Former Cowboys receiver Terrell Owens was the headline at Ticketstock 2016 over the weekend. Here's some things the always entertaining wideout had to say about his time in Dallas:

On his memories of Dallas:

"This is a place where Jerry Jones gave me an opportunity to extend my career. I told him, I remember, at the press conference to get your popcorn ready. I just wanted to come in and try to do whatever I could try and get the team to where it hadn't been in a while, and that was obviously to the playoffs. We didn't win a championship, but I just tried to come in and do what I'd been doing throughout my career and that was bring some energy to the team, come out and play at a high level and play the best brand of football that I knew how."

On perceived tension with Bill Parcells:

"Maybe he had tension with me, but I didn't have any with him. I think as things kind of unfolded I didn't realize that he had the feelings that he did toward me. I guess I was just oblivious to it. I really didn't pay too much attention to it until afterwards. Other than that, I came in and I thought he was on board with me being here in Dallas, but that didn't seem to be the case. But Jerry Jones runs the team, he brought me in to help and that's what I did."

Did it bother him that Parcells didn't call him by his name?:

"Not at all. That says a lot about him more so than it says about me. First and foremost, I never really thought I would play beyond the collegiate level. When I came from Benjamin Russell High School in Alexander City, Alabama, I wasn't heavily recruited out of high school. I only went there [Chattanooga] because they were recruiting another receiver on our high school team. Things just kind of unfolded, things started to happen while I was in Chattanooga. My freshman year I really didn't play much and then I went home for the off-season, the summer, I got myself bigger, faster and stronger. The sophomore year was somewhat of my breakout year. Things kind of just started to get better and better. I played basketball there; three years of basketball at UT-Chattanooga as well as football. I consider myself an athlete. [Parcells] should have just called me 'The Athlete' because that's how I feel like I was able to be as good as I was on the football field, because I wasn't just a football player.