Since the first meeting between the Cowboys and Texans in 2002, the two teams have met in the regular season every four years, when all four
NFC East teams play all four
AFC South teams and every eight years at each team's home stadium, plus in 2024 when both teams won their divisions, and meet relatively often (by NFL standards) in the preseason; from 2002 until 2008 and again from 2013 to 2021 (except 2017 and 2020, which were canceled), the Cowboys and Texans have been scheduled to play each other in the preseason whenever they are not scheduled to meet in the regular season. In 2010, the teams played both a pre-season and regular season game while in 2009, 2011, and 2012 they did not meet at all. The 2017 preseason game, scheduled to be played in Houston, was canceled due to
Hurricane Harvey. In 2018, the teams played both a pre-season and regular season game once again, marking the first time that this instance of two games in one year had happened since 2010. The two cities of
Houston and
Dallas have a rivalry that goes way back before the team's founding. Until 2010, both were the two largest cities in Texas, with Dallas being known for having wealthy elites of the
Texas oil and gas industry in the early 20th century, while Houston was known for being a
working-class city with the lower-tier workers working in making
oil pipelines during the Texas boom. In 2010
San Antonio – yet to ever have an
NFL team – overtook Dallas to become Texas' second largest populated city. The US Census of 2020 has Houston with 2.3 million persons, the largest populated city in Texas, followed by San Antonio with 1.5 million people, then Dallas as Texas third largest city, with 1.4 million residents. The Houston and Dallas metropolitan areas remain far larger than San Antonio's, moreover, the Cowboys have not played in Dallas proper since . In 1960, the NFL established the
Dallas Cowboys, mainly as an effort to cut off the
American Football League (AFL)'s
Dallas Texans: the cutoff effort was only a partial success, as the Texans relocated to become the
Kansas City Chiefs in 1963, but the AFL itself would thrive and eventually
merge into the NFL in 1970. The AFL would be the first league to place a professional team in Houston, and though the
Houston Oilers and the Texans were in opposite divisions, they quickly became rivals: this culminated in the double-overtime
1962 American Football League Championship Game that the Texans won to prevent an Oilers threepeat in the Texans' last game under that identity. In 1965, the AFL's Houston Oilers and NFL's Dallas Cowboys both drafted
Oklahoma tackle
Ralph Neely. The Oilers sued the Cowboys over Neely's services. In the settlement of the case, the Oilers received three Cowboys draft picks in addition to a cash settlement. The Cowboys also agreed to play five preseason games, three in Houston, against the Oilers. Thus began the Governor's Cup series, a Texas tradition created by franchise free agency. In 1992 the Cowboys and Oilers met twice in the preseason. The first game took place in Tokyo as part of the NFL's
American Bowl series, and the second meeting in Dallas for the Governor's Cup. The 1994 Governor's Cup was not actually played in Texas but in
Mexico City at
Estadio Azteca as part of the American Bowl series. As a result of Estadio Azteca's unusually large seating capacity, a league record 112,246 fans watched the Oilers shut out the Cowboys, 6–0 on August 15, 1994. The Governor's Cup went into recess after the Oilers relocated to Nashville, Tennessee at the end of the 1996 season (being rebranded as the Tennessee Titans): this left the Cowboys as the only NFL team in Texas until the Texans entered the NFL as an expansion team in 2002. The only other professional football league to feature teams from Dallas and Houston at the same time is the
2020 incarnation of the XFL, which established the
Dallas Renegades and
Houston Roughnecks. In 2023, both teams won their respective divisions, resulting in a 2024 meeting due to the rotation of the fifth interconference game first played in 2021 pairing each NFC East team in a 2024 home game against the AFC South team with the same division placement in 2023. ==Season-by-season results==