Cowboys’ Dak Prescott on importance of Week 11 Vikings battle: ‘This is a playoff game’

It’s only November, but the Cowboys QB is already in triple-dog dare, do-or-die mode as the Cowboys travel north to face the 8-1 Vikings. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Words matter. And certain words raise the stakes exponentially just for having been uttered.

Players talk about big games. They talk about important games. They refer to key games, statement games, and even must-win games.

But when a team’s leader uses the P-word in Week 11, it’s like Ralphie’s schoolyard friends invoking the hallowed “triple-dog dare” in terms of conveying the critical nature of what’s about to take place.

“This is a playoff game,” Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott told reporters this week ahead of their meeting with the NFC North-leading Vikings.

“You’ve got a team with one loss, and then us coming in, coming off of one. We know what this means. We know what this means in the division, we know what this means in the NFC.”

A victory in Minnesota would put the Cowboys at 7-3, with a chance to move to 8-3 if they can win their Thanksgiving contest just four days later. That would keep them within striking distance of Philadelphia, with that rematch coming at home on Christmas Eve.

A loss against the Vikings, however, sends them to 6-4 and scrambling for answers as the much-improved Giants come to town, looking to deliver a knockout blow in front of a nationwide holiday audience.

The Cowboys have beaten the Vikings in four of their last five meetings. And they’ve won in Minneapolis two years running, though neither of those games even saw Prescott on the field.

So yes, the Dallas defense is rightfully under fire for blowing a 14-point fourth-quarter lead to Green Bay and giving up 200+ rushing yards per game in their last two outings. But Prescott knows Sunday is also an opportunity for him to get back on track, too, after missing Weeks 2 through 6 with a fractured thumb on his throwing hand and coming back to mixed reviews since.

Prescott stands 23rd among the league’s passers in completion percentage. While his current 63.8% doesn’t seem that far off his career mark of 66.5%, it is a notable dip. His cumulative number would have him outside the top 10 by just 0.2%.

His passing yards per game are down as well: 259.8 through his first six seasons, but just 214.0 so far in 2022. And his four interceptions this year? That equals all the picks he threw in his entire 16-game rookie campaign.

The Cowboys’ $40 million man is still unquestionably the leader of this team (both now and for the foreseeable future), but he’s also clearly rusty and not in sync with his receiving corps.

“It’s five games in [to the season] for me,” Prescott explained. “Some things are just getting on the same page, making sure guys understand. And they do. We obviously hit a lot of it in the game and continue it throughout the week, just understanding where I’m at in my trust in them and making sure that they feel the same thing and are seeing the same thing. But obviously [we’re] not 5-0 in those games, so damn sure not as clean or as good as I’d want it.”

Prescott looks to start turning the ship around with Sunday’s visit to the home of the Vikings.

“It’s about going up there, putting our best foot forward, and making sure that we put our best performance out there, just show the team that we are, in all aspects of our game.”

And if it’s really a game with playoff-level importance, then it’s time for Prescott and the Cowboys to collectively man up and stick their tongues to that frozen flagpole.

[listicle id=705436]

[listicle id=705462]

[lawrence-newsletter]

O’Connell, Moore’s script-writing among 3 keys to victory for Cowboys-Vikings contest

Stick to the script! But it better be a good one as Dallas needs to get early momentum according to @cdpiglet’s 3 keys to victory.

The Dallas Cowboys and Minnesota Vikings enter Week 11 with opposing impressions about how Week 10 ended. In what might have been the game of the year so far, the Vikings started off looking like 7-1 frauds. They had already lost to the Philadelphia Eagles, and were down 27-10 to the Buffalo Bills in the second half, with Kirk Cousins having thrown two interceptions. Minnesota earned a furious comeback win on the road that included a fourth-down failure, forcing a fumble and recovering for a TD, allowing a game-tying drive with under a minute on the clock and finally an overtime win.

The Cowboys flipped that script, allowing a 14-point fourth-quarter lead to evaporate, then failing on a fourth down in OT only to watch another game-winning drive by Aaron Rodgers send them home dejected. Will momentum continue the way Week 10 ended, or can the Cowboys take down the Vikings’ ship for a third straight time? Here are the keys to answering that question for Dallas and Minnesota.

