Cowboys LB Sean Lee to weigh future: ‘I’ve been so, so lucky’

The 34-year-old was reflective after Sunday’s season-ending loss, but he’s not ready to make a decision about continuing his playing career.

Sometimes it’s what is said. Sometimes it’s what is not said. Sometimes it’s how a question is answered. Sometimes it’s what’s offered when there’s no question at all.

The interviews that players do with reporters in the moments following a game can be a tricky business. Win or lose, there’s recapping what just happened on the field, but there’s also plenty worth talking about that’s part of the bigger picture. The things that make up a stretch of games. The things that make up a season. The things that make up a career.

And whether or not it’s over.

Linebacker Sean Lee wanted to talk about the game on Sunday. He dissected the Cowboys’ 23-19 season-ending loss to the Giants in the analytical way that has made Lee a team leader over his ten seasons on the field. He talked about the confusion over Wayne Gallman’s controversial fumble in the final two minutes. He talked about the defense’s slow start in allowing a New York touchdown on the game’s opening drive. He talked about how the officiating seemed lopsided early. He praised his teammates for their fight and called the snuffing of the team’s slim playoff chances “heartbreaking.”

Lee was methodical and measured in his answers, as he typically is. His is a mind that thinks in Xs and Os, recalling the details of the in-game situations with an exacting clarity that seemingly makes him a prime candidate for a coaching position whenever he decides to hang up his cleats.

So of course, the 34-year-old was also asked if that decision- to retire as a player- is forthcoming this offseason.

“I love this team. I love this organization. I love playing the game,” Lee told media members after Sunday’s loss. “As you get older, it is what it is: you get older and you question things. I still think I have a lot to give, but at the same point, you acknowledge as you get older, physically, things change. I’ll take time, I’ll talk to the family and really think it through. I’ve been so lucky to be part of this. I love all my teammates. To be able to play has been a complete dream. And to give it up is not something that’s easy. You want to win a Super Bowl. You love playing, you love practicing day in and day out. It’s a harder decision than I thought it would be. So we’ll see. We’ll see what happens, and I’ll take some time. But I’ve been so, so lucky and so blessed.”

That’s a lot of reflection on the topic all balled up in one answer. But that’s to be expected; it’s not the first time Lee has wrestled with walking away. The two-time Pro Bowler seriously contemplated retiring after the 2018 season, when a loss in the divisional round ended the Cowboys’ playoff run. He said then that he wanted to talk with his family before deciding whether to come back for 2019.

Lee did return, and even approached the front office with a plan for a restructured deal and pay cut to stay with the team in a reduced role supporting younger linebackers Jaylon Smith and Leighton Vander Esch.

For the former second-round draft pick who obsessively studies game film, it’s that fresh look from a different vantage point that helps him come up with a plan of attack. And that’s true whether he’s reading an opposing quarterback or determining the next step of his football journey.

“I’ve gotten great advice. You can’t make decisions in-season or right after the season. You need the perspective of getting away from it further. And you think about yourself physically, you think about yourself mentally. And then role-wise, can you still help the team? Can you go out on the field and play a role where you know that you can make sure that you’re helping the team win? So you have to check all those boxes and know it 100% before you make a commitment to come back. So that’ll be the process I go through. Can I help us? Physically, can I continue to do this? Mentally, am I ready? You really look deep into those before make a commitment.”

Lee technically hit free agency in March of 2020, but was resigned by the Cowboys to a one-year deal within days, just as the COVID-19 crisis gripped the country. He began the season on injured reserve, sidelined by a sports hernia that required surgery to repair. By the time he returned to action, quarterback Dak Prescott had been lost and Dallas was in freefall with a 2-5 record under first-year coach Mike McCarthy. A month later, the team’s strength and conditioning coordinator Markus Paul passed away suddenly.

Lee played just the last nine games of the Cowboys’ season and was in on just 20 tackles, a career low. But he played an integral relief role, especially with Vander Esch’s year being cut short due to injury. He recorded six tackles against New York on Sunday, a season high.

The All-Pro has dealt with numerous injuries of his own over his playing career, missing 42 games over 11 years. He was shelved for all of 2014; he’s played a 16-game season just once. Yet Lee called 2020 the most challenging he’s ever faced.

