’

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Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones poses with a bust of him during inductions at the Pro Football Hall of Fame

Jerry Jones didn’t say when.

But the Dallas Cowboys owner, at long last, confirmed Super Bowl-winning coach Jimmy Johnson will be inducted into the team’s Ring of Honor.

The announcement — if Jones’ admission amid the FOX NFL TV crew’s pressure can constitute such — was vague.

“He will be in the Ring of Honor,” Jones said as Johnson sat between him and Hall of Fame quarterback Troy Aikman. Johnson will be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame this weekend.

The 78-year-old Johnson quipped to 78-year-old Jones: “While I’m alive?”

Jones asked Johnson: “Are you going to be able to make it through this Hall of Fame ceremony?”

The interchange took place after Jones said former Cowboys general manager Tex Schramm told him to keep the Ring of Honor members “kind of limited with people.”

“But make sure it wasn’t just about the plays they made,” Jones added. “Make sure they contributed to the story of the franchise.”

In five seasons as Cowboys coach, Johnson engineered a turnaround from a 1-15 debut to consecutive Super Bowl victories. He coached the Miami Dolphins for four years afterward. Jones has continued to punt on Johnson’s induction into the Ring of Honor.

Jimmy Johnson is being inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame this weekend.
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“I don’t want to do anything that takes away from this year,” Jones said July 21 during the Cowboys’ opening press conference of training camp. “He’ll have a year, provided everything goes good, he’ll have a year that we also honor his Hall of Fame and it will be this year.””

A reporter asked Jones then to confirm whether Johnson would eventually be inducted into the Ring.

“Let’s don’t knock all the fun off,” Jones quipped. “Let’s keep having fun here.”

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Cowboys’ Jerry Jones makes emotional confession about infamous split from Jimmy Johnson

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It’s no secret there’s no love lost between Jimmy Johnson and Jerry Jones, the former set to join the latter in the Pro Football Hall of Fame this August. The two fought through adversity at the turn of the 1990s when Jones purchased the team, and took the Dallas Cowboys from a downturn that saw the organization hemorrhaging roughly $1 million per month — with talks of a possible relocation — to an NFL dynasty. Pushing through the first two lean seasons that saw them finish 1-15 and 7-9, respectively, a bombshell trade by Jones with the Minnesota Vikings with Herschel Walker as the bait helped give Johnson the personnel he needed to win two Super Bowls in Dallas.

The club would go on to win one more following the toxic divorce between Johnson and Jones, but many attribute the Lombardi won under Barry Switzer largely to his ability to keep Johnson’s roster from derailing — until he couldn’t anymore. And so it goes that two alpha males tussled in the public forum for credit in who was more important to building the Cowboys dynasty, ultimately leading to Johnson calling it quits (he wasn’t actually fired) versus continuing to work under Jones.

The Cowboys haven’t been the same in the decades since, and in a rare moment of public clarity, Jones shouldered all of the blame for what transpired in the mid-1990s: an unnecessary spat that devolved into the end of an era.

Speaking from the first press conference of Cowboys training camp in Oxnard, California, Jones got emotional about it all.

“The idea of being a part and coming to training camp goes to my mind, and of course Jimmy was involved [back] in those days. All of that comes to mind when I think of those times,” said Jones. “We actually were together here four and a half years, and I had known him for 10 to 15 years before that, or 20 years before that, and thought the world of him or he wouldn’t have been the coach of the Cowboys.”

And speaking of Switzer, it was he who looked Jones in the eyes and called it like he saw it.

“When I look back at the time that we got to enjoy and what happened to us during that time, I go back to what Barry Switzer said,” Jones continued. “Barry Switzer came in the office and Jimmy had just left. Barry came down from Norman, Oklahoma, to talk about getting the job. And he comes in and he said, ‘Where’s Jimmy?’ 

“Now, Barry had coached us both. He said, ‘Where’s Jimmy?’ I said, ‘Jimmy’s gone.’ He said, ‘Well, that’s not right. Get him. Get him in here. Where’s Jimmy?’ 

