Texas Standard » Stories from Texas

The Life of Tom Landry, the Man in the Hat


Listen Later

Tom Landry and Charles Schulz died on the same day: Feb. 12, 2000. Mike Thompson, the Detroit Free Press cartoonist honored them both with a cartoon showing them entering the pearly gates together. Schulz was depicted as Charlie Brown and Landry had his arm around him. Landry said, “Now a few pointers on kicking a football…”

For Coach Landry, at least, I can’t imagine a finer eulogy.

I mourned Landry’s passing, of course, along with millions of other Landry fans. A day that was almost as tough, though, was the day Landry was fired, in 1989. That day, too, hit me like a death in the family. Landry had been our coach since many of us were children. And when he was fired, we were 40. He had been our father on the field. He raised us within the game, teaching us to be gracious in victory and dignified in defeat. And with one stroke of Jerry Jones’ pen, he was gone. Devastating.

Landry was known as the man in the hat. He was the stoic leader on the Dallas Cowboys sidelines, always impeccably dressed and sporting his fedora. Commissioner Paul Tagliabue said, “If there were a Mount Rushmore for the NFL, the profile of Tom Landry would have to be there, wearing his trademark hat.”

While coaching, Landry was so focused he rarely smiled. He was often called “unemotional.” But I can think of words that would be more fitting: a man of character, honor, integrity, and faith. He was pure class, on and off the field. He was ethos personified.

In his 29 years as Dallas’ head coach, Landry led the Cowboys to more playoff seasons, by far, than they have had since. And here is another statistic hard to fathom: the Cowboys still have not played as many games without Landry as they played with him.

Under Landry, the Cowboys won 13 Divisional titles and played in five Super Bowls, winning two. They enjoyed 20 consecutive winning seasons, a record no NFL coach has ever come close to matching.

As glorious as those years were, none equalled Landry’s finest season in football. He played for the New York Giants professionally, and was all-pro one year, but that was not his finest season, either. He played football on scholarship for the University of Texas, but after only one semester, his career there was put on hold by World War II. He volunteered to join the Army Air Corps and flew 30 missions over Germany, crash landing once in Belgium. Though the wings were shaved off, he and all his men walked away without serious injury. Not bad for a 20-year-old.

One could consider his WWII service, in a Churchillian sense, his finest season, but as we are talking football, we have to go back further.

To get to his best season ever, we have to go all the way back to his high school years in Mission, Texas, way down in the Rio Grande Valley.

It was Landry’s senior year, 1941. He played both sides of the ball. He played quarterback and defensive back. Landry led the Mission Eagles to a perfect 12-0 season. They went all the way to the regional championship, which was as far as they could go that year (there was no state championship in those days).

The Mission Eagles won every game they played, holding every team scoreless, except for one. In 12 games they gave up only one score. Donna High School managed to squeeze out one touchdown against them.

Many years later, in his autobiography, Landry wrote, “That autumn of glory, shared with my boyhood friends… remains perhaps my most meaningful season in my fifty years of football. The game was never more fun, the victories never sweeter, the achievement never more satisfying.”

Landry’s near flawless season, and his impressive professional life thereafter, was honored in 1975 when the Mission School District named their football stadium the Tom Landry Stadium. And when he died in 2000, I-30 between Dallas and Fort Worth was named the Tom Landry Highway.

To me, one of the trivial truths about Landry that speaks to his greatness, is that his Cowboys never gave him a Gatorade bath, never dumped the ice bucket down his back.

After his coaching days were over, he developed a sterling reputation as an inspirational speaker. He always advised young players to keep their lives ordered in this simple way: faith, family, and football. He was also fond of saying, ¨As of today, you have 100 percent of your life left.¨

He took his own words to heart. After he was fired, while the rest of us were using our energy being mad about the disrespectful way our icon was sacked, Landry was already moving on with his life.

He didn’t waste time being angry or bitter. With characteristic optimism, he saw the silver lining. He said, “As a boy growing up in Mission, Texas, I always dreamed of being a cowboy. For 29 wonderful years, I was one.”