“I would say 100%,” he confirmed. “As a team, dealing with what we dealt with and how hard we fought. And then me personally, dealing with the surgery in-season. But what I’m proud of is how hard we fought down the stretch. Me personally, being able to battle back from surgery, being able to help us. And then the team, the guys who love being with each other, practicing every day the right way. No matter what situation was thrown our way, guys were able to rally and stay positive and really try to play the right way and gave us a shot to get into this thing. And we didn’t get there, but we have the right type of guys, we have the right type of attitude. And I really believe we’re on our way to things greater.”

Go back and read that again. Lee sounds just like a coach.

It’s widely believed that there will be a place on the Cowboys coaching staff for Lee if and when he wants it. McCarthy says he has talked with the linebacker about that very possibility. Lee wasn’t ready after the Giants loss- a game for which he was named a team captain- to make any pronouncements about his next move; he’ll take the time to analyze the situation, of course.

But as he stepped away from the mic at the end of Sunday’s postgame interview, the player nicknamed The General seemed to have something more substantial on his mind than just the throwaway acknowledgment that the Q-and-A was over.

“I appreciate you guys very much,” Lee said.

And then he came back to the mic. Not quite ready to leave. With just a little bit more to give before he went.

“Very much. Very, very much.”

Was that a final goodbye? Or just the conscious realization that it might be?

Sometimes it’s what is said. Sometimes it’s how it’s said. Sometimes it’s what’s offered when there’s no question at all.

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Cowboys’ McCarthy defends not challenging critical catch: ‘It was too close’

In 2014, McCarthy ended Dallas’s postseason with the toss of a red flag. On Sunday, he ruined their postseason chances by not throwing it.

For nearly six years, Dallas fans have turned “Dez Caught it” into a rallying cry and a stubborn point of pride. As the team now heads into the offseason after their 23-19 loss to the New York Giants ended a surreal and disappointing 2020 campaign, Cowboys Nation may have a new mantra. And while “Dante Trapped It” likely won’t inspire any leaguewide rule changes or its own Twitter hashtag, the play and the sideline’s reaction- or lack thereof- will sting for quite some time.

When Giants receiver Dante Pettis hauled in a 10-yard throw from quarterback Daniel Jones with seven minutes to play and New York up by one point, it set up New York’s final field goal. Replays showed that the ball may have hit the turf as Pettis went to the ground, but Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy opted not to challenge the call.

“The catch was obviously down in our area,” McCarthy explained in his postgame press conference, “and when the receiver turned to me, the information we got, we just thought it was too close. We thought it was kind of a bang-bang type situation. The fact of the matter is, we were in a tight game, and the three timeouts was obviously of high value there. We just didn’t think there was enough information to overturn it.”

The broadcast crew thought it was close enough to warrant a review, but the red challenge flag remained securely in McCarthy’s pocket. Graham Gano connected on the ensuing 50-yard kick, and the Giants extended their lead to four points.

The Cowboys put together a 17-play drive on the next possession that got the offense inside the New York red zone. But with the team needing seven points instead of three, quarterback Andy Dalton ended up forcing a blind heave on a desperate third-and-goal scramble. Giants rookie Xavier McKinney’s end zone interception sealed the New York win and ended the Cowboys’ chances at both a Week 17 victory and the unlikeliest playoff berth in franchise history.

A win would not have given Dallas the NFC East crown, as Washington won their night game versus Philadelphia and with it, the division title. Some may therefore call the loss- and the decision not to challenge the Pettis catch- ultimately meaningless, but for a Cowboys squad that had been on a three-game win streak, the season-finale letdown added one last insult to a season riddled with injury and ineptitude.

For Cowboys fans, the hope of a late-game rally being snatched away by the meticulous frame-by-frame review of wide receiver and football meeting the ground in agonizing synchronicity was a familiar gut punch.

“It looked a lot like the one from the playoffs before I got to the Cowboys,” running back Ezekiel Elliott told reporters after the game. “I think it was 2014, maybe. The one that Dez had in Green Bay that they called incomplete. It looked like that one to me, but I think since then, they changed the rule. So I don’t know. I’m not a ref. I don’t get to make those calls.”

Mike McCarthy was on the sideline that day, too. As Packers head coach, he had the benefit of ample replays being shown to the roaring crowd at Lambeau Field. He suggested that the scoreboard operator at MetLife Stadium on Sunday may not have been quite as eager to show Pettis’s play from every conceivable angle following the on-the-field call of a reception.

“We’re trying to get as much information as possible,” McCarthy said of the team’s internal communications in those precious moments. “Obviously, you don’t get a lot of help on the road, particularly if it’s a play that’s something you have higher interest in than your opponent; I think that’s the norm. But yeah, we have coaches in the box that relay the information. Ultimately, I make the decision.”

