In 1984, Donald Trump brushed aside the chance to purchase the Dallas Cowboys for an estimated $50 million. Four decades on the team is worth $13 billion dollars. Is it the worst business call he’s ever made?

At the time, he reportedly remarked that he felt “sorry for the poor guy who is going to buy” the franchise and so the decision stands as one of the most glaring financial missteps in sports history.

The Cowboys are now worth $12.8 billion by far the NFL’s most valuable team and one of the most recognizable brands in global sport, dominating football commercially even if on-field success has been few and far between.

Although Trump‘s rejection came during an era when the Cowboys were struggling on the field and searching for stability off it, Jerry Jones completely flipped the script on that mood.

The 82-year-old Arkansas oilman’s hands-on leadership reshaped the economics of the league by creating the first modern super-team to hit the NFL, becoming a media powerhouse.

Jones‘ strategy combined bold investment with relentless promotion. He transformed Texas Stadium and later AT&T Stadium into premium entertainment destinations, aggressively pushed merchandising, and forged new licensing deals that exported the Cowboys brand worldwide.

“America’s Team” was no longer just a moniker but a fully monetized identity that could thrive regardless of playoff outcomes. Remarkably, this success unfolded despite a prolonged championship drought.

Dallas has not lifted a Lombardi Trophy in nearly three decades, yet their financial growth dwarfs competitors, with a $7bn gap to the Los Angeles Rams in second-place in the valuation charts.

It proves their star power, distribution, and cultural ubiquity outweighs all of their rivals, despite the trophies won by the likes of the Kansas City Chiefs, when it comes to business dominance.

Could Trump have saved the Dallas Cowboys?

This raises the obvious question: what would have happened if Trump had said yes? History offers some clues, and they suggest the Cowboys’ rise under his watch would have been far less certain.

Trump‘s résumé is marked by a series of high-profile failures. His casinos in Atlantic City entered bankruptcy multiple times. Trump Airlines collapsed under heavy debt. His real estate ventures, such as Trump Plaza and Trump Soho, struggled or shuttered.

Even his foray into professional football with the USFL in the 1980s, pushing the league into a disastrous head-to-head with the NFL, ended in collapse.

Those patterns suggest that his ownership of the Cowboys might have been less a story of growth and more another cautionary tale – in fact, there might not even be a football team in Dallas now if he got his hands on the franchise.

Jones succeeded not only because he invested heavily but because he understood the entertainment value of the NFL as a shrewd businessman, one who shows he understands the art of the deal.

A year-round spectacle, he sold the team as much as the sport whilst Trump‘s record in sports management, by contrast, leans more toward overreach and failed strategy.

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