1960 Dallas Cowboys

The 1960 Dallas Cowboys season was the inaugural season for the franchise in the National Football League. The team finished with no wins, 11 losses, and 1 tie, which placed them last in the Western Conference, and was the worst record in the NFL for that season.

Offseason
The NFL granted a franchise to Clint Murchison, Jr., and Bedford Wynne on January 28, 1960. The franchise hired former Los Angeles Rams executive Tex Schramm as their general manager. Tom Landry, an assistant coach with the New York Giants, was named head coach. Landry was offered the coaching job before the 1959 NFL championship game. Landry was offered a five year contract. The same day that Landry accepted the offer, it was reported by the UP, that Landry would become coach of the AFL’s Houston Oilers.

Gil Brandt, who had served as a part-time scout for the Los Angeles Rams under Schramm, was named player personnel director. According to Schramm, the team's name was originally the Dallas Steers, but then was changed to the Dallas Rangers, which was the name of the minor league baseball team that was supposed to move out of town at the end of the baseball season.

The franchise was admitted to the league too late to participate in the 1960 NFL college draft. However, majority owner Clint Murchison signed two college players, quarterback Don Meredith from SMU, and running back Don Perkins from New Mexico, to personal services contracts before the draft (and before the franchise was voted into the league). The NFL honored these contracts after the franchise was voted in, although the Chicago Bears actually drafted Meredith in the third round, and the Baltimore Colts drafted Perkins in the ninth round. The franchise was allowed to retain both players, but had to give their third-round and ninth-round choices in the 1962 draft to the Bears and Colts, respectively.

On March 13, 1960, the franchise selected 36 players in an expansion draft. Each of the other 12 NFL teams were allowed to protect 25 players from their 36-man roster. The franchise was then were given 24 hours to select three players from those unprotected by each other team.

The franchise was placed in the league's Western Conference. However, since they were the league's thirteenth franchise in addition to being an expansion franchise, it was decided that they would play every team in the league once, instead of playing each team in their conference twice, as the other teams did.

Transactions
Other notable transactions prior to the season included acquiring quarterback Eddie LeBaron from the Washington Redskins, offensive end Billy Howton from the Cleveland Browns, and signing former San Francisco 49ers fullback Gene Babb. During training camp the team signed quite a few players who were released by other teams. Notable signings included center Mike Connelly, a rookie who was released by the Los Angeles Rams, and veteran Don Bishop, a defensive back who was released by the Chicago Bears.

Name Change
The franchise used the nickname "Rangers" during its draft. But on March 19, 1960, the organization announced that it would be called the Cowboys to avoid confusion with the American Association Dallas Rangers baseball team.

Season recap
Expectations certainly weren't high for the Cowboys heading into their inaugural season, but they got off to a hopeful start, as the team took a 14–0 lead on Bobby Layne and the Pittsburgh Steelers early in their first game and led throughout before succumbing in the fourth quarter 35–28. The next week they played the eventual league champion Philadelphia Eagles to a near deadlock, losing 27–25, the difference being two blocked extra points.

The lack of talent on the roster caught up with them as the season went on, however. Their first ever road game was against the woeful Washington Redskins, and it ended in defeat, 26–14, spoiling quarterback Eddie LeBaron's return to the city where he starred for the Redskins during the '50s. The next week the team was annihilated at home by one of the league's top teams, the Cleveland Browns, 48–7. The team would go on to suffer more lopsided defeats, including a 45–7 loss to the defending champion Baltimore Colts, and a 41–7 loss to the eventual Western Conference champion Packers. Squeezed in between blowout losses was rookie quarterback Don Meredith's first start, which came against the Rams. Predictably, Meredith struggled in a 38–13 loss.

The Cowboys also suffered heartbreaking losses, including a 12–10 defeat in St. Louis to the Cardinals, a game in which they led late only to lose on a field goal in the last minute, and a 26–14 defeat against the San Francisco 49ers, in which the Cowboys surrendered 17 points during the last 6 minutes of the game.

The Cowboys' lone highlight of the season came near the end of the season, when they traveled to New York and tied the Giants 31–31, ending the Giants' hopes of winning the Eastern Conference crown for the third year in a row.

The Cowboys struggled in almost every statistical category, finishing last in both points scored (177) and points allowed (369). Quarterback Eddie LeBaron and the receiving corps provided some big plays in the passing game throughout the season, but LeBaron mostly struggled behind a porous offensive line, and the quarterbacks threw a league-high 33 interceptions. Rookie halfback Don Perkins was lost prior to the season after breaking a bone in his foot, and the Cowboys rushing attack suffered all season long, finishing last in the league in rushing at 1049 yards, and averaging a paltry 3.4 yards per carry.

Defensively the team was gashed by opposing running games all season long, giving up 2242 yards rushing and allowing 5.0 yards per carry, both last in the league. The team's pass defense had its moments, particularly in games against the Bears and the Cardinals, but gave up too many big plays and didn't provide much of a pass rush.

The kicking game proved to be average, and the kick returners were among the worst in the league, despite an ample number of opportunities (a league high 69 kick returns).