Back in 2014, though, McCarthy got extra assistance in making the decision. He admitted during last January’s introductory press conference as Cowboys coach that a sideline conversation with Gene Steratore, the head referee that day in Green Bay, prompted him to challenge Bryant’s touchdown grab.

There was no such help for the Cowboys coach on the sideline in New York on Sunday.

When asked if he thought game management had been a recurring issue this season, the first-year Cowboys coach was blunt in his reply.

“No, not at all. Not at all.”

Cowboys coaches did have a few extra seconds in which to debate challenging the catch. Because it was fourth down, the Giants were not able to hurry the next snap, but instead had to send out their field goal unit.

Even if Dallas had challenged the call and gotten the catch ruling overturned, New York still might have attempted the kick, which would have been from 60 yards. Gano had missed just one field goal try all season and is one of the league’s more reliable legs from long distance; he’s 25-of-41 from beyond 50 yards in his 11-year career. He hit three kicks of 50 or longer in Week 5’s Cowboys-Giants tilt and booted one from 63 yards as recently as 2018.

By throwing the red flag in 2014, McCarthy ended the postseason for Dallas, a team favored by many to win the Super Bowl. By not throwing the red flag on Sunday, he merely made it a little more difficult for a 6-9 team to avoid double-digit losses.

It’s not known if referee Brad Allen’s crew would have overturned Pettis’s catch. There’s no guarantee Gano would have missed from 60. There’s no way to be sure that the Cowboys would have capitalized and come away with a win. And in the end, even if all those things had gone Dallas’s way, the Cowboys players would still be cleaning out their lockers and scheduling exit interviews this week. So maybe McCarthy’s decision to not challenge is truly irrelevant.

“As I’ve addressed it,” McCarthy said, “I didn’t feel there was enough information for them to overturn it. We didn’t think it was clear and obvious.”

What’s clear and obvious is that the Cowboys’ season is over. But finishing it with a four-game win streak sure would have been easier to swallow than another offseason of questions about receivers maintaining control, coaches making in-game sideline decisions… and what ultimately might have been.

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4 milestones, landmarks Cowboys players could reach Week 17

Ezekiel Elliott, Dalton Schultz, Jaylon Smith and CeeDee Lamb all have individual milestones in front of them on Sunday. A 55-year old mark could be taken down (sort of).

The fate of the 2020 Dallas Cowboys doesn’t lie in their hands alone. No, they’ll need help that might not be coming in order to make the playoffs. What they can control, however, is their own performance in Week 17 against the New York Giants.

Football is a team game of individual matchups. Players need to win their one-on-ones on every play in order to contribute to the greater good of the entire team. So even though statistics don’t directly correlate to wins, it’s still something when players reach certain milestones. Here’s a look at four of them within reach on the day.

Dallas Cowboys vs. New York Giants live stream, how to watch, NFL football predictions, odds, tv channel, start time

The Dallas Cowboys are on the road in the last week of the NFL regular season when they face the New York Giants at MetLife Stadium.

The Dallas Cowboys are on the road in the last week of the NFL regular season when they face the New York Giants at MetLife Stadium.

The Cowboys come into this one on a three-game winning streak and playing their best ball of the season with Andy Dalton at the helm. As for the Giants, they have struggled over the last few games, being held at 19 points or less in each of their last five games.

With both teams still being able to make the playoffs this should be a fun game to watch. Tune in today’s game, here is everything you need to know to stream the action!

Dallas Cowboys vs. New York Giants

  • When: Sunday, January 3
  • Time: 1:00 p.m. ET
  • TV Channel: FOX
  • Live Stream: fuboTV (watch for free)

Prediction: I’ll roll with the Cowboys in this game, they are playing better football than the Giants and should be able to hold on to more than a field goal in this one.

Bet: Dallas Cowboys -2

How to watch the NFL this season

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NFL Football Odds and Betting Lines

NFL odds courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook. Odds last updated Sunday at 10:00 a.m. ET.

Dallas Cowboys (-2) vs. New York Giants

Over/Under: 44.5 

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Dallas Cowboys vs New York Giants Prediction, Game Preview

Dallas Cowboys vs New York Giants prediction, game preview, and fantasy player to watch.

Dallas Cowboys vs New York Giants prediction, game preview, and fantasy player to watch.


