This Dallas Morning News article catches up with former Dallas Cowboy quarterback and folk hero Clint Longley, who as a 22-year-old rookie out of Abilene Christian University replaced a woozy Roger Staubach early in the third quarter and led the Cowboys to a dramatic 24-23 comeback victory over George Allen‘s Redskins 30 years ago on Thanksgiving Day.
Longley was a live wire, so his remarkable performance generated more than the usual amount of interest throughout Texas and the NFL. One of the best comments on the game came from Cowboys offensive lineman, Blaine Nye, who described Longley’s performance (11-20 for 203 yards and 2 TD’s) as “the triumph of an uncluttered mind.”
Longley’s three year professional career was utterly undistinguished except for that one magic game and one other incident — when he sucker-punched Staubach during training camp in 1976, prompting the Cowboys to trade Longley to San Diego. By the end of that season, the Chargers waived Longley and he never played for another NFL team.
Charlie Waters, a former Cowboy teammate, noted that Longley’s unpredictable nature manifested itself in the Staubach sucker-punch:
Waters knew how unpredictable Longley could be. The season before, Waters had agreed to let Longley keep his new pony on three acres of land he’d purchased near the team’s practice facility.
“He pulls up in a 1957 Cadillac,” said Waters, “and the horse’s head was sticking out one of the back windows and its ass was hanging out the other side.”
Over the past 30 years, Longley has refused all interview requests and now lives quietly — albeit idiosyncratically — in Corpus Christi. He did not grant an interview for the story, but DMN reporter Matt Mosley did a good job in the article, anyway. Read the entire piece.