A childhood football dream more than 40 years in the making finally came full circle on Dallas Express Sports Network.
In a new DXSN segment, lifelong Dallas Cowboys fan Claude Cramer shared how Pro Football Hall of Famer Bob Lilly inspired him as a young athlete growing up in Northern California, far from Cowboys country.
Cramer said he first learned about Lilly when a physical education teacher showed football game films on rainy school days. He was about 10 years old at the time, but the impact stuck.
“I first met Bob Lilly through a game thing when I was 10 years old,” Cramer said. “And I wanted to be a defensive lineman.”
When Cramer began playing high school football as a freshman, he had the chance to choose his number. He picked No. 74, the same number Lilly wore while helping define the Dallas Cowboys’ early identity.
A photo from Cramer’s senior year in 1980 shows him wearing No. 74. That same year, Lilly entered the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
The moment gave Lilly a chance to see how far his influence had reached, even to a small farming town in California.
“It’s interesting because that was the year I went in the Hall of Fame,” Lilly said.
The exchange offered a simple reminder of how sports heroes can shape young athletes in ways they may never know. For Cramer, Lilly was not just a Cowboys legend on film. He was the player Cramer wanted to model himself after.
Watch the full Dallas Express Sports Network segment to see Cramer share the story directly with Lilly and the DXSN crew.