“I said, ‘Barry, Jimmy’s gone. We’re sitting here talking about you being the coach.’ I said, ‘What in the world are you so anxious to talk to Jimmy about?’ He said, ‘I just want to get both you little a–holes on this couch and ask you both how could you f— this up.'”

Jones didn’t view it that way at the time, but with the benefit of age, experience and hindsight, he certainly does now.

“Well, I just think of those great times,” said Jones, as he began to fight back tears. “And Jimmy’s a great coach. Ridiculous, my role — it was my job was to keep it together. It was my job. Should have had deference to something that was working good. 

“Those are the things that come to my mind. We had a great run of it. He’s a great coach, and I’m proud to have him as a friend, and proud to have had the times that we had. We just had a great experience.”

The Cowboys have never been able to regain the magic they possessed when both Johnson and Jones were in the building, just as the former couldn’t achieve similar success without the latter in his time spent coaching the Miami Dolphins in his final four seasons in the profession. So as it turns out, the credit for what the Cowboys were able to achieve in yesteryear was attributable to both, and equally, as opposed to one or the other on a weighted scale.

It’s all water under the bridge now though, or at least mostly, with Jones not closing the door (as he once did) on Johnson being elevated to the coveted Ring of Honor — Johnson himself noting Jones will do it when the mood is right. At the very least, that gesture would be a huge step toward healing the wounds of a decimated relationship that was once ironclad, and a divorce Jones will never truly recover from emotionally — while relentlessly working to try and recover from it in a football capacity.

“I’ve never been able to know why I f—-d it up,” confessed Jones. “No, I can’t answer those questions.”

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Jimmy Johnson (American football coach)

Jimmy Johnson
refer to caption
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Johnson in 2009
Personal information
Born: July 16, 1943 (age 78)
Port Arthur, Texas
Career information
High school: Thomas Jefferson
(Port Arthur, Texas)
College: Arkansas
Undrafted: 1965
Career history
As a coach:
Career highlights and awards
As head coach:

As player:

Career coaching statistics
NFL win–loss record: 80–64
Postseason record: 9–4
NCAA win–loss record: 81–34–3

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James William Johnson (born July 16, 1943) is a former American football coach and sports analyst. Johnson served as a head football coach on the collegiate level from 1979 to 1988 and in the National Football League (NFL) for nine seasons. He is the first head football coach to win both a college football national championship and a Super Bowl, achieving the former with Miami and the latter with the Dallas Cowboys.

Johnson held his first head football coaching position at Oklahoma State before becoming Miami’s head football coach in 1984 and guided the team to victory in the 1988 Orange Bowl. His collegiate success resulted in Johnson succeeding original Cowboys head coach Tom Landry in 1989, a position that saw him help rebuild the team back to winning form. Johnson’s tenure from 1989 to 1993 culminated with the Cowboys winning consecutive Super Bowl titles in Super Bowl XXVII and Super Bowl XXVIII, but conflict with owner Jerry Jones led to Johnson leaving after the second championship.

Following two years away from football, Johnson returned in 1996 to become the head coach of the Miami Dolphins, where he served until retiring after the 1999 season. Since his coaching retirement, Johnson has appeared as an analyst for Fox Sports and is one of the featured commentators of Fox NFL Sunday. He was inducted to the College Football Hall of Fame in 2012 and the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2020.

Jerry Jones

Jerry Jones
Jerry Jones (24176024648) (cropped).jpg
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Jones in 2017
Born
Jerral Wayne Jones

October 13, 1942 (age 78)

Education University of Arkansas, Fayetteville (BA)
Occupation Owner, President, and General Manager of the Dallas Cowboys
Spouse(s) Eugenia Jones
Children 3

Football career

Dallas Cowboys
Position: Owner/President/General Manager
Career information
High school: North Little Rock (AR)
College: Arkansas
Undrafted: 1965
Career history
As an executive:
Career highlights and awards

Jerral Wayne “Jerry” Jones (born October 13, 1942) is an American billionaire businessman and has been the owner, president, and general manager of the Dallas Cowboys of the National Football League (NFL) since 1989.

