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Dave Edwards, Part of ‘Doomsday Defense’ for Dallas Cowboys, Dies at 76 Dave Edwards, Part of ‘Doomsday Defense’ for Dallas Cowboys, Dies at 76
(about 3 hours later)
Dave Edwards, a linebacker who helped lead the Dallas Cowboys to three Super Bowls and was part of the team’s so-called Doomsday Defense, died on Monday at his home in Lake Whitney, Tex., about 80 miles southwest of Dallas. He was 76. Dave Edwards, a linebacker who helped lead the Dallas Cowboys to three Super Bowls and was part of the team’s so-called Doomsday Defense in a 12-year career with the team, died on Monday at his home in Lake Whitney, Tex., about 80 miles southwest of Dallas. He was 76.
His death was confirmed by his brother, Timothy. He had been scheduled to have surgery on Thursday for a heart arrhythmia that was recently discovered, his brother said.His death was confirmed by his brother, Timothy. He had been scheduled to have surgery on Thursday for a heart arrhythmia that was recently discovered, his brother said.
Dave Edwards played for the Cowboys from 1963 through the 1975 season. Known for his speed and aggressiveness, he was considered a key component of the team’s defense. He was frequently listed among the linebackers with the most interceptions, according to the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame, which inducted him in 1998. Edwards played for the Cowboys from 1963 through the 1975 season. Known for his speed and aggressiveness, he was considered a key component of the team’s defense and was frequently listed among the linebackers with the most interceptions, according to the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame, which inducted him in 1998.
Charlie Waters, a safety for the Cowboys, recalled in a 2014 The Los Angeles Times article about so-called Hail Mary plays that superstition had played a role in Edwards’s game. (The term has its roots in a 1975 divisional playoff game in which Roger Staubach, the Cowboys quarterback, chucked a 50-yard desperation pass to Drew Pearson for a touchdown with 24 seconds left and later acknowledged having said the prayer after releasing the ball.) During his years with the Cowboys the team won Super Bowl VI in 1972, in which Dallas beat Miami, 24-3, at Tulane Stadium in New Orleans. He played in two other Super Bowls in 1971, when Dallas lost to the Baltimore Colts, 16-13, at the Orange Bowl in Miami, and in 1976, when the Cowboys were defeated by the Pittsburgh Steelers, 21-17, again at the Orange Bowl.
Waters said Edwards would have the defensive players walk in the direction that the Cowboys’ offense was moving. Edwards spent his entire N.F.L. career with Dallas, playing in 181 games, and had 13 career interceptions and 17 fumble recoveries. He missed only one game, his brother said.
“It was like a stream of defensive players walking along the sidelines,” Waters said. “Dave was probably chanting some sort of mystical chant. But we all glanced over there when it happened, and we thought it was us we thought that was why it worked!” At Auburn University, Edwards was an outstanding two-way player, as a receiver on offense and at end on defense. He played during the 1959, 1960 and 1961 seasons and was considered among the premier defensive players in the Southeastern Conference.
During Edwards’s time with the Cowboys, the team won Super Bowl VI in 1972, in which Dallas beat Miami, 24-3, and played in two others, after the 1970 and 1975 seasons. He spent his entire N.F.L. career with Dallas, playing in 181 games, and had 13 career interceptions and 17 fumble recoveries. He missed only one game, his brother said. David Monroe Edwards was born on Dec. 14, 1939, in Abbeville, Ala., to Warren and Millie Edwards. Timothy Edwards recalled that his brother had been a standout basketball and football player in high school and that his skills had extended to chain-saw carvings.
At Auburn University, Edwards was an outstanding two-way player, as a receiver on offense and at end on defense. He played during the 1959, 1960 and 1961 seasons, according to the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame, and was considered among the premier defensive players in the Southeastern Conference. “He could carve a bear out of a log,” Timothy Edwards said.
David Monroe Edwards was born on Dec. 14, 1939, in Abbeville, Ala., to Warren and Millie Edwards. Timothy Edwards recalled that his brother had enjoyed biking and skiing and was a standout basketball and football player in high school. His skills extended to chain-saw carvings. After retiring from football Edwards owned several businesses, including one that sold land-clearing equipment, and operated a bar and restaurant, his brother said.
“He could carve a bear out of a log,” Timothy Edwards said. “He could do anything.”
In the decades after he retired from football, Dave Edwards worked at numerous jobs and owned several businesses, including selling land-clearing equipment and operating a bar and restaurant, his brother said.
In addition to his brother, survivors include two sons, Chris and Mike; and three sisters, Jane Price, Susan MacDonald, and Gloria Courtemanche.In addition to his brother, survivors include two sons, Chris and Mike; and three sisters, Jane Price, Susan MacDonald, and Gloria Courtemanche.
Charlie Waters, a safety for the Cowboys during the ‘70s, told The Los Angeles Times in 2014 that superstition had played a role in Edwards’s game, particularly in a 1975 divisional playoff game against the Minnesota Vikings in which Roger Staubach, the Cowboys quarterback, chucked a 50-yard desperation pass to Drew Pearson for a winning touchdown with 24 seconds left. The play, in football lore, gave birth to the term “Hail Mary pass.”
As the seconds had wound down Edwards had the defensive players on the sideline walk in the direction that the Cowboys’ offense was moving.
“It was like a stream of defensive players walking along the sidelines,” Waters said. “Dave was probably chanting some sort of mystical chant. But we all glanced over there when it happened, and we thought it was us — we thought that was why it worked!”