Dallas Cowboys vs New York Giants Broadcast

Date: Sunday, January 3
Game Time: 1:00 ET
Venue: MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, NJ
Network: FOX

[jwplayer u1UpvV8e]

All of the CFN Fearless Predictions

Dallas Cowboys (6-9) vs New York Giants (5-10) Game Preview

For latest lines and to bet on the NFL, go to BetMGM


Why New York Giants Will Win

If the Giants win and Washington loses, they’re in.

New York isn’t getting much out of the offense lately, but the passing game has been okay, the Dallas run defense is still a disaster, and there’s a shot at home to keep the score low and the game at their level.

The Giants haven’t been able to get the ground attack going, but really, the Dallas run D is awful. It’s the worst in the NFL, allowing 125 yards or more in six of the last seven games. It’ll do that again.

Why Dallas Cowboys Will Win

If the Cowboys win and Washington loses, they’re in.

The Giant offense hasn’t just stopped, but it’s stopped doing much of anything with just 26 points in the last three games and not hitting 20 points in any of the last five.

Dallas has gone on a three-game winning run with takeaways, coming up with ten in the last three games all while getting the passing game going again. It might not be like it was with Dak Prescott, but Andy Dalton is starting to crank up the attack.

CFN Experts Picks: Week 17 NFL

What’s Going To Happen

The Washington game against Philadelphia isn’t until Sunday night. Before that, Dallas will keep its offense going, the Giants won’t be able to get enough out of the passing game to keep up, and even with well over 150 yards on the ground, it won’t be enough.

Dallas willet the win, and that it’ll get the Football Team pom-poms out.

Dallas Cowboys vs New York Giants Prediction, Line

Dallas 23, New York Giants 17
Bet on Dallas Cowboys vs New York Giants with BetMGM
Dallas -1.5, o/u: 44.5
ATS Confidence out of 5: 2

Must See Rating: 4

5: Week 16 NFL Football
1: Week 17 NFL Football

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Behind Enemy Lines: Previewing the Giants search for retribution against the Cowboys

For one last time, the Dallas Cowboys are trotting out on the field for the 2020 regular season. Will these be their final snaps of the season? That answer won’t be known until well after the final whistle, but the contest against the division rival …

For one last time, the Dallas Cowboys are trotting out on the field for the 2020 regular season. Will these be their final snaps of the season? That answer won’t be known until well after the final whistle, but the contest against the division rival New York Giants contains all the intrigue a once-lost season can contain.

To get better acquainted with what’s new with the Giants, we checked in with Dan Benton, managing editor of Giants Wire. We needed to know how things have gone in Jason Garrett’s first year as offensive coordinator, life and times without Saquon Barkley and with Daniel Jones, and many more things. In exchange, we gave them the keys to the Cowboys’ turnaround, thoughts on Ezekiel Elliott, Andy Dalton and the Giants’ biggest nightmare, DeMarcus Lawrence.

Week 17 Staff Picks: Cowboys-Giants for all the marbles… maybe

The Cowboys-Giants showdown has everything on the line, except the result may not even matter. It’s 2021, but it’s still 2020.

There’s not many people out there who had Week 17 circled on the calendar as a game that might mean something and have some relevance. But, it’s 2020. Here we are.

The Dallas Cowboys close their regular season with a trip east to face the New York Giants. Both the Cowboys and the Giants have an outside chance to not only win this game but to also be crowned NFC East champions and host a playoff game in January.

Both teams seem to be going in opposite directions which usually spells disaster for the hot team believe it or not. The Cowboys have won three straight over the Bengals, 49ers and the Eagles while the Giants are reeling after their third straight loss at the hands of the Baltimore Ravens.

While this game is to keep them alive for a few hours, the winner of this game will be huddled around a television to find out if the Philadelphia Eagles can play spoiler by defeating the Washington Football Team. With a Washington loss, the winner of this Week 17 showdown between the Cowboys and the Giants will be NFC East Champions. Buckle up. Let’s see how the staff decides to start their new calendar year and end their seasons picks.

News: Aikman thinks directionless Cowboys now capable of playoff run

Also, looking at Dallas’s playoff chances and possible opponents, what sparked the defense’s turnaround, and key injury updates.

Plenty of news in Cowboys Nation as the team prepares to close out the 2020 regular season with an early-2021 date in New York. Dallas can still make the postseason with a win and help, although their chances of going on to compete for the Lombardi Trophy are statistically infinitesimal. But even one of the franchise’s all-time legends agrees there is hope, and that’s something that seemed lost just a few weeks ago.