Cowboys hit by seasonal bug; key DL and team’s lone punter questionable for Sunday

Quinton Bohanna has missed 2 straight days with an illness but is expected to play Sunday; Bryan Anger sat out on Friday. | From @ToddBrock24f7

NFL players may seem nearly invincible, capable of superhuman feats as well as astonishing recovery times.

But even the most talented athletes on the planet, apparently, are susceptible to cold and flu season.

The Cowboys’ end-of-week practice report lists six key players as questionable for Sunday’s matchup with the 8-1 Vikings. While Ezekiel Elliott, DeMarcus Lawrence, Anthony Barr, and Anthony Brown are considered iffy based on injuries, two of their teammates got the same designation for something else.

Nose tackle Quinton Bohanna and punter Bryan Anger sat out Friday’s walkthrough due to “illness.”

While the exact nature of the ailments wasn’t specified, Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy, in his press conference earlier in the day, chalked it up to basic winter crud.

“Some stuff going around, you know?” he told reporters.

Then he noticeably sniffled and raised his own hand. “It happens.”

Does that make McCarthy questionable, too? The coach had to miss a late-season game against the Saints in 2021 after testing positive for COVID; would he be ruled out of the trip north to the Twin Cities because of a wintertime bug?

“No,” McCarthy scoffed. “Everybody else in my house has it, but I’m not allowed to have it.”

Bohanna’s massive 360-pound frame would figure to be among the keys to stuffing the Vikings’ run game and lead back Dalvin Cook. While the Kentucky product has now missed two straight days of practice, McCarthy said he expects his eight-game starter to suit up again in Week 11.

Friday’s absence was the first for the veteran Anger, who is currently averaging 42.5 net yards per punt and was last season’s Pro Bowl specialist at the position. He is the only punter the team has on the roster and is also their holder on field goal and PAT attempts.

Cowboys fans will hope that Bohanna and Anger are able to load up on chicken noodle soup and vitamin C in time to sufficiently rebound for Sunday’s late-afternoon kickoff.

[listicle id=705520]

[listicle id=705489]

[listicle id=705462]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Which Kirk Cousins the Cowboys defense sees in Week 11 could decide key game

The Vikings QB is 2-8 all-time vs. Dallas, despite riding a hot streak into a key NFC matchup. The Cowboys look to impart a history lesson. | From @ToddBrock24f7

The Cowboys know what they’re in for when Vikings wide receiver Justin Jefferson steps onto the field. Dallas safety Jayron Kearse this week called him “the best receiver in the league, hands down,” and Jefferson’s ridiculous catch against Buffalo last Sunday backs up that claim.

The Cowboys are even more familiar with the guy who’ll be throwing Jefferson the ball. But what they’ll get from the Minnesota quarterback on Sunday is a far bigger roll of the dice.

Which Kirk Cousins will Dallas see when they visit U.S. Bank Stadium?

The iced-out Captain Kirk who danced shirtless on the plane ride home after yet another win earlier this month?

Or the dorky dad-to-be who nearly missed a cardboard target from three yards away at his son’s gender reveal party?

The answer to that could dictate whether the Cowboys get their playoff pursuit back on track. To do it, they’ll need to take down a red-hot 8-1 Vikings squad who has put quite an arsenal of offensive playmakers at their quarterback’s disposal.

“Kirk Cousins is playing as well as I’ve seen him play,” McCarthy said Friday morning on 105.3 The Fan. “His consistency and his efficiency are both very high.”

Having surefire Pro Bowler Justin Jefferson and running back Dalvin Cook- currently seventh in the league in rushing yards per game- certainly helps in that regard. But the coach also cited veteran wide receiver Adam Thielen and newly-acquired tight end T.J. Hockenson as important complementary pieces that give Cousins plenty of options with the ball.

“This is a well, well-balanced offense,” said McCarthy admired.

The Cowboys know Cousins intimately after his six seasons in the NFC East with Washington. Subsequent meetings with the Vikings in every season since 2019 (the quarterback’s second with the club) have only added to the two parties’ shared history, though that history shows itself to be decidedly one-sided.

