Perhaps no man in the Pro Football Hall of Fame was as controversial a football player than Charles Haley. (Terrell Owens won't be enshrined until this summer, so, yeah, Haley still owns the crown.) It's why the media can't get enough and why Haley's words once again make headlines.

During an appearance on 103.3 ESPN Radio in Dallas, Haley didn't hold back his thoughts and feelings about what he sees in the presently constructed Dallas Cowboys, per The Dallas Morning News.

“I don’t think they understand what it takes to win a game,” Haley said, via the Dallas Morning News. “If you want to look back, if that was Coach [Jimmy] Johnson, we would’ve worked harder than we did last year just to repeat that part of it. I don’t see that maturity where guys are doing their own thing out there. When the coach says run 10, you run 15, or you grab your teammates and go run. They took 13-3 for granted and they thought, ‘OK, we’ll win the Super Bowl the next year.’

The man who tallied 100.5 sacks and five Vince Lombardi Trophies over the course of a stellar 13-year career was relentless in his pursuit to put down his former team.

“I blame everybody. It’s one team and everybody’s together. And that’s the key. I go over there and I tell guys, ‘Man, Jerry built this house for a bunch of damn losers.’ And they get mad. They have to do something about it. I can’t do anything about it, I can’t play. All I can do is give you some knowledge.

“And then the egos are so big and they’re so busy getting on Twitter and Facebook and everything else – maybe they should get in that playbook. Maybe they should learn how to rush, catch and block.

During his career, Haley encountered many a controversial issue. His run-ins with teammates and even coaches have been well-documented through the years. In many respects and instances, he was the most feared man in the National Football League.

But when Haley discusses winning and getting it done on the football field, diehard football heads tend to perk-up. He represented a hard-working walking Hall of Famer.

After that 13-3 season two years ago, these current batch of Cowboys muddled through a disappointing 9-7 playoff-less season. Only time will tell whether Charles Haley will be spouting off harsher words this time next year.