Luminaries: 3 Cowboys who shined brightest in victory over Bucs

The sky was clear on Monday night, allowing the Star’s stars to shine brightly in the wild-card round. | From @cdpiglet

The Dallas Cowboys exercised a lot of demons Monday night in Tampa Bay. They went into the game 1-4 when playing on grass. They were 1-6 wearing the navy blue jerseys in the playoffs. The team had never beaten Tom Brady, and they hadn’t won a road playoff game since Jimmy Johnson yelled, “How bout them Cowboys?’ after a win in San Francisco all the way back in 1992.

The team that had back-to-back 12-win seasons for the first time since 1996, cleared all those records off the slate with a dominating performance against the Buccaneers. Dallas had the edge in time of possession, turnovers, and total yards. They had less penalties, allowed less sacks, and beat Tampa in almost every way possible.

Minus four missed extra points and a failed onside kick recovery, the Cowboys played a pretty flawless game, which allows for multiple options for the three stars of the game, but who stepped up the most for a Dallas playoff victory?

Position grades, snap counts from Cowboys dominant dispatching of Tampa Bay

The Cowboys would’ve made the Dean’s List with their positional grades against Tampa Bay, but the special teams’ outing shut that down. | From @CDBurnett7

The Dallas Cowboys delivered one of their best performances of the season in Monday night’s wild-card round win. They shut out the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the first half before sealing the victory early in the fourth quarter. The 31-14 final, impressive on its own, may not accurately portray the dominance Dallas displayed in what could’ve been Tom Brady’s final game.

Quarterback Dak Prescott was the star of the show, delivering a signature performance, but it was a team effort to exorcise the team’s road playoff curse with their first such win since 1993. With the San Francisco 49ers next on the menu, here’s the positional and coaching grades from the Cowboys excellence after worries in Week 18 seem eons in the past.

Watch: Goat comedian clowns GOAT Brady in Cowboys-Bucs recap

Comedian @MrGo30 adds the Buccaneers to his long list of fried victims. Check out his wild-card short and other Cowboys-related videos. | From @KDDrummondNFL

Even with all its issues, we still can’t believe Twitter is free. You can find everything on Twitter following the Cowboys’ 31-14 domination of Tom Brady and the Buccaneers. From current and former player reactions, to fans and media chiming in and highlights, it’s all there. Also there, is skit comedian Brendan Clinton, aka Coach 30.

No one cuts up a losing NFL or CFB team like Clinton with his cast of characters. Playing coaches, players and sometimes media personalities like this week with Stephen A. Smith, if your team rode away from the stadium on the struggle bus, chances are he’s going to light you up. This week, Brady catches heat along with other Tampa Bay players, and then check out other Cowboys-related videos from the past couple of seasons.

‘Dak faked out the entire state of Florida’ and other great Cowboys-Bucs tweets

Here’s how Twitter responded to the Cowboys taking down Tom Brady and company. | From @ProfessorO_NFL

“How bout them Cowboys?” The Cowboys showed up on Monday night and left no doubt that they were the better team with a statement victory over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and legendary QB Tom Brady.

Scoring 31 points against a tough defense is impressive. Doing that on the road in the playoffs is even more impressive.  The defense set the tone early and suffocated the Bucs offense forcing multiple frustating possessions for Tom Brady and didn’t ease their grip until the game clock hit zero.

The Offense started out slow for two possessions before Dak Prescott and company exploded with multiple 80+ yard touchdown drives. The passing attack was surgical and Tony Pollard was the leading rusher.

Twitter reactions are always fun but they are even better after a Cowboys playoff victory. Without further adeiu, here is the best reactions to the Cowboys 31-14 win over the Bucs.

Cowboys injuries: Parsons, Kearse give positive updates; team ‘certainly concerned’ for Jason Peters

Micah Parsons and Jayron Kearse brushed off Monday’s in-game injuries, but Jerry Jones voiced concern for 40-year-old Jason Peters’ hip. | From @ToddBrock24f7

The Cowboys went into Raymond James Stadium feeling very good about their team’s health, with several marquee players back in the lineup.

After silencing the cannons in a dominant 31-14 win over the Buccaneers to advance to the next round, they left Tampa with a few new questions about who’s going to be available in next weekend’s divisional matchup.

Three notable Cowboys players either left the game early or were obviously dinged during the Monday night win. Two of them gave encouraging updates on their own health following the team’s first road playoff victory in 30 years.

Safety Jayron Kearse was a significant contributor to the clampdown on Bucs quarterback Tom Brady, recording three tackles, defending three passes, and intercepting an end zone strike to kill a Tampa Bay scoring drive. And in a defense that promised to show some new looks after a few weeks of late-season tinkering, Kearse found himself lining up at several different positions on the field.

But he was forced to exit the contest in the third quarter after suffering an apparent left knee injury. Kearse needed considerable assistance from team trainers just to get to the sideline, and he did not return to action.

On the first series with him off the field, Tampa Bay went 95 yards on 10 plays and scored their first touchdown on the night.

Despite what looked to be a severe injury, though, he hinted that he’ll be fine to face the 49ers on Sunday.

“It’s feeling all right,” Kearse told reporters at his locker following the win. “I’ll be good. It’s feeling all right. It’ll be all right.”

Newly-named All-Pro Micah Parsons also gave fans a scare.

After the final play of the first half, the linebacker/edge rusher was slow to get up with what appeared to be a leg injury, eventually limping toward the tunnel and stopping en route to massage the area around his right knee.

Replays seemed to show Parsons’s shin taking a hit, although some reports classified it as an ankle issue. Either way, Parsons played on, missing only three defensive snaps on the night and turning in a massive stat line.

He, too, gave a positive update to reporters afterward.