Cousins is 2-8 all-time versus Dallas.

That’s the most losses he’s been handed by any single opponent; no other team has beaten the 11th-year man more than five times.

And oddsmakers don’t exactly love him to buck that trend this week; Minnesota is an exceedingly rare home underdog for this Sunday afternoon’s clash.

If Vegas doesn’t buy into the Cousins boom of 2022, it may be partly because he’s traditionally been a bust against good clubs.

The Michigan State product has a career record of just 10-40 versus teams with a winning record, per David Helman of Fox Sports.

The Vikings kicked off 2022 with a decisive win over Green Bay (a feat that looks less impressive the more the Packers play against anyone not wearing a star on their hats). After a Week 2 stumble versus Philadelphia, Minnesota hasn’t lost again, with victories along the way over Detroit, New Orleans, Chicago, Arizona, and Washington.

Not exactly the cream of the crop.

But seven straight wins is nothing to sneeze at, and they did beat Miami and Buffalo in there, too.

The Vikings are doing plenty right, and Cousins has been a key factor.

He currently stands in ninth place in the league in passing yards per game; his 261.8 average is better than Jalen Hurts and Aaron Rodgers, both of whom defeated Dallas this year. It’s also better than Dak Prescott’s mark entering Week 11.

So, again: which Kirk Cousins will the Cowboys face in Minneapolis this weekend?

Will it be the one who’s led his team to a league-leading five game-winning drives already?

Or the one who’s thrown eight interceptions, tied for third-most among all NFL passers?

Dallas linebacker Anthony Barr, who saw Cousins every day in practice for four seasons in the purple and gold, believes if the Cowboys defense- the league’s sack leaders- can pressure Cousins, that interception total might go up.

“Whoever gets to him, I’ll be happy,” Barr said this week of his ex-teammate, who has been sacked 20 times in nine outings. “Affect him a little bit, and hopefully he’ll throw us one.”

The Cowboys secondary, led by cornerback Trevon Diggs, will be on high alert for errant throws as they work to contain Jefferson, Cook, Thielen, and Hockenson.

“We’ve got great guys, too. Tre is playing at a high level, all our defensive guys are playing at high level. It’s going to be a battle,” cornerback Anthony Brown commented.

Cousins- and how effective the Dallas defense is in forcing the lesser version of him to come out- could go a long way in deciding who wins that battle.

“He’s a competitor,” Brown acknowledged. “Kirk’s going to fight to the end. He gives his guys a chance.”

But if the Cowboys can rattle Cousins the way they have in years past, he could just as easily give Dallas a chance… to break that purple winning streak.

[listicle id=705520]

[listicle id=705462]

[listicle id=705464]

[lawrence-newsletter]

NFL Week 11 parlay: Let’s make some money

Analyzing NFL Week 11 betting odds and lines, with predictions and picks for the best parlay bet to make.

[mm-video type=video id=01gj3h56hnf9z4eaf7av playlist_id=none player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01gj3h56hnf9z4eaf7av/01gj3h56hnf9z4eaf7av-c630d90758b33a67dd14e62a422c34f4.jpg]

Welcome back to the weekly parlay play. Let us have some fun and win some money. With some strong teams coming off bye weeks. Some games stick out to me for a parlay this week. Other games, not so much.

After looking at Tipico Sportsbook’s NFL Week 11 odds, here is the latest “Let’s make some money” NFL parlay bet to cash in on among SportbookWire’s NFL expert picks and predictions.

FOOTBALL NEVER STOPS
Live games, analysis and more 7 days a week: Get ESPN+

NFL Week 11: Let’s make some money parlay

Odds provided by Tipico Sportsbook; access USA TODAY Sports Scores and Sports Betting Odds hub for a full list. Lines last updated Thursday at 3:30 p.m. ET. All games Sunday and ET unless noted.

Leg 1: Panthers at Ravens OVER 42 (-110) – 1 p.m. (FOX)

While I wanted to take the Ravens here, I think the -12 is just a bit too high of a risk. Instead, I will go with the total of 42 which is a few points too low.