The Giants know the Cowboys are different bunch now, and their head coach breaks down the ways. A seemingly healthy Ezekiel Elliott could be looking at another 1,000-yard season, and some are already looking ahead to the Cowboys’ possible opponent in a wild-card round. Whatever happens, there will be decisions to be made: about fifth-year options on rookie contracts, about Andy Dalton’s future, about Mike Nolan and the Dallas defense that has only just recently come alive… and about the franchise tag of one Rayne Dakota Prescott. All that, and a Cowboys legend blows out the candles on another birthday cake. Here’s the News and Notes.

Cowboys HC McCarthy preaches resilience: ‘Our fight is our fight’

The Cowboys had to find their fight after Dak Prescott’s injury. That may be the theme of the season as they move forward with Andy Dalton.

Dak Prescott’s devastating injury took all of the air, the emotion, and the optimism out of AT&T Stadium on Sunday. It was up to coach Mike McCarthy to make sure it didn’t also take the fight out of the players left standing.

The Cowboys were down by one point to the rival Giants when the injury occurred. There were 21 minutes left to play. Dallas had gone into the Week 5 divisional matchup feeling like the game would be a make-or-break moment for the 2020 season. They had no idea how right they would end up being in that assessment, as the team now faces the 11 games left on their regular season schedule without their unquestionable leader.

“Really, the message was, ‘Our fight is our flight,'” coach Mike McCarthy said he told the team after the 37-34 last-second win. “If you look at the five games we’ve played, we’ve had some rough moments. Every game has come down to the end. The composure, the communication on the sidelines: I thought we were much better than we were this time last week. But we have a lot of work to do. There’s still some things we can sync up better, and I think it allows everybody to perform at a faster level. We got better, we improved today, and the most important thing is we won the game. But we’re going to have to make some adjustments moving forward.”

Obviously, the biggest adjustment will be at the quarterback position. With Prescott lost for the season, ten-year veteran Andy Dalton will presumably be commanding the Cowboys’ high-powered offense for the duration of the 2020 campaign.

Dalton made the most of his relief appearance Sunday, finishing off the possession Prescott had started with an Ezekiel Elliot rushing touchdown, and leading two three-point drives in the final nine minutes to get the win. The former TCU star coughed up the ball on one snap exchange, but he then went 7-for-8 on those last two possessions, including back-to-back deep throws to wideout Michael Gallup- one for 19 yards, and the next for 38 yards to set up the game-winning kick.

“Andy came in and made the key throw there at the end,” McCarthy told reporters in his postgame remarks. “I can’t say enough about the connection between him and Michael at the most important part of the game. That’s big-time football. You’ve got to make big plays in key moments to win games in this league. That’ll never change. Andy did a heck of a job.”

The injury to Prescott- who had been off to a blistering start to the season- had many wondering in the immediate aftermath if the club might pursue a younger, higher-profile passer to step in and take the reins in Dallas. But McCarthy downplayed that notion with a reminder that Dalton’s considerable experience is why the team chose to sign him as Prescott’s backup to begin with.

“We have great confidence in Andy,” McCarthy stated plainly. “We’ve all been working together since training camp. Andy’s got a lot of pelts on the wall. He’s been a great addition to the quarterback room; it’s a very healthy quarterback room. I’d expect Andy to keep our offense moving forward, and hopefully we can improve. The one thing we haven’t nipped in the bud yet is the turnovers. But yeah, we have great confidence in Andy.”

The rest of the team echoed that sentiment.

“He’s very calm and composed, like he’s been there before,” noted rookie receiver CeeDee Lamb. “Just having him as the next man up, there’s no better feeling. He has you feeling confident, he’s going in smiling on the last drive. It’s an energy-booster.”

Jaylon Smith may not be in the offensive huddle with Dalton, but the linebacker knows that the three-time Pro Bowler can lead the team; he’s seen him do it before. “Just [from] being a fan of football and seeing what Andy has already accomplished,” Smith explained. “Now he’s on a bigger stage to be able to do it. And he’s going to have everyone behind him.”

Running back Ezekiel Elliott maintains that the offensive gameplan likely won’t even have to be re-invented with the personnel change.

“I don’t think it’ll really change much,” Elliott said after Sunday’s win. “We probably won’t have any quarterback runs, but other than that, we probably won’t change much.”

