What We Learned: Cowboys rookie DT is ready, WR rotation tough to crack

If the dress rehearsal is to show how ready for the season a team is, the Cowboys stood to learn a few things about themselves in their third preseason tilt. | From @BenGrimaldi

The Dallas Cowboys are now 0-3 on the preseason after losing to the Houston Texans by the score of 20-14. They’ll have one more chance to get a win on their exhibition slate when they face off against the Jacksonville Jaguars before the regular season begins.

Losing isn’t fun, but the evaluations are more important than the team’s win-loss record in the preseason. The Cowboys did some good things in the loss, yet they still couldn’t come away with a win. Here’s what we learned in the latest preseason adventure for the Cowboys.

News: COVID forced late shakeup for Cowboys before Texans game, Dak’s progress, game coverage

The Cowboys were a mixed bag in the Houston loss, while COVID concerns caused a late swap for a key coach, and Dak Prescott aced pregame. | From @ToddBrock24f7

The Cowboys were calling their preseason meeting with Houston a “dress rehearsal” for the regular season. Saturday night showed that some of the cast in Dallas isn’t quite ready for the curtain to go up on this show. The first half provided some encouraging moments from Cooper Rush, Tony Pollard, Cedrick Wilson, and the Cowboys defense, but Ben DiNucci’s poor performance throughout the second half overshadowed the good stuff in a 20-14 loss.

The best bit of news from Saturday night? Dak Prescott’s warmup workout should give Cowboys fans a boost. The quarterback was nearly perfect, despite reports floating around from one notable insider who is questioning his health. Speaking of health, Dan Quinn and Carlos Watkins are suddenly in the COVID-19 spotlight in what will be a developing story over the next few days and weeks. All that, plus a profile on perhaps the most mysterious Cowboys player currently on the roster, clues from Stephen Jones about the backup quarterback situation, Jason Witten kicks off his Friday night football gig, and Emmitt Smith looks to help others lead the field in his latest sporting venture. Here are the News and Notes from a busy Saturday.

Winners and Losers: Cowboys QBs separate themselves in loss, a 5th WR emerges?

Cooper Rush and Ben DiNucci lead the winners and losers from the Dallas Cowboys’ preseason loss to the Houston Texans. | From @NoHuddle

The Dallas Cowboys extend their “meaningless” losing streak to three straight games after falling to the Houston Texans 20-14 in what was considered their dress rehearsal. The performances Saturday night would be best described as a mixed bag for a team that couldn’t score in the second half. As always, there are winners and there are losers, so it’s time to dive in.

Ben DiNucci’s 3 second-half INTs sink Cowboys in 20-14 loss to Texans

The Dallas defense played well without its coordinator, but QB Ben DiNucci’s decision-making and turnovers gave Houston the Governor’s Cup. | From @ToddBrock24f7

For one half of preseason football, things were clicking for the Cowboys. Cooper Rush had led the offense on a pair of touchdown drives- after Garrett Gilbert was ineffective over the first two series- and perhaps given himself a leg up over Gilbert for the backup quarterback job. The defense, meanwhile, had kept Houston mostly bottled up, save for an opening possession that started practically in the Cowboys’ red zone.

But after the intermission, it was Ben DiNucci time. The second-year passer out of James Madison responded with three interceptions, including one that was returned for a touchdown that tied the game and another that ended a potential game-winning drive late. One has to wonder if Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy will finally give up on DiNucci after the dreadful performance in which he made several poor throws and exhibited even poorer decision-making.

The defense, meanwhile, showed improvement- despite being without their defensive coordinator. Dan Quinn left the stadium prior to kickoff, following COVID-19 protocols, according to the team. Secondary coach Joe Whitt Jr. took over defensive play-calling duties from the booth. The unit responded by holding the Texans to just that one offensive touchdown (on a short field) and two field goals. The defense also showed up on third downs, allowing Houston to convert just one all night.

But in the end, turnovers doomed Dallas. If the third preseason game was the “dress rehearsal” for the regular season, the Cowboys coaching staff will have to consider ordering a wardrobe overhaul for at least one of their backup passers. The next wave of roster cuts comes Tuesday, with the final preseason game next Sunday versus Jacksonville.

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