“I’m feeling good,” Parsons said. “I feel I finished the game well. Continued to get my pressure, continued to keep going, understanding the circumstances I was faced with. I’m excited for next week, excited for the matchup.”

Offensive lineman Jason Peters, however, may be less of a sure thing.

The veteran got the wild-card start at left tackle, but hobbled off the field in the second quarter. His absence, judged to be a hip injury, caused a shuffle along the line as rookie Tyler Smith slid over from the left guard position and Connor McGovern was forced to abandon the backfield blocking role he had been filling to take over at guard.

At halftime, Peters was ruled out for the rest of the game.

By Tuesday morning, Cowboys owner Jerry Jones was trying to stay optimistic about the 40-year-old’s status.

“I certainly am concerned. I don’t know any more than we knew when we left there last night. We’ve got a little hope that it might not be serious,” he told 105.3 The Fan in referring to Peters. “But it’s important to realize that he’s not sitting here in his rookie year.”

Jones commented on the offensive line that started the game for Dallas, noting that Peters, Zack Martin, Tyron Smith, and Tyler Smith made for a formidable front… for the four series they were together.

“You can make the case that you’ve got four Hall of Famers there by the time it shakes out, at various stages of their career. That’s pretty solid to be there at this time of the year.”

Tuesday could be an important day, though, in determining whether that foursome will be there when the Cowboys take the field in San Francisco on Sunday.

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4 Takeaways: Yippie Brett Maher lone sad face as Cowboys’ coaches come through

Dak Prescott and Kellen Moore led the way for the Dallas Cowboys in their 31-14 win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the wild card matchup. | From @BenGrimaldi

It’s just one game, but the Dallas Cowboys exorcised a lot of demons in their 31-14 blowout win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. A wild-card win isn’t the ultimate goal but the Cowboys showed their mettle in winning a playoff game against one of the league’s best quarterbacks ever to wear a uniform.

Yet the better quarterback in this contest was the one with the star on his helmet. Cowboys QB Dak Prescott outplayed his legendary counterpart in an exquisite performance to help end several franchise droughts. The narrative that Dallas couldn’t win a playoff game on the road, or on grass, or in navy uniforms, or beat Tom Brady were all dispelled. Too many people forgot the Cowboys won 12 games this season, while the Buccaneers struggled to win just eight.

Those sins of the past had nothing to do with what would happen in this playoff game, and the Cowboys proved that this team wouldn’t let history decide the outcome. Here are four more takeaways from the Cowboys’ win over the Buccaneers.

Prescott’s amazing performance clears Josh Allen, closes in on Mahomes

The Cowboys QB wasn’t just the player of the game, he achieved things few others have. Get your highlights and internet-argument ammo here. | From @TimLettiero

The Dallas Cowboys are on their way to San Francisco after taking down Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in emphatic fashion. Simply put, everything other than the yippee kicker clicked on all cylinders Monday night. From the very beginning, the defense never relinquished an inch of ground and the offense quickly put their foot on the Bucs’ neck.

There was not much more that Dallas could’ve done to quiet their doubters and it was all led by the franchise QB1 himself, Dak Prescott. There’s been much talk about what kind of season Prescott has had and what his ceiling is, but at the end of the night his position among league quarterbacks was pretty clear.

What we learned from Cowboys crushing of Tampa Bay

The Dallas Cowboys taught the world three major things in their takedown of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. | From @ReidDHanson

There weren’t many good takeaways from the Cowboys Week 18 loss to Washington. The coaching staff didn’t strategize, the players didn’t execute and general effort was mailed in. In Monday night’s wild-card matchup in Tampa, Dallas provided some mighty takeaways.

The Cowboys weren’t getting much love by the talking heads before the game. Dallas was being treated more like the No. 5 seed and less like the 12-win team which boasted four more victories on the season than their Monday Night Football hosts. That didn’t stop Dallas from putting on a clinic, 31-14, teaching the NFL this season’s Dallas Cowboys are different from years prior. Here’s what we learned.

Cowboys players react to advancing in the postseason

A review of how players and the Cowboys’ team account responded to Monday night’s 31-14 win in the wild-card round in Tampa Bay. | From @KDDrummondNFL

Head coach Mike McCarthy made sure his players knew that none of the failures of previous teams were on them. The Cowboys’ teams that lost six games in a row to Tom Brady before this season started? Wasn’t them. The 30 years worth of clubs that hadn’t won a road playoff game? Irrelevant to their lives. He almost assuredly told them that the Week 1 and Week 18 losses didn’t make a lick of difference on Monday night.

And they listened. Dallas’ defense has an unreal energy from their first snaps and once the offense calmed down they began to roll as well. Everything but the kicking game fired on all cylinders in the wild-card round, getting Dallas to the divisional round for the first time since 2018. Here’s how the players responded on Twitter to the victory.

Cowboys exorcise demons as Prescott dominates Brady, Bucs in 31-14 wild-card win

The Cowboys were sick of hearing they’d never beaten Brady, so they decided to beat the brakes off him. Here’s the instant analysis. | From @KDDrummondNFL

They’d had enough. The 2022 Dallas Cowboys may have lost to Tom Brady and the Buccaneers in Week 1, but they were sick and tired of hearing the narratives. After a lackluster showing in Week 18 when they still had a longshot to win the division, the calls got loud. Dallas hadn’t played well down the stretch of the season and the final few weeks of the season set them up to face their demons.

Not only were they going to have to go on the road for their first playoff game after finishing with 12 wins. But the Cowboys had to go on grass where they were 1-4, and they had to do it against the greatest QB of all time who they had never beaten. Well, they beat the living daylights out of his squad. Dak Prescott had the playoff game of his life and the Cowboys emerged victorious.