 

Jerry Jones

Owner / President / General Manager/Billionaire

 

Biography

In one of the most dramatic eras of ownership in professional sports, Jerry Jones’ stewardship of the Dallas Cowboys has brought unprecedented results and success to one of the world’s most popular sports entities. His three-decade long journey reached a rare pinnacle with his selection for induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame as a member of the 2017 class of enshrinees. Jones became the 15th owner in history to earn a bust in Canton.

Aside from being one of just three current owners to guide their franchises to at least three Super Bowl titles, Jones’ efforts in the areas of sports marketing, promotion and the development of AT&T Stadium have created a vivid imprint on the landscape of the NFL and the American sports culture.

On the heels of his recent Hall of Fame selection, Jones was selected as one of the 100 Greatest Living Business Minds in commemoration of Forbes magazine’s 100th year anniversary in 2017. In that same year, he was also recognized for his career contributions to sports in America by being named the 2017 recipient of the Sports Business Journal’s Lifetime Achievement Award. Prior to his enshrinement in Canton, USA Today designated Jones as No. 1 on its list of the 100 Most Important People in the NFL in July of 2016.

Highlighted by Super Bowl victories following the 1992, 1993 and 1995 seasons, Jones became the first owner in NFL history to lead his team to three league championships in his first seven years of ownership. In 1995 Dallas also became the first team in NFL history to win three Super Bowls in four seasons while tying the then NFL record for most Super Bowl victories by an organization with five.

The first decade of Jones’ ownership closed with eight playoff appearances, six division titles, four conference championship game appearances and three world crowns as the Cowboys were named the NFL’s Team of the 1990s. More recently, the Cowboys have won NFC East Division titles in 2007, 2009, 2014 and 2016, while the ’16 club secured the 14th playoff appearance in Jones’ 29 years of leadership.

Following the 2014 season, a year when the Cowboys posted a 12-4 record and then won a home playoff game, Jones was named the NFL Executive of the Year by the Pro Football Writers Association of America.

Along with the success of the Dallas Cowboys on the field, Jones’ vision and leadership provided the driving influence behind the concept, design and construction of AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas – a venue that is recognized internationally as perhaps the most spectacular and state-of-the-art sports stadium in the world.

Opened to the public in May 2009, the stadium’s dramatic first season of operation resulted in the venue being named the Sports Facility of the Year by the Sports Business Journal in May 2010. Along with that achievement for the team’s new home, Jones was also named the 2009 Sports Executive of the Year by the SBJ.

The 100,000-plus seat stadium established the attendance record for an NFL regular season game as 105,121 witnessed the September 20, 2009 home opener, while the 108,713 who attended the NBA All-Star Game on February 14, 2010 became the largest crowd to witness a basketball game in the history of the sport.

In just over nine years of operation, more than 11 million fans have attended events that included high school and collegiate football, major college basketball, international soccer, professional bull riding, Supercross, world championship boxing and concerts that featured world-renowned recording artists. More than three million other visitors have passed through the 12-story high doors of the stadium for daily public tours of the venue.

With its architectural versatility and cutting edge media capabilities, AT&T Stadium has become a visible beacon that has established North Texas as a major focal point on the sports and entertainment canvas of North America.

The brilliant home of the Cowboys has become a powerful catalyst in attracting a wide range of national and international events that will define the future of the region for generations to come. The stadium has already played host to Super Bowl XLV (February 2011), the NCAA Final Four in men’s basketball (April 2014) and the inaugural College Football Playoff Championship Game (January 2015). Other top-flight sporting events for the future include the annual Goodyear Cotton Bowl, the Texas A&M-Arkansas football Southwest Classic and the annual AdvoCare Classic collegiate football series.

