How 'bout them Cowgirls?
The Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders....just hearing those words automatically generate images of an American icon - beautiful young ladies decked out in blue and white uniforms cheering America's Team to victory; precision dance routines that demand a perfect concoction of stamina, flexibility and timing that would leave most of us gasping - yet those beauties smile and dance on. For some of us, we flash back in our minds to the time that we met one of them and she signed an autograph and we spent a few minutes chatting or we shared the spotlight in a polaroid. To each their own special image. Today's phenomenon of the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders is equally special. Everywhere across the country or around the world that any of these young ladies appear thousands of fans congregate looking for the opportunity for a photograph, an autograph, or a few moments to say hello. America's Sweethearts have truly become the darlings of the National Football League.
The Dallas Cowboys have always had cheerleaders. As was the standard in professional football throughout the 1960's, the CowBelles & Beaux were high school students from the Dallas/Ft. Worth Metroplex managed by Dee Brock. They cheered on the football teams success all the way to the 1971 Super Bowl Championship. But, during the Cowboys preparations for the defense of their World Championship title in the 1972 season, a new idea was born.
Tex Schramm was the Cowboys general manager and, with his extensive background in television, recognized that professional football had become more than sports - it was sports entertainment. He knew that the public liked pretty girls. In fact, he'd already tried hiring professional models for the sidelines. It was a disaster. The models were beautiful, but they were not athletes. More than 3 hours of exertion in the hundred degree heat of the sidelines had left them in worse shape after the game than the football players. But, the idea just would not go away. Models had not worked, but what about dancers?
He talked the idea over with Dee and the decision was made to expand the established football tradition of sideline cheerleaders into a glamorous, choreographed squad of accomplished dancers that would serve as a counterpoint to the game itself. Dee recruited one of the top dancers in America, Texie Waterman, who also owned a dance studio in Dallas, to judge at the auditions and help create a squad of dancers to grace the sidelines of Texas Stadium. Sixty ladies attended that first audition. Seven were chosen. They spent their summer at Training Camp with Texie where cheers and chants were replaced with grand jetes and pirouettes.When the 1972-73 NFL season kicked off that fall, it was a major turning point in Cheerleader history. The Dallas Cowboys introduced their "new" Cheerleaders at Texas Stadium wearing new star spangled uniforms and debuting an innovative and exciting new form of gameday action. For the first time ever, anywhere, jazz dancing was blended with beauty and brought to a football field...and the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders were born.
They are often imitated. They are never equaled. They are the Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders.
Comments
- -- Posted by kkcaver47 on Mon, Apr 27, 2009, at 6:20 PM
- -- Posted by shannonhoon on Mon, Apr 27, 2009, at 6:22 PM
- -- Posted by goat lady on Mon, Apr 27, 2009, at 9:15 PM
- -- Posted by cheers4dhs on Tue, Apr 28, 2009, at 11:07 AM
- -- Posted by shoe lady on Tue, Apr 28, 2009, at 4:38 PM
- -- Posted by fun2teach on Tue, Apr 28, 2009, at 6:36 PM
- -- Posted by goat lady on Tue, Apr 28, 2009, at 8:49 PM
- -- Posted by FJGuy on Tue, Apr 28, 2009, at 9:47 PM
- -- Posted by shannonhoon on Thu, Apr 30, 2009, at 11:32 AM
- -- Posted by MikeM68 on Wed, May 6, 2009, at 10:31 AM
Respond to this blog
Posting a comment requires free registration:
- If you already have an account, follow this link to login
- Otherwise, follow this link to register