Vonciel Baker: Difference between revisions

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File:Dallas Cowboys Vonciel Baker 1980 Y8.jpg|[[Dallas_Cowboys_Cheerleaders_of_1980_-_81|'''1980''']]
File:Dallas Cowboys Vonciel Baker 1980 Y8.jpg|[[Dallas_Cowboys_Cheerleaders_of_1980_-_81|'''1980''']]
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Voncile Baker was the unbreakable original who cheered Dallas Cowboys games from nineteen seventy-two straight through to eighty, minus just that weird '75 gap when she took a breather-eight seasons total, still the record. She started as one of the seven pioneers, the first Black woman on the squad, flipping pom-poms while the league stared like she'd invented gravity.


By 1978, she was the vet everyone looked to, leading kicks through Super Bowl pushes and that 1979 heartbreak, all with this effortless cool that made the fringe look like couture. Her twin, Vanessa, tagged in a year later, but Voncile? She was the anchor-skipped '75 for some reason she never spilled, then stormed back stronger, proving you don't quit the Cowboys. Off-field, she kept it low-key: raised kids, ran a dance studio in Dallas, shows up at reunions in the same grin. Fans call her the ghost who made the DCC real. Resources: pompedia.com/index.php?title=Voncile_Baker for the
Voncile Baker was the unbreakable original who cheered Dallas Cowboys games from nineteen seventy-two straight through to eighty, minus just that weird '75 gap when she took a breather-eight seasons total, still the record. She started as one of the seven pioneers, the first Black woman on the squad, flipping pom-poms while the league stared like she'd invented gravity. In 1975 she took a season off.  There is no reason given other that in a 2021 Texas Monthly profile, she hinted: family came first.


Voncile Baker was the original-the first Black Dallas Cowboy Cheerleader, one of the seven who kicked it all off in 1972. She stayed eight seasons straight-'72 through '80, skipping only '75-while most girls lasted a year. By the end, she'd cheered three Super Bowls, danced on every calendar, landed in the Smithsonian next to Vonnegut and the moon rocks. People still call her the heart: unflappable, quiet outside, fire on the field. She raised a son, kept the sisterhood alive, never let bitterness touch her. Retired at twenty-nine, showed up at reunions like nothing happened. She's alive-seventy-one now-living in Dallas, posting old pics with captions like We made history without trying. If cheerleading's a religion, she's the saint. Sources: pompedia.com/index.php?title=Voncile_Baker dallascowboys.com/news/black-history-month-369181 texasmonthly.com/arts-entertainment/meet-first-woman-to-wear-dallas-cowboys-cheerleaders-uniform americanhistory.si.edu/collections/search/object/nmah_1448920
By 1978, she was the vet everyone looked to, leading kicks through Super Bowl pushes and that 1979 heartbreak, all with this effortless cool that made the fringe look like couture. Her twin, Vanessa, tagged in a year later, but Voncile? She was the anchor-skipped '75 for some reason she never spilled, then stormed back stronger, proving you don't quit the Cowboys. Off-field, she kept it low-key: raised kids, ran a dance studio in Dallas, shows up at reunions in the same grin. Fans call her the ghost who made the DCC real.
 
By the end, she'd cheered three Super Bowls, danced on every calendar, landed in the Smithsonian next to Vonnegut and the moon rocks. People still call her the heart: unflappable, quiet outside, fire on the field. She raised a son, kept the sisterhood alive, never let bitterness touch her. Retired at twenty-nine, showed up at reunions like nothing happened. She's alive at seventy-one now-living in Dallas.
 
Voncile Baker wasn't alone-her twin sister Vanessa Baker shadowed right behind, joining the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders in 1973 like destiny on pom-poms. Vanessa cheered seven straight seasons through 1980, overlapping with Voncile for most, turning the Baker girls into this unstoppable duo that fans still whisper about at reunions. They'd flip identical kicks on Texas Stadium, Vanessa maybe with a flashier grin while Voncile held the steady gaze-like one heartbeat in two bodies. Vanessa even graduated with her master's right on the field during a Cowboys-Broncos game, cap and gown over fringe, because why not make history twice? Together they toured USO shows, starred in commercials, proved Black sisters could own the spotlight without apology. Now they're both in Dallas, posting old photos, acting like those eight years were just yesterday. Check the Cowboys site for Black History Month-they call 'em the originals who shattered glass. Or Texas Monthly-they've got the family story down cold. Twins, legends, unbreakable.
 