Jones recently turned his football development and marketing expertise to the new World Headquarters of the Dallas Cowboys as The Star in Frisco, Texas, opened its doors for operation in the summer of 2016. Located in a rapidly growing community of more than 150,000 residents, The Star is a partnership with the City of Frisco and The Frisco Independent School District that places a strong focus on inspiring a solid future for high school football, youth sports and the next generation of players and fans by uniquely engaging them at the place where the Cowboys live, work and practice.

The Star is the only NFL training facility in the U.S. that is shared with a public high school athletic program. All 10 Frisco ISD high schools play home games in Ford Center at The Star, a state-of-the-art, 510,000-square-foot indoor athletic facility. With a capacity of 12,000 seats, Ford Center hosts a variety of events in addition to football games, such as concerts, collegiate basketball, boxing and professional lacrosse, to name a few.

The Star includes a 91-acre mixed-use development located on the Dallas Tollway. In addition to the team’s headquarters, the project is a vibrant destination that features shopping, dining, nightlife, athletics, fitness, event and hotel options.

Since he took over as general manager in 1989, Dallas has drafted 33 different players who have gone on to appear in a combined total of 118 Pro Bowls. Dallas has also signed 13 free agent players who have made 31 Pro Bowl appearances while representing the Cowboys. Additionally, Dallas traded for two different players who made three Pro Bowls. Since 1989 the Cowboys have made 150 trades, the most celebrated of which was the 1989 deal that sent Herschel Walker to the Minnesota Vikings and provided the personnel foundation for three league titles.

His recent efforts to retool the Dallas roster have resulted in some of the NFL’s most productive drafts over the past eight years. Between 2010 and 2017, Dallas has selected 19 players who have become starters, with seven of those becoming All-Rookie Team selections.

Those same seven players have become Pro Bowlers who have already made a collective total of 20 trips to the annual all-star game: Dez Bryant (selected in 2010), Tyron Smith (2011), DeMarco Murray (2011), Travis Frederick (2013), Zack Martin (2014), Ezekiel Elliott and Dak Prescott (both 2016). The foundation for the future success of the team has been put in place on the offensive line where, following the 2017 season, Smith, Frederick and Martin were all Pro Bowlers for the fourth straight year. Elliott and Prescott – Dallas’ duo of young offensive backfield weapons – became the first pair of Cowboys rookies to ever be selected to the Pro Bowl in 2016. Elliott led the NFL in rushing and took home FedEx Ground Player of the Year honors while Prescott became the first rookie quarterback in team history to be named to the Pro Bowl and the first to win AP Offensive Rookie of the Year.

In selecting the on-the-field leadership for the Cowboys, Jones hired a pair of coaches who won three Super Bowls in Dallas: Jimmy Johnson (1992-1993) and Barry Switzer (1995). Chan Gailey followed with a division title and playoff appearances in 1998 and 1999. In 2003 Jones successfully recruited two-time Super Bowl winner Bill Parcells to Dallas, and Parcells directed the team to three winning seasons and two playoff trips in four years. In February 2007, Jones added another successful NFL head coach in Wade Phillips, who guided the club to a pair of division titles in his first three years (2007 and 2009) and a playoff victory in 2009. In 2011 Jones named Jason Garrett as the team’s eighth head coach after the former Cowboys quarterback guided the club to a 5-3 record as the interim coach in the second half of the 2010 season. Garrett has since added a pair of division titles in 2014 and 2016, and his overall record of 68-55 represents the second-most victories by a head coach in club history.

In the last 40 years, 38 different owners have entered the NFL. Of that group, only Jerry Jones, Pat Bowlen of Denver and Robert Kraft of New England have guided their franchises to more than two Super Bowl championships. Moreover, Jones joins Art Rooney, Jack Kent Cooke, Al Davis, Eddie DeBartolo, Kraft and Bowlen as the only men to have won at least three Super Bowls as NFL owners.

