In a sit-down interview with Dave Campbell's Texas Football, former Dallas Cowboys offensive lineman Joe Looney reveals why he's coaching for Little Elm Lobos.
LITTLE ELM, Texas - Joe Looney has played football in nearly every NFL stadium, but Little Elm High School’s indoor facility still takes his breath away.
He played high school football on a dirt field in West Palm Beach, Florida. The players helped the coaches paint lines on it the night before a game. Now, the 34-year-old looks around the indoor field with his arms out and palms up, a ‘Can you believe this place?’ gesture. Looney didn’t mention his eight-year NFL career once during his job interview. Coaching Little Elm offensive linemen is his new Super Bowl.
“I tell these guys in the locker room, ‘I’m so jealous of you right now,’” Looney said. “‘You get to go hit somebody, and there’s no repercussion from it!’”
His hands are balled in fists, eyes glinting as he speaks. Looney wasn’t a Dallas Cowboys fan favorite because of his play. He started less than half of his 77 career games in Dallas, becoming the unsung hero of the 2018 team when he filled in at center for Pro Bowler Travis Frederick, who was diagnosed with an autoimmune disorder that August.
Looney is a legend for his personality, which always loomed larger than his imposing 6-foot-3 presence. The highlight most fans remember is when he dressed up in running back Ezekiel Elliott’s signature crop top jersey and tinted visor for a practice.
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That’s the image that new Little Elm head coach Keiston Alexander had in his mind when Looney’s name popped up in his email asking about the open offensive line coaching position. At first, he thought it couldn’t be real. Soon, Looney attended the team’s morning lifting sessions, dancing with the kids between sets.
“You could tell his energy and personality was going to be something we needed here at Little Elm,” Alexander said.
Little Elm went 0-10 last season and has only won three combined games the past three years. The program’s last playoff appearance was in 2016.
But Alexander, who was on staff at Coppell for a 23-2 run the last two years, says he feels God’s presence over his first offseason. Looney and Alexander actually connected through the church. Alexander spoke to the pastors in his first month on the job, and the pastors told Looney to reach out to him if he wanted to get back into coaching.
Looney first coached at Arlington Sam Houston after retiring in 2021, but in recent years, he stepped away from the game and focused on teaching. He guesses he was his students’ most intimidating teacher ever on the first day of classes before they figured out Looney was a big softie, as he calls it. It also didn’t help that kids now have Google, allowing them to access a mock-body building photo Looney took in the Cowboys’ locker room.
It’s been a recharging period for Looney. Football gave him so much, but it took time away from his family. Now he’s back for a couple reasons. One: his wife gave him permission. But he’s also realized the competitor inside him won’t retire. It needs an outlet.
“As a teacher, it’s a wonderful way to compete with yourself,” Looney said. “When you learn how to do that as a teacher and a coach, I think the world really opens up for you. That competitiveness never leaves you.”
Besides, he has so much knowledge from his playing career to pass on. Looney practiced daily with future Hall of Famers Tyron Smith and Zack Martin. Whenever he believed himself prepared for Sunday’s game, the linemen would circle up after practice and bounce questions off each other about that week’s blocking schemes.
But his favorite lesson harkens back to his time in San Francisco, where he was drafted in the fourth round in 2012. He shared a meeting room with Hall of Fame wide receiver Randy Moss that first offseason. During a Day 1 install meeting, Looney saw Moss scribbling notes. Why are you writing this down? Looney asked. You’ve been in the NFL for 14 seasons.
“Looney, when you think you’ve made it in this league, that’s when things don’t go well,” Moss said.
Looney is a storyteller at heart. While many revolve around football, they aren’t really about football. They’re about life lessons he learned through this game. His stories are how he teaches them, and class is now in session.
“The first time he spoke to the team and introduced himself, it gave me goosebumps,” Alexander said.
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