Switzer had seemed content with not being a head coach within the college ranks, once stating, "Every year the coach gets a year older but the product stays the same age. Recruiting has always been something like pimping, I guess, but it never bothered me until I looked in the mirror one day and said to myself, 'Hey, Switzer, what is a fifty-year-old man doing chasing eighteen-year-old boys around the country? On March 30, 1994, he was hired by the
Dallas Cowboys. Switzer was hired the day after
Jimmy Johnson, who had won the last two Super Bowls with Dallas, announced his departure from the team. Many felt that owner
Jerry Jones, who had clashed with Johnson, hired Switzer due to wanting a coach who would be more apt to go along with Jones' ideas. He stated that Switzer had the qualities needed in "leadership, charisma, motivation, and a proven winner" to serve as coach; he also once stated that "500 coaches who could win with the talent assembled in Dallas." Incidentally, Switzer had been an assistant coach on the
1964 Arkansas Razorback team that had both Jones and Johnson on the roster. It was reported that one of the first things Switzer did was to ask each of his assistant coaches to name him any jerks that were on the team. The response was that there were none. Switzer did not get to hire his own staff, as the assistant coaches from the previous season were retained. His
first season with the Cowboys was successful; they went 12–4 and advanced to the NFC Championship Game against the
San Francisco 49ers for the third straight year. However, the game did not turn out well for the Cowboys, who were down 21–0 after two turnovers in the first five minutes of play. While the Cowboys did narrow the score to 24–14 (after a missed field goal from 27 yards) with a minute to play before halftime, Switzer elected to try and reach for more points with passes on the suggestion of offensive coordinator
Ernie Zampese rather than his own idea to run the ball. The result was three incompletions, after which Dallas punted the ball away, leaving enough time and favorable field position for San Francisco to score a touchdown pass to lead 31–14 at halftime. The
1995 season saw a revolving door of free agents coming and going from Dallas, such as the recruitment of Sanders to play in Dallas. The Cowboys won seven of their first eight games. The only ignominious loss was a game against the
Philadelphia Eagles, in which Switzer elected to try to convert a 4th and 1 from his own 29 with two minutes remaining. The team elected to do a run play that was about to be called short only for the officials to whistle the play dead due to the two-minute warning having been applied before the snap. However, Switzer elected to run the ball again anyway. The play failed again and the Eagles subsequently kicked a field goal to win. The Cowboys finished 12–4, clinching home field advantage throughout the playoffs. The Cowboys trounced their playoff competition in the NFC, scoring 24 unanswered points against Philadelphia and then beating the
Green Bay Packers 38–27 in the NFC Championship Game, winning their third NFC title in four seasons. They faced the
Pittsburgh Steelers in
Super Bowl XXX. Despite being limited to just 209 yards passing and less than 60 yards on the ground, the Cowboys never trailed, turning three interceptions (two by
Larry Brown) into 14 points in a 27–17 victory. The win made Switzer the second coach to win a college national championship and a
Super Bowl, the other being Johnson;
Pete Carroll joined them in 2014. Switzer thought about retiring after the victory, but he was talked out of it by a friend in view of what Jones had done for him. The
1996 season saw high hopes for the defending Super Bowl champions, but the resulting season was a roller coaster.
Michael Irvin was suspended for the first five games after pleading no contest to felony cocaine possession after being found at a party with topless dancers and drug use.
Emmitt Smith ran for over 1,000 yards again, but had his first season with under four yards per carry since his rookie season, while scoring only 12 touchdowns. Key defensive end
Charles Haley missed the whole year due to injury. The Cowboys lost three of the first five games, but they went 5–3 in the final eight games (which included two wins in which all of their points were field goals) to clinch the division with a week to play, finishing with an overall 10–6 season. Their record was not enough to give them a top-two seed in the playoffs, so they played in the Wild Card round against the
Minnesota Vikings, winning in a 40–15 blowout. For the next round, Dallas traveled to play the second-year
Carolina Panthers in Charlotte. The buildup to the game was marred by sexual violence allegations against Irvin and
Erik Williams (which were proven to be false after the game). The Cowboys lost both Irvin and Sanders to injury as the Panthers shocked the Cowboys with a 26–17 victory, essentially ending the Cowboys dynasty (the loss was the first of several to follow before the next Cowboy playoff victory in 2009). In August 1997, Switzer was arrested after a loaded .38-caliber revolver was found in his luggage at the
Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport. Switzer, who was returning to the team's training camp facility in Austin, said there were children at his Dallas home and he had put the gun in his bag to hide it from them. He said he accidentally forgot to remove the gun from the bag before heading to the airport. Switzer pleaded guilty, was fined $3,500, and was given one-year deferred adjudication. Two days later, he was fined $75,000 by Jones (). Switzer's penchant for being a players' coach came to haunt him with disagreements with quarterback
Troy Aikman, who felt the team had a lack of discipline along with poor practice habits. Each reflected upon their disagreements in
Troy Aikman: A Football Life, where Aikman felt that Switzer was not the same hard-driving coach that he had seen at Oklahoma while saying the team was "kind of hanging on" in the post-Johnson era. All of this came to a head with the
1997 season, complete with Aikman delivering a heated rant on the sideline during the preseason about not wanting to be the "bad cop" in the routine all the time. The Cowboys started off well, winning three of their first four games, but a sign of trouble brewed with their one loss, which came against the
Arizona Cardinals after they blew a 22–7 lead and lost in overtime. They then lost two straight games against division rivals
New York Giants and
Washington Redskins before a late victory against
Jacksonville got them to 4–3. They then traded back-to-back losses with back-to-back wins to reach 6–5 before the wheels fell off with five straight losses. On January 9, 1998, Switzer resigned as head coach of the Cowboys with a 40–24 career NFL coaching record. == After coaching ==