W.F. Strong is a Fulbright Scholar and professor of Culture and Communication at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. At Public Radio 88 FM in Harlingen, Texas, he’s the resident expert on Texas literature, Texas legends, Blue Bell ice cream, Whataburger (with cheese) and mesquite smoked brisket.

The post The Life of Tom Landry, the Man in the Hat appeared first on KUT & KUTX Studios -- Podcasts.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Texas Standard » Stories from TexasBy Texas Standard, W.F. Strong

  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8

4.8

207 ratings


More shows like Texas Standard » Stories from Texas

View all
This American Life by This American Life

This American Life

91,112 Listeners

TED Radio Hour by NPR

TED Radio Hour

21,996 Listeners

Stuff You Should Know by iHeartPodcasts

Stuff You Should Know

78,294 Listeners

Freakonomics Radio by Freakonomics Radio + Stitcher

Freakonomics Radio

32,103 Listeners

The Joe Rogan Experience by Joe Rogan

The Joe Rogan Experience

227,747 Listeners

Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! by NPR

Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!

38,741 Listeners

The Moth by The Moth

The Moth

27,233 Listeners

The Rachel Maddow Show by Rachel Maddow, MSNBC

The Rachel Maddow Show

36,947 Listeners

Song of the Day by KUT & KUTX Studios

Song of the Day

95 Listeners

Higher Ed by KUT & KUTX Studios, Jennifer Stayton

Higher Ed

31 Listeners

1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries Podcast by Jon Hagadorn  Podcast Host

1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries Podcast

1,681 Listeners

The Secret Ingredient by KUT & KUTX Studios, Raj Patel, Tom Philpott & Rebecca McInroy

The Secret Ingredient

37 Listeners

Two Guys on Your Head by KUT & KUTX Studios, Dr. Art Markman & Dr. Bob Duke

Two Guys on Your Head

234 Listeners

In Black America by KUT & KUTX Studios, John L. Hanson

In Black America

291 Listeners

KUT » Stuart Hall: In Conversations by KUT & KUTX Studios, Ben Carrington & Rebecca McInroy

KUT » Stuart Hall: In Conversations

10 Listeners

In Perspective by KUT & KUTX Studios

In Perspective

2 Listeners

Liner Notes by KUT & KUTX Studios, Neil Blumofe

Liner Notes

8 Listeners

Austin Music Minute by KUT & KUTX Studios, Laurie Gallardo

Austin Music Minute

9 Listeners

Texas Standard » Typewriter Rodeo by Texas Standard, Typewriter Rodeo

Texas Standard » Typewriter Rodeo

14 Listeners

Texas Standard by Texas Standard

Texas Standard

246 Listeners

KUT Weekend by KUT & KUTX Studios

KUT Weekend

40 Listeners

Views and Brews by KUT & KUTX Studios

Views and Brews

15 Listeners

Pod Save America by Crooked Media

Pod Save America

87,203 Listeners

History That Doesn't Suck by Prof. Greg Jackson

History That Doesn't Suck

6,028 Listeners

Fiction - Comedy Fiction by The Sunset Explorers

Fiction - Comedy Fiction

6,451 Listeners

SmartLess by Jason Bateman, Sean Hayes, Will Arnett

SmartLess

58,333 Listeners

Pause/Play by KUT & KUTX Studios

Pause/Play

40 Listeners

Black Austin Matters by KUT & KUTX Studios, Richard J. Reddick, Lisa B. Thompson

Black Austin Matters

51 Listeners

The Tucker Carlson Show by Tucker Carlson Network

The Tucker Carlson Show

16,864 Listeners

24 Hours in Austin by KUT & KUTX Studios, Matt Largey

24 Hours in Austin

9 Listeners

(SPF 1000) Vampire Sunscreen by KUT & KUTX Studios, Laurie Gallardo

(SPF 1000) Vampire Sunscreen

5 Listeners

Take a Moment by Marnie Castor

Take a Moment

3 Listeners

Money Talk with Carl Stuart by Carl Stuart

Money Talk with Carl Stuart

3 Listeners