The Panthers are not good. But the Ravens defense has been anything but shut down this season. Even with the struggles facing the Panthers, they should be able to get to 20 in this game.

While the Ravens are 6-3, they have led every game this season by a minimum of 10 points at 1 point or another. They will do so again here, and they should win by such a margin. With reports of TE Mark Andrews practicing and coming back for this game, Lamar Jackson will have his most trusted receiver and he will be able to throw to him as well as run the ball against this weak Panthers defense.

Saying this and thinking the Panthers, under QB Baker Mayfield should get to 20, I see the Ravens hitting 30 and easily going over this total of 42.

Claim your risk-free bet up to $350. Catch the excitement and start betting with Tipico Sportsbook! New customer offer in CO and NJ. 21+, see Tipico.com for Terms and Conditions. Bet now!

Leg 2: BEARS +3.5 (-119) at Falcons – 1 p.m. (FOX)

The Falcons, after going 5-0 against the spread (ATS) to start the season, have failed to cover in their last 5 games. This game will make it 6.

The Bears have scored at least 29 points in 3 straight games. They have become the only team in history to do so while losing all 3 games. The offense, and especially Justin Fields, is finally coming together. After 178 yards rushing against the Miami Dolphins, Fields had 147 against the Detroit Lions. He will be able to run again against a Falcons defense who allows both run plays and pass plays in bunches.

Although the records do not show it, the Bears have been playing better than the Falcons of late. The offense will continue to thrive while the defense will do just enough to get by in this matchup. As +3.5-point underdogs, I like the Bears to cover and win. But for the purposes of better chances of winning my parlay, I will take the points being given by the book. Give me the Bears +3.5 (-119) for the 2nd leg of my parlay.

Play our free daily Pick’em Challenge and win! Play now!

Leg 3: BENGALS -4 (-107) at Steelers – 4:25 p.m. (CBS)

This makes me a bit nervous. T.J. Watt is back and the defense for Pittsburgh shut out New Orleans in the 2nd half last week. But the Bengals are not the Saints, and it will be far more difficult to shut down the likes of Joe Mixon and Joe Burrow.

While Ja’Marr Chase is still out, the Bengals still have WRs Tee Higgins and Tyler Boyd to catch passes as well as TE Hayden Hurst, who will be valuable against a Steelers defense tryingt to get to Burrow early and often.

The Steelers offense, bad at its best of times, got even worse with the departure of Chase Claypool to Chicago. Opposing defenses can focus more on Diontae Johnson. Najee Harris has not had the breakout season many in the fantasy community thought was coming in 2022. This makes Pittsburgh a 1-dimensional offense and that dimension is not a solid 1.

Although these games are usually close, I will take my chances that Cincinnati can do enough to win by 4 and take the Bengals -4 (-111) to finish my parlay.

Parlay payout: Bet $10 to win $65.90 (profit $55.90).

Try out the USA TODAY Parlay Calculator.

Leg 4-*: COWBOYS -2 (-110) at Vikings – 4:25 p.m. (CBS)

*-If you want to add a 4th play to this parlay:

The Vikings have been playing with fool’s gold this season. Four of their victories have been against teams starting backup quarterbacks and one other game, last Sunday, against an ailing Josh Allen.

With Dak Prescott back and healthy for Dallas, the Vikings luck could end.

The Dallas defense with Micah Parsons is flying high this season. It has been able to stop the run and slow down the pass game of opponents. Justin Jefferson is great, but with Dallas being able to limit Dalvin Cook, Jefferson can not do it by himself, and Dallas will be able to come into Minnesota and walk out victorious.

Parlay payout: Bet $10 to win $125.80 (profit $115.80).

*-If you want to substitute one of the above, here’s another option:

Commanders at TEXANS (+145) – 1 p.m. (FOX)

Washington comes into this game off a high after handing Philadelphia its 1st loss of the season. This will be a classic letdown spot for a team and Houston could pounce on it. This is a risky wager, which is why it is only an optional play. But with Houton looking to gain a 2nd victory of the season, this could be its best chance to do so against an overhyped Washington team on a short week.

More NFL Week 11 picks and predictions

Want action on any of these games or other sports matchups? Bet legally online with a trusted partner: Tipico Sportsbook, SportsbookWire’s official sportsbook partner in CO and NJ. Bet now!