On the league front, Jones actively contributes his vision and enthusiasm to enhancing the NFL’s status as the world’s premier professional sports league by serving on a wide range of league committees. As a member of the Management Council Executive Committee, he was very involved in the 2011 labor negotiations that resulted in the most recent Collective Bargaining Agreement between the NFL and its players. In addition to the CEC, Jones is currently the Chairman of the NFL Network Committee, Chairman of the Pro Football Hall of Fame Committee, and he is a member of the NFL Broadcasting Committee, and the Health and Safety Advisory Committee. Jones also served on the committee that was charged with overseeing the search for a successor to retired NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue, a process that successfully landed current NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell in September 2006. In addition, Jones has served two prior terms as a member of the NFL’s Competition Committee as well as a stint on the Business Ventures Committee.

His contributions and innovations in the areas of marketing, corporate sponsorships, television, stadium management, stadium development, labor negotiations and community service have made a visible imprint on the ever evolving face of professional sports in America. Since becoming involved with the Cowboys, Jones’ accomplishments have been recognized through his induction into the Boys & Girls Clubs of America Hall of Fame, the Texas Sports Hall of Fame (2007), the Texas Business Hall of Fame (2005), the Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame (1999) and the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame (1998). In July 2012, Jones was recognized as the Lifetime Achievement Award recipient by the Arkansas Sportscasters and Sportswriters Hall of Fame. In August 2007, he served as the presenter for Michael Irvin’s induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, a recognition he was also named for by Emmitt Smith in Canton in August 2010 and 2013 enshrinee Larry Allen.

In April 2014 Jones received the prestigious Horatio Alger Award in Washington, D.C. and was inducted as a lifetime member into the Horatio Alger Association of Distinguished Americans. In May 2014, Jones was also recognized with the Lifetime Achievement Award presented by Pop Warner Little Scholars, Inc. On October 3, 2013, Jones was inducted into the National Football Foundation’s Leadership Hall of Fame, an award which celebrates leadership of a lifetime of success on the field, in the boardroom and in the community.

As a co-captain of the 1964 National Championship Arkansas Razorbacks, Jones is one of a small number of NFL owners who actually earned a significant level of success as a football player. He is the only man in the history of the National Football League to play for a collegiate national championship football team and own a Super Bowl winner. In addition, Jones and the legendary George Halas are the only two men to become NFL owners after playing in a major college football bowl game. His current ties to the college game include membership on the Board of Directors for the National Football Foundation and College Football Hall of Fame.

A man of varied interests who will not rest on yesterday’s achievements, he is a dedicated businessman and family man, sharing a vivid enthusiasm for both. Although Jones and his family are very involved in numerous civic and charitable causes, the Joneses have left an indelible local and national impression on the philanthropic landscape with their love and dedication to The Salvation Army.

For the past 21 seasons, the Jones family has dedicated the Cowboys Thanksgiving Day halftime show as a national showcase to kick off The Salvation Army’s annual Red Kettle Campaign. Through the donation of national television airtime, the event has created a holiday tradition while helping to increase donations to The Salvation Army’s annual fundraising efforts by more than two billion dollars. Reba McEntire, Destiny’s Child, Sheryl Crow, Carrie Underwood and Kenny Chesney are just a few of the distinguished artists who have provided entertainment for the holiday extravaganza.

The Salvation Army points to the annual Cowboys kickoff event as one of the most effective, creative and important innovations that has been developed in the long and storied history of the organization.

The Joneses received the Evangeline Booth Award in 1999, one of The Army’s highest national community service awards, and have been selected for membership into the prestigious Salvation Army William Booth Society. Jerry and his wife Gene were also named to The Army’s National Advisory Board in April 1998 shortly after being named the organization’s Partners of the Year in 1997. In April 2007, the Joneses served as the honorary chairpersons for The Salvation Army’s National Advisory Organizations Conference (NAOC) that was held in Dallas.

For 10 years, Gene and Jerry Jones served as hosts and underwrote the costs for the Super Lunch, a fundraising event for The Salvation Army Irving Corps Community Center. In 1998 the Gene and Jerry Jones Family Center for Children opened in conjunction with The Army.

As part of the Jones Family and the Dallas Cowboys commitment to Arlington, Texas, the home of the club’s stadium, Gene and Jerry Jones Family Charities will donate a total of $16.5 million to non-profit organizations serving youth in Arlington from 2009-2041.