That may be overstating things. It will no doubt be a different Cowboys offense game plan with “the Red Rifle” calling the shots under center, but McCarthy believes his backup is well-equipped to step into the starting role and build off the momentum from Sunday’s emotional win.

“Andy’s steady. There’s no doubt about it; you could see that from Day One. He’s very calm. He’s the same guy every day. That’s exactly how he practices. It was no surprise just to see him just pick up and keep going.”

Pick up and keep going may as well be the mantra for this Cowboys team, now faced with the prospect of moving forward in 2020 without their fallen field general.

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QB Andy Dalton reflects Cowboys’ mindset: ‘There’s no flinch’

The 10-year veteran was talking about the team’s attitude in the wake of Dak Prescott’s injury, but his performance showed the same grit.

To be a backup quarterback is to be on constant standby. Most of the time, he’s wearing a headset and holding a clipboard; but any moment could be the one that sees him suddenly strapping on a helmet and taking live-fire action in the game.

It’s not a familiar role for Andy Dalton, the ten-year veteran who spent his first nine seasons in Cincinnati, where he was the starter in his first NFL game. But it’s a role he adjusted to quickly upon signing with Dallas this past offseason. As someone who had to turn the Bengals offense over to the understudy several times due to injury, Dalton knew all too well that his playing status could change on any given snap.

“You never want anything to happen, but you’ve got to stay ready,” the 32-year-old Texas native told reporters after leading the Cowboys to a 37-34 win over the Giants in relief of an injured Dak Prescott. “That’s what I’ve done. I’ve stayed ready, been ready to go into these games. You want to have the opportunity to play; I mean, I knew the situation I was in. Just trying to do my best to support Dak and everything that he’s doing, but I feel like I was prepared for these moments.”

Prescott suffered a gruesome compound fracture and ankle dislocation midway through the third quarter of Sunday’s contest in Arlington. Dalton entered the game and was tasked with the unenviable job of having to rally an emotional Cowboys offense who had just watched their leader carted off the field in tears.

“You absolutely hate it for Dak,” Dalton said. “The way that he was playing this year and everything he’s put into it, I hate to see that for him. It’s emotional. You hate that injuries happen in this game; unfortunately, they’re part of it.”

Dalton made a brief appearance in the team’s Week 2 outing versus Atlanta, coming on for two snaps while Prescott was checked for a possible concussion after a rough hit. He threw one end-zone incompletion and handed off to Ezekiel Elliott for no gain before Prescott returned.

The three-time Pro Bowler got off to an even less auspicious start in his latest relief appearance, taking a sack and losing five yards on his first play against New York.

“Obviously, the first play, we would like to have a better outcome. But there’s no flinch. We ended up scoring on the drive, able to finish that drive off.”

But the Cowboys followed up that touchdown drive with a three-and-out. When they got the ball back next, Dalton promptly lost the exchange of the snap from rookie center Tyler Biadasz.

“The second possession, we fumbled the ball,” Dalton recounted, “gave them a chance and got them back in the game. But one thing you’ve seen with this team is there’s no flinch.”

After that hiccup, though, Dalton was lights-out, going 7-of-8 for 92 yards over the team’s final two series, both drives ending with field goals. The first tied the score with under two minutes to play; the second won it as time expired.

“For a lot of people, you want to be in those situations: tie ball game, get a chance to go down [in a] two-minute drive to win the game. You want to instill confidence in everybody. I’ve obviously been in these situations multiple times, so it’s a lot of fun to be in those situations. Fun to see how everybody responded. Everybody came out and made their plays,” Dalton explained. “That’s why you play this game, for moments like that.”

If the former TCU star wants moments like that, he came to the right team at just the right time. The Dallas defense has been dreadful thus far, allowing tons of yards and lots of points to opponents over five weeks. The offense has been forced to play most of the season in catch-up mode, squeaking by with two last-second wins and falling just short in their three losses.

“We feel like we’ve been in these moments too often already this season,” Dalton remarked. “What it’s shown is there’s no quit in this team, no quit in what we’re doing. To have the turnover- fumbled snap, which we’ve got to get that fixed- to give them a chance to then score the touchdown, but for us to respond. I think that was huge. To drive down, kick the game-winning field goal, make the play that we needed to make, I think that’s just more confidence to know that we can do anything that we want to do. We’ve just got to all play together and find ways to win these games.”

For the rest of 2020, it seems, Andy Dalton will no longer be on standby. He’ll be the one leading the Cowboys’ effort to find those ways.

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