The Dallas Cowboys have become a juggernaut at AT&T Stadium under head coach Mike McCarthy and quarterback Dak Prescott. This year, they have won their five home games by a combined score of 205 to 60, have never scored under 30 points, have three games scoring over 40, and have never allowed more than 17. Prescott hasn’t even attempted 20 fourth-quarter passes total in those five contests.
Dallas utilized the bye week well, switching the offensive game plan to feature pre-snap motion and shifts. They were at the bottom of the league before the bye week and have been in the middle of the pack since. They used shift or motion on a season-high 76% of their snaps versus the Washington Commanders.
Prescott has thrown for 312 yards per game in his last six outings while completing over 70% of his passes. He has 18 touchdown passes to only two interceptions and a passer rating of 122.6. He has now thrown 16 touchdowns on vertical routes, and 14 of those have been since Week 8. There isn’t a quarterback playing at that level besides him.
The Seattle Seahawks will be the first team since the 1-0 New York Jets in the Cowboys home opener to come in with an above-.500 record, at 6-5. This game will test Dallas’ home dominance more than any this season. The Cowboys will need to accomplish these specific tasks to keep the Seahawks from pulling off a significant upset at AT&T Stadium.