In 2001 the Joneses were awarded the Chairman’s Award by The Boys & Girls Clubs of America. In June 2002, Gene and Jerry Jones were recognized as the recipients of the Children’s Champion Award for Philanthropy that was presented by the Dallas for Children organization. In 2003 the Family Gateway organization of Dallas presented Gene and Jerry with the Annette G. Strauss Humanitarian Award. In April 2005, Gene and Jerry were recipients of the Hope Award, the highest community service recognition awarded by the Lone Star Chapter of the National Multiple Sclerosis Society. In 2010 the Jones Family and the Cowboys were selected by The Boys & Girls Clubs of America to receive the prestigious Chairman’s Award that recognized the Cowboys long and dedicated history of supporting that organization.

The Jones family is very involved with several other community-related organizations, including Children’s Medical Center of Dallas, Happy Hill Farm Academy/Home, the National Board for The Boys & Girls Clubs of America, the Kent Waldrep Paralysis Foundation, The Rise School of Dallas, The Family Place and The Family Gateway. In 2010 the Jones family endowed the North Texas Youth Education Town with a $1 million grant. Created as a lasting legacy of Super Bowl XLV, the North Texas YET is administered by The Salvation Army and provides North Texas youth with education, mentoring, fitness and character enrichment programs.

Jerry (10/13/42) and Gene live in Dallas. They have three children, Stephen, Charlotte and Jerry Jr., and nine grandchildren.

Stephen is a graduate of the University of Arkansas and serves as the Cowboys Chief Operating Officer/Executive Vice President/Player Personnel. Charlotte is a Stanford graduate and serves as the Cowboys Executive Vice President/Chief Brand Officer/President of Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders. Jerry Jr., a graduate of Georgetown University, who earned his law degree from Southern Methodist University, is the Cowboys Executive Vice President/Chief Sales and Marketing Officer.

Jerry Jones graduated from Arkansas in 1965 with a Bachelor of Science degree in business administration, and earned a Master of Arts degree from the university that same year.

#264 Jerry Jones

President and General Manager, Dallas Cowboys
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Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones poses with a bust of him during inductions at the Pro Football Hall of Fame

REAL TIME NET WORTH

$8.9B
as of 8/6/21
  • The former co-captain of University of Arkansas 1964 national championship team, Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has long had football in his blood.
  • His most valuable holding is the Dallas Cowboys, which he bought for $150 million in 1989. The team is currently valued at $5.5 billion.
  • Jones made a name for himself as an oil wildcatter, making his first million in oil investments in the 1970s.
  • He still invests in drilling opportunities as well as retail and residential real estate projects in Dallas.
  • After a 2018 deal, Jones became the controlling shareholder in Comstock Resources, a publicly traded Texas oil and gas company.
  • An avid art collector, Jones’ collections includes Norman Rockwell’s “Coin Toss” as well as paintings by Picasso, Renoir and Matisse among others.
On forbes lists
Stats
Age78
Source of WealthDallas Cowboys, Self Made
ResidenceDallas, Texas
CitizenshipUnited States
Marital StatusMarried
Children3
EducationBachelor of Arts/Science, University of Arkansas; Master of Arts, University of Arkansas

Did you know

Jones jumped into the workforce at age 9 as a customer greeter at his parent’s grocery store, named Pat’s Supermarket.

Net worth over time

$5.2B
Forbes 400
October 2016

“The Dallas Cowboys fans are the greatest fans on Earth. But I love Jag fans, I love Eagle fans, I love Redskin fans, Massillon High School fans, Canton McKinley fans…you’re here tonight because you love the game, I am here because I love it too.”

Jerry Jones

More on Forbes

May 31, 2021

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Superyacht designers Carlo Nuvolari and Dan Lenard have a well-earned reputation for creating some of the most recognizable superyachts in the world including Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones’ 357-foot-long Bravo Eugenia, the 456-foot-long Opus that Lenard calls a “warship wearing a tuxedo,” and …

 

 

 

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