The sun's glare coming through the glass doors at AT&T Stadium has been making life difficult for wide receivers for years. The Cowboys could solve the problem by tinting the glass or putting up curtains.

Neither is expected to happen.

"I don't see curtains at all," Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said Wednesday morning on 105.3 The Fan's Shan and RJ show [KRLD-FM]. "We're real good at knowing where that sun is on these games, so I don't see that in the future. We played with an 18-inch drop-off in each corner of the endzones at Texas Stadium. That was quite an advantage. We knew where it was and the opponents didn't.

"We don't want the sun in the quarterback's eyes and we'd rather keep it out of the receivers' eyes, but they'll get good. They'll know what part of the field and they'll know when [the glare is a problem] and we'll get real good at it. We became really good at playing that 18-inch drop-off on each corner of those endzones."

The glare has only been a problem during the 3:30 p.m. games at AT&T Stadium. Since the stadium opened, the Cowboys have played 29 games that kicked off at 3:30. They've only won 13.

Cowboys wide receivers Dez Bryant and Brice Butler both said the sun's glare was a problem during Sunday's game. Both dropped passes because of the glare during the 28-17 win over the Kansas City Chiefs.

Jones later added: "The sun has not been a factor at all in any win or loss we've had in that stadium."