If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, access all of our content at SportsbookWire.com and BetFTW. Please gamble responsibly.

Follow Dominick Petrillo on Twitter. Follow SportsbookWire on Twitter and like us on Facebook.

Access more NFL coverage:

BetFTW | TheHuddle Fantasy Football | BearsWire | BengalsWire | BillsWire | BroncosWire | BrownsWire | BucsWire | CardsWire | ChargersWire | ChiefsWire | ColtsWire | CommandersWire | CowboysWire | DolphinsWire | EaglesWire | FalconsWire | GiantsWire | JaguarsWire | JetsWire | LionsWire | NinersWire | PackersWire | PanthersWire | PatriotsWire | RaidersWire | RamsWire | RavensWire | SaintsWire | SeahawksWire | SteelersWire | TexansWireTitansWire | VikingsWire | DraftWire | TouchdownWire | ListWire

[lawrence-newsletter]

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1367]

 

Justin Jefferson, yes, but so much more for Cowboys to know about Vikings

The top priority is obvious, but there’s plenty more to know about the upcoming opponent. @BenGrimaldi dives in.

The Dallas Cowboys are coming off a brutal overtime loss in Week 10, a game in which they held a 14-point lead heading into fourth quarter. It’s a tough one to swallow, but the Cowboys need to get right back up and face an 8-1 Minnesota Vikings coming off one of the best wins on the season (on the road over Buffalo).

Dallas needs to forget about what happened the week prior and focus their energy. It’s another road game and in one of the more difficult places to play in the league. A new week brings another chance to prove the Cowboys belong in the conversation with the top teams in the league. A win against the Vikings would ease some of the sting, so in preparation here are six things to know about them.

Adaptation is sincerest form of flattening offense’s pulse for Cowboys’ Dan Quinn

The Dallas Cowboys defense is changing, not just from earlier in the year, but within games. @DailyGoonerRaf breaks down how Quinn adjusted to Vikings’ attack in Week 8.

Speed Kills.

It’s a time honored football maxim. In today’s game, speed of adaptation kills. Those clubs whose coordinators can quickly decipher what their opposition is doing to nullify their own game plan, then make changes, often wins.

We’ve analyzed the speed with which Dallas Cowboys offensive coordinator Kellen Moore can act, game to game and even series to series.  Today, we’re going to look at a small change that defensive coordinator Dan Quinn and his line coach Aden Durde made in the second half of Sunday Night’s win against the Vikings, and how it collared a Vikings offense that was threatening to pull away from the Cooper Rush-led Dallas attack.

It’s like deja vu all over again for 2021 Cowboys as Ezekiel Elliott invokes Emmitt Smith memories

The more things change, the more they stay the same. The era and game have shifted, but Cowboys RBs making incredible, clutch plays? Same. @DailyGoonerRaf breaks down Sunday’s big play and harks back to yesteryear.

Strange things are afoot at the Cowboys Circle K. Some eerie and cheery resemblances between the 2021 Cowboys incarnation and that last Dallas championship bunch from nearly 30 years ago are emerging. It’s easy to wave them off as coincidence, but sometimes those coincidences have too many matching parts to ignore.

Like this one from Sunday night’s game-winning drive.

The situation: 3rd-and-11 for the Cowboys at the Minnesota 20. Dallas has just been gifted five yards after a defensive delay of game penalty, making a 3rd-and-16 far more manageable. The Cowboys trail 16-13 with 1:04 to play and face a game-tying field goal attempt if they do not convert.

Minus green dot, Cowboys LB Micah Parsons named NFC Defensive Player of the Week

Micah Parsons wasn’t the defensive playcaller Sunday, but he became the first rookie ever to log double-digit tackles with 4 for loss. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Micah Parsons made some changes to his personal routine during the Cowboys’ bye week, like coming into work earlier to get a head start on his own game prep.

I just felt like I’ve got to do more,” he said.

He certainly did more on Sunday… but maybe because he was doing less.

The rookie linebacker was named NFC Defensive Player of the Week for his dominant performance in the Cowboys’ 20-16 win over the Vikings: ten tackles, an assist on another, a quarterback hit, four tackles for loss.

