Edward Lee Jones (born February 23, 1951), commonly known as Ed "Too Tall" Jones due to his height, is an American former professional football player who was a defensive end for 15 seasons (1974–1978, 1980–1989) for the Dallas Cowboys in the National Football League (NFL). In 1979, he left football to attempt a career in professional boxing.[1]
As a senior, he fought a Golden Glovesboxing match, recording a knockout of his opponent in less than a minute. He stopped shortly after that, when his basketball coach read an article about the fight, and made him choose between basketball and boxing.[4]
The 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) Jones received his famous nickname during his first football practice, after a teammate mentioned that his pants did not fit because he was considered too tall to play football. In his new sport, he became a two-time All-Americandefensive lineman, playing on a team that lost only two games, en route to winning the black college football national championships in 1971 and 1973.[6]
Jones ranks third in school history in sacks in a season with 12 and fifth in career sacks with 38. In 1999, he was voted to the 50th Anniversary Senior Bowl All-Time Team.[7]
He became a starter at left defensive end during his second season in 1975, and in 1977 he helped the Cowboys win Super Bowl XII. After playing five years for the Cowboys from 1974 through 1978, Jones at 28 years old and in the prime of his athletic career, left football to attempt a professionalboxing career.
Boxing career
A former Golden Gloves fighter in Tennessee, Jones fought six professional bouts as a heavyweight, with a perfect 6–0 record and five knockouts.[9] Due to his high profile as a football player, all of Jones' fights were televised nationally by CBS.
His pro boxing debut, held in Las Cruces, New Mexico, on November 3, 1979, was controversial. Despite giving away over fifty pounds, opponent Abraham Yaqui Meneses dropped Jones with a left hook in the sixth and final round, then hit Jones again illegally when he was down. Jones' cornerman then entered the ring illegally and attempted to revive his fighter with an ammonia bottle. Referee Buddy Basilico reasoned that since both fighters had broken the rules, he would punish neither of them, and let the fight go on. Jones survived the round and was awarded a narrow majority decision, causing the pro-Meneses crowd to boo loudly.[10]
The Meneses bout was the only one of Jones' fights that he did not win by knockout. But his other five opponents were journeymen at best, with the arguable exception of Mexican heavyweight champ Fernando Montes, whom Jones knocked out in just 44 seconds on November 24, 1979. After his last ring appearance on January 26, 1980, Jones announced that he would return to play for the Cowboys. In a 2016 interview, Jones called boxing his favorite sport and said that fighting "was probably the best decision [he] ever made," because his boxing training regimen made him a better football player.[11]
Dallas Cowboys (second stint)
Jones returned to play for the 1980 season, replacing John Dutton at defensive end and performing better than his first stint with the team.
He earned All-Pro and Pro Bowl honors three times from 1981 to 1983. He was one of the most dominant defensive players during this time,[12] playing in 16 playoff games and three Super Bowls. He was part of three NFC championship teams and the Super Bowl XII champion. His success batting down passes convinced the NFL to keep track of it as an official stat.[13]
In 1985 the 34 year-old had a career-high of 13 sacks in spite of being limited with a hamstring injury. He also had 80 tackles and 13 blocked passes. In the fifteenth game, he batted a pass into the hands of teammate Jim Jeffcoat, whose 65-yard touchdown return changed the momentum in the 28–21 win for the NFC East title.[14]
In 1987, he led the team in sacks (10) for the second time in the previous three years. He also tallied 61 tackles, 7 blocked passes and one fumble recovery. He had a single-game career-high of 4 sacks in the 33–24 upset victory over the New York Giants.[15]
In 1989, with the arrival of new head coach Jimmy Johnson, the team experienced a youth movement. Seven weeks into the season, Johnson indicated that rookie Tony Tolbert would start in place of Jones against the Phoenix Cardinals, motivating Cowboys fans to stage a call-in campaign to allow Jones to reach 200 career starts, forcing Johnson to relent and allow Jones to start not only the next two games to reach the milestone, but also the following 3 contests.[16] He appeared in 16 games with 10 starts, collecting 39 tackles, one sack, 4 passes defensed, one forced fumble and 3 blocked kicks. Despite this, he has yet to be named to the Cowboys Ring of Honor.[17]
On June 5, 1990, the 39 year-old announced his retirement, having never missed a game.[18] He was tied with Mark Tuinei and Bill Bates for most seasons (15) played in franchise history.[19]Jason Witten broke his record for games played and L.P. Ladouceur has broken his record for most seasons played.
The NFL did not start recognizing quarterback sacks as an official stat until 1982; although the Cowboys have their own records, dating back before the 1982 season. According to the Cowboys' stats, Jones is unofficially credited with a total of 106 quarterback sacks (third most in team history) and officially with 57.5. He appeared in 224 games with 203 starts, while recording 1,032 tackles (third in franchise history), 19 fumble recoveries, 86 blocked passes and 3 interceptions.
Acting career
Jones’ acting credits in television include appearing as himself in the Diff'rent Strokes season 3 episode, "The Magician", and in the 1992 Married... with Children episode, "Just Shoe It", as one of the famous athletes in a sports shoes commercial that the character, Al Bundy, is starring in.
Jones starred in a GEICO commercial that initially aired in late 2009. The commercial rhetorically asks if Jones is indeed "too tall," then confirms it by showing a nurse attempting to measure his height, but breaking the medical scale's height rod when it doesn't reach high enough. The nurse then mutters, "I'm just going to guesstimate."[20]