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"No one's asked since," McCarthy said, "but we'd look into accommodating them if it could be worked out."
Fat chance of that happening.
Dan Reeves, who played for the Cowboys and was Landry's assistant before coaching in Dallas, New York, Denver and Atlanta, was the last coach to routinely don a coat and tie for games. He was grandfathered in on the 1993 agreement, but switched to polo shirts when he arrived in Atlanta in 1997.
"The Smith family owned the team at the time, and when we negotiated a contract, it was part of the deal," he said. "They were dead last in merchandising sales at the time, so I understood. They were trying to get the people in the stands to start wearing the gear ...
"But I got into the habit because of Tom Landry and I kept with it because, I believe, the coat and tie calmed me down. I'd get all riled up and start pulling on the coat or the tie, and then I'd remember how stately and in control coach Landry always looked. So I wonder," added Reeves, "if that wouldn't help some of the guys out there right now."
If that doesn't work, maybe some of today's coaches should solicit fashion advice from the people they trust most.
Miami Hurricanes coach Al Golden's crisp white dress shirt and a sharp orange tie make him arguably the best-0dressed coach in the college game. He played for the late Joe Paterno at Penn State, himself one of the last throwbacks to the jacket-and-tie set. But when Golden got his first break as a head coach at Temple in 2006, he usually wore a sweatshirt.
One day he got a call. On the other end was his mom.
"Wear some pants and a shirt," she said.
Advice well worth heeding.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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