As per the team website, Parsons is the first rookie in NFL history to log double-digit tackles in a game and have four of them occur behind the line of scrimmage.

He was given the game ball for his efforts, a souvenir he carried with him all the way to the podium during his postgame remarks to reporters.

“I just felt like this is one of my better games I’ve played,” Parsons said after the victory. “Like I said during the week, when things aren’t going right, you’ve got to prepare different. So I think this week, I came in with the mindset like, ‘Sunday night, I’ve got to be the It Factor.’ It’s kind of what I expected, what I wanted to do today.”

There is obviously more to it than just setting an earlier alarm in the morning, but defensive coordinator Dan Quinn definitely noticed a renewed focus and energy from the 22-year-old in the week leading up to game time.

“I did see that, in fact,” Quinn said of Parsons’s mental shift. “I get in pretty early. I turn around and I saw him walking in next to me. So I said, ‘Okay, what have we got going on here?’ And he said, ‘I’m doing something. I’m changing some things.’ I said, ‘I love it, man.'”

The first-round draft pick has packed a lot into his first seven games at the pro level. After starting Week 1 at linebacker, the rookie moved to defensive end for his second and third outings to cover for missing teammates. He’s been asked to do a lot as a rookie, and he’s answered every call from the Dallas coaching staff.

In Week 8, though, they actually asked him to do just a little bit less.

Jayron Kearse wore the defensive playcaller’s “green dot” in Minnesota instead of Parsons. With the journeyman safety acting as the primary communicator in the huddle, Parsons was able to simplify his pre-snap routine in a way he previously couldn’t.

“What this did was let Micah Parsons be free, let Micah Parsons not think,” noted ex-NFL safety Ryan Clark on ESPN. “This is the best he’s played from the inside linebacker position. Micah Parsons got to bring this thing back to park ball. Run. And hit.”

Maybe it’s the green dot. Maybe it’s the earlier wake-up call. Maybe it’s an extra push that came from some self-scouting sessions. Parsons believes it’s all of the above.

“I would say it’s everything,” Parsons said. “It wouldn’t be just one particular thing. It’s everything we do: how you prepare, what you watch, how you practice, what time you come in, how you recover during the week. I think everything let me play how I usually play today.”

It is indeed a process. And by stripping the whole thing down and building it back more thoughtfully, Parsons and the coaching staff may have taken a leading candidate for Defensive Rookie of the Year… and made him even better for the Cowboys’ run to the playoffs.

“When you’re trying to improve,” Quinn explained, “one of the best things you need to learn how to do is put a process together; what is that step-by-step going to look like? It’s not just, ‘Hey, I’m going to wake up earlier.’ It’s: to do what when you get here? What are the processes? I knew when he got to the game, when you just feel that ready. I said, ‘Where did that come from?’ It was from the week. I said, ‘It was no surprise that you’re going to play well,’ and he certainly did.”

[listicle id=684820]

[listicle id=684766]

[listicle id=684734]

[lawrence-newsletter]

4 Takeaways: Cowboys flip script and prove they are more than just Prescott’s greatness

The Cowboys stole an unlikely win against the Vikings, changing the narrative on a franchise that has fallen into traps in recent years. | From @CDBurnett7

Odds didn’t favor the Dallas Cowboys with backup Cooper Rush making his first career start on the road against the Minnesota Vikings. Dallas didn’t care, stealing the game, 20-16, in U.S. Bank Stadium.

Rush, in relief for Dak Prescott who was ruled out prior to the game, totaled an impressive 325 passing yards and two touchdowns while turning the ball over twice with a fumble and interception. Thankfully, the Cowboys’ defense also rose to the occasion, forcing three-and-outs on short notice after the turnovers.

This was a game Dallas would’ve lost in the past, but there’s something to be said about the work head coach Mike McCarthy is doing, leading the Cowboys to a 6-1 start.

Dallas looked helpless in 2020 without Prescott, but they brushed it off on Sunday night. Perhaps, the Cowboys are brewing something special in 2021. Here are four takeaways from the unlikely win in Minnesota.