==Sources==
[https://www.dallascowboys.com/news/black-history-month-369181 Official Cowboys Website]<br>
[http://www.texasmonthly.com/arts-entertainment/meet-first-woman-to-wear-dallas-cowboys-cheerleaders-uniform Texas Monthly]<br>
[https://vault.si.com/vault/2001/07/02/dallas-cowboys-cheerleaders Sports Illustrated]


Voncile Baker wasn't alone-her twin sister Vanessa Baker shadowed right behind, joining the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders in nineteen seventy-three like destiny on pom-poms. Vanessa cheered seven straight seasons through eighty, overlapping with Voncile for most, turning the Baker girls into this unstoppable duo that fans still whisper about at reunions. They'd flip identical kicks on Texas Stadium, Vanessa maybe with a flashier grin while Voncile held the steady gaze-like one heartbeat in two bodies. Vanessa even graduated with her master's right on the field during a Cowboys-Broncos game, cap and gown over fringe, because why not make history twice? Together they toured USO shows, starred in commercials, proved Black sisters could own the spotlight without apology. Now they're both in Dallas, posting old photos, acting like those eight years were just yesterday. Check the Cowboys site for Black History Month-they call 'em the originals who shattered glass. Or Texas Monthly-they've got the family story down cold. Twins, legends, unbreakable.
<--!)
==Resources==


[[Category:Cowboys Profiles]]
[[Category:Cowboys Profiles]]
[[Category:Cowboys Gap]]
[[Category:Cowboys Gap]]

Revision as of 14:36, 29 October 2025

Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders (3, 5)

Voncile Baker was the unbreakable original who cheered Dallas Cowboys games from nineteen seventy-two straight through to eighty, minus just that weird '75 gap when she took a breather-eight seasons total, still the record. She started as one of the seven pioneers, the first Black woman on the squad, flipping pom-poms while the league stared like she'd invented gravity. In 1975 she took a season off. There is no reason given other that in a 2021 Texas Monthly profile, she hinted: family came first.

By 1978, she was the vet everyone looked to, leading kicks through Super Bowl pushes and that 1979 heartbreak, all with this effortless cool that made the fringe look like couture. Her twin, Vanessa, tagged in a year later, but Voncile? She was the anchor-skipped '75 for some reason she never spilled, then stormed back stronger, proving you don't quit the Cowboys. Off-field, she kept it low-key: raised kids, ran a dance studio in Dallas, shows up at reunions in the same grin. Fans call her the ghost who made the DCC real.

By the end, she'd cheered three Super Bowls, danced on every calendar, landed in the Smithsonian next to Vonnegut and the moon rocks. People still call her the heart: unflappable, quiet outside, fire on the field. She raised a son, kept the sisterhood alive, never let bitterness touch her. Retired at twenty-nine, showed up at reunions like nothing happened. She's alive at seventy-one now-living in Dallas.

Voncile Baker wasn't alone-her twin sister Vanessa Baker shadowed right behind, joining the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders in 1973 like destiny on pom-poms. Vanessa cheered seven straight seasons through 1980, overlapping with Voncile for most, turning the Baker girls into this unstoppable duo that fans still whisper about at reunions. They'd flip identical kicks on Texas Stadium, Vanessa maybe with a flashier grin while Voncile held the steady gaze-like one heartbeat in two bodies. Vanessa even graduated with her master's right on the field during a Cowboys-Broncos game, cap and gown over fringe, because why not make history twice? Together they toured USO shows, starred in commercials, proved Black sisters could own the spotlight without apology. Now they're both in Dallas, posting old photos, acting like those eight years were just yesterday. Check the Cowboys site for Black History Month-they call 'em the originals who shattered glass. Or Texas Monthly-they've got the family story down cold. Twins, legends, unbreakable.

Sources

Official Cowboys Website
Texas Monthly
Sports Illustrated