Cowboys-Eagles: How to watch, stream online, listen to Week 16

It feels like every year one of the final weeks of the season features a Dallas-Philadelphia matchup that ultimately decides which organization has a shot at going to the postseason, and 2020 is no exception. The Eagles are set to travel to Dallas …

It feels like every year one of the final weeks of the season features a Dallas-Philadelphia matchup that ultimately decides which organization has a shot at going to the postseason, and 2020 is no exception. The Eagles are set to travel to Dallas for a showdown that will immediately rid the loser from any playoff hopes.

The two organizations will need a little help from their rival Washington if they want to move into first place, but a win Sunday will give Dallas a real chance at the NFC East entering the final week of the regular season. Below is everything you need to know about how to watch, or listen, to this pivotal divisional meeting.

News: Kellen leaving Cowboys for Boise? Elliott’s calf ‘way better’

Despite the Eagles coming to town and a playoff berth still mathematically possible, some eyes have already turned to next year. Specifically, to the Cowboys coaching staff. One current coordinator is being linked to a job opening at his collegiate …

Despite the Eagles coming to town and a playoff berth still mathematically possible, some eyes have already turned to next year. Specifically, to the Cowboys coaching staff. One current coordinator is being linked to a job opening at his collegiate alma mater, and one current player is thought to be headed toward a role roaming the Dallas sideline, possibly sooner rather than later.

Also in News and Notes, the Cowboys are getting key players back in action for Sunday’s showdown, apparently including starting running back Ezekiel Elliott. But injuries always create a need for more depth, and the club has brought practice squad reinforcements aboard for the 2020 home stretch. There’s plenty of talk about Philadelphia quarterback Jalen Hurts, including intel from a former teammate, and the revelation that the Cowboys kicked the tires on him back in April. There’s news on DeMarcus, Dalton, and Donovan; Jaylon Smith gets coaching from his football idol; and we bid farewell to a glory-days Cowboys specialist, an unsung hero who had a unique role in the legend of the greatest Cowboy of them all.

Eagles will start QB Jalen Hurts against Cowboys, open as 1.5-point favorites

Doug Pederson says Jalen Hurts will start at QB Week 16 for the Eagles. – Andrew Siciliano (@AndrewSiciliano) December 21, 2020 The Dallas Cowboys (5-9) couldn’t beat Carson Wentz earlier in the season, now they’ll get a chance to take down his …

The Dallas Cowboys (5-9) couldn’t beat Carson Wentz earlier in the season, now they’ll get a chance to take down his replacement. As all expected, Philadelphia Eagles head coach Doug Pederson ended his coy routine on Monday and announced that second-round rookie Jalen Hurts would get his third consecutive start in Week 16. Hurts won his first game and played extremely well in Week 15’s road loss to the Arizona Cardinals that dropped the Eagles record to 4-9-1 and moved them into the NFC East basement.

Both teams have distant playoff chances, and it will be a battle of the backups as Andy Dalton looks to give the Cowboys their first three-game winning streak since the opening three weeks of the 2019 season. Dalton himself hasn’t won three straight games since Week 2 of the 2018 season and in three consecutive weeks since the Cincinnati Bengals opened the 2015 season 8-0. BetMGM has the Eagles as 1.5-point road favorites in this contest.

In the first matchup between the clubs, Dallas started rookie Ben DiNucci after Dalton was knocked out of the previous contest with a concussion against Washington. DiNucci looked completely lost under center in a 23-9 defeat that saw rookie corner Trevon Diggs, drafted ahead of Hurts in Round 2, intercept Wentz twice in the end zone.

The Cowboys are now 3-4 with Dalton starting, and the QB has thrown for 11 touchdowns against six interceptions though he’s throwing for the lowest yards-per-attempt number (6.1) in his entire career.

Hurts meanwhile has taken over for an inept Wentz and injected life into a listless Eagles offense that was a sack and turnover factory. Hurts has thrown for over 500 yards with four scores and no picks in two games, and also ran for 169 yards and another score. He has fumbled four times, which could bode well for a Dallas defense that all of a sudden are turnover machines, forcing seven in the last two games including five recovered fumbles.

The two teams will match up in the late afternoon game on FOX.

[vertical-gallery id=660700][listicle id=660678][lawrence-newsletter]

 

Cowboys rookie Diggs on 2 picks vs. Eagles: ‘I’m starting to get the hang of it’

The second-round draft pick had a pair of interceptions versus the Eagles on Sunday night; they could be the first of many in a long career.

Interceptions are a rare thing in Dallas. The Cowboys defense had logged just one through the first seven games of the 2020 season. Only seven all of last year, tied for the league low. And coming into Sunday night’s contest, no Cowboys defender had had multiple interceptions in a single game since 2015, when Jeff Heath snagged a pair against Tampa Bay in Week 9 of that season.

Just eight games into his pro career, Trevon Diggs looks like he’s going to sell a ton of No. 27 jerseys during his tenure in Dallas.

The rookie made two impressive picks in Sunday night’s game and was a rare bright spot in another lackluster performance by the Cowboys.

Carson Wentz and the Philadelphia offense had clearly targeted Diggs in their game plan. Rookie wideout Jalen Reagor scored the Eagles’ first touchdown on a short pass in which Diggs was the cover man.

But the 23-year-old cornerback decided he wasn’t going to be picked on all night long.

“You’ve just got to keep fighting. That’s the beauty of the position,” Diggs told reporters after the game. “We’re all professionals; they’re going to catch some passes. You’ve just got to respond and keep competing throughout the whole game.”

Diggs got his revenge on a 35-yard laser from Wentz later in the opening half. In double coverage on Reagor, Diggs snared the ball as he was diving out of bounds. After dropping one toe, he managed to flatten his ankle and contact the end zone turf with his shin just before his other knee slid over the chalk.

“What is it? An arm or a leg? An arm or a leg counts as [the second of] two [feet]?” Diggs asked with a laugh. “I knew I wasn’t going to get my other foot down with the momentum, so I slid and put my knee down. Just making a play on the ball, having awareness of where I’m at on the field, making a play.”

He said he felt the pick that ended Philadelphia’s potential scoring drive helped make up for getting burned by Wentz and Reagor on the earlier touchdown.

“You’ve just got to have a short memory,” Diggs explained. “I’m a competitor. I like to fight, too. I’m going to keep fighting all the way to the end of the game. That’s all that was. He had gotten me; it’s my turn now.”

The second interception came shortly after halftime. Trying to capitalize on their first possession of the second half, Wentz launched a bomb from beyond midfield. The ball hung in the chilly wind, and Diggs turned into a centerfielder, completing the haul on the run at the five-yard-line.  After sliding untouched into the end zone, he got up and brought the ball back to the Cowboys’ 30.

 

“I was just reading my keys, not trying to get beat deep… just playing my technique, reading my keys, and making a play on the ball.”

The pair of picks capped a strong showing for the rookie, who has been baptized by fire this season, seeing heavy action as part of a paper-thin Cowboys secondary.

It’s been a struggle at times for Diggs as opposing teams go after him in coverage, but his Dallas teammates have been encouraging him to trust the skills that made him a second-round draft pick.

“Talking to him on the sidelines,” linebacker Leighton Vander Esch told media members, “I’m telling him, ‘Dude, you’re going to get one sooner or later. You are going to get one. Just keep playing, keep being you. We’ve all got your back. We all trust in you. Just keep being you; you’re a heck of an athlete.’ And then he got one. And I was, like, ‘Dude, that’s the first of many.’ And then he got a second one. It was awesome. It was great. I don’t even know how he caught the second one, honestly.”

If his over-the-shoulder play looked like one an offensive wideout would make, there’s good reason. The pick actually required Diggs to dig back into his own football past, when he played wide receiver in high school and as a freshman at Alabama.

“That’s exactly what it was. I had seen the ball thrown and seen what angle it was going at, so it kind of took me back to my wide receiver abilities, just tracking the ball and things like that. It did play a factor.”

His older brother Stefon, a starting wideout for the Buffalo Bills, would undoubtedly be proud. The two train against each other often; going up against a legitimate WR1 in their practices has certainly helped the younger Diggs get acclimated to the speed of the NFL game.

“I feel like it’s starting to slow down a lot. The more reps that I’ve gotten, playing in every game and things like that, everything’s starting to slow down. Things are starting to look familiar, and I’m starting to get the hang of it.”

Head coach Mike McCarthy agrees.

“I love the way he played,” McCarthy said after Sunday’s game. “I love his competitiveness. Such a high-level competitive spirit. He had some tough challenges, and the guy just keeps going. He’s as good a young player as I’ve ever seen in my time in this league when the ball is in the air.”

[vertical-gallery id=644692]

[vertical-gallery id=656807]

[lawrence-newsletter]

‘Moving in the right direction’: McCarthy, Cowboys spin latest loss as progress

After a 14-point loss to the rival Eagles, Dallas coaches and players looked for the silver linings that