Granted they did not play as frequently as other non-DAL or DET teams (5 times before tonight) but incredibly they never got one Turkey Day game during that Montana/Young/Garcia era when they were arguably the NFL’s showcase teams

Like we never got a SF/DAL Thanksgiving when that was THE premier rivalry

Or Steve Young vs Barry Sanders

  • GirthyBird257@alien.topB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    10 months ago

    Yes, but the biggest takeaway from today is how Dallas does the little things, the intricacies, and dominates any team they play without a heartbeat. So incredible.

    Cowboys are a juggernaut. Scary lol

  • FormerCollegeDJ@alien.topB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    10 months ago

    The 49ers weren’t going to play Detroit on Thanksgiving Day because they are a Pacific Time Zone team. (The Lions haven’t hosted a team located west of the Central Time Zone on Turkey Day in over 30 years.)

    The 49ers probably weren’t going to play Dallas on Thanksgiving Day during the Montana/Young era because 1) they had to be scheduled to play at Dallas in a given season, 2) CBS and NBC (and later Fox and NBC and then Fox and CBS) would alternate televising Detroit and Dallas, meaning the 49ers would only be a possibility to play on Turkey Day in Dallas every other year, and 3) the NFL gets huge TV ratings on Thanksgiving for the afternoon games because of the captive audience, and they weren’t going to waste a marquee 49ers/Cowboys matchup that would get huge ratings whenever it was played by playing it on Thanksgiving. The only time the 49ers might have played at Dallas during the Montana/Young era was when the Cowboys were down (1987 to 1991, and really only 1989 or 1990).

    • suid@alien.topB
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      10 months ago
      1. the NFL gets huge TV ratings on Thanksgiving for the afternoon games because of the captive audience, and they weren’t going to waste a marquee 49ers/Cowboys matchup that would get huge ratings whenever it was played by playing it on Thanksgiving.

      I think that’s the key. As long as there were only 2 games, there was no need to schedule (waste) a marquee matchup - when the audience would come for just about anything.

      In 30+ years, I can’t remember an “exciting” matchup - some games were close, but still “meh” (just background noise and movement to distract folks from the food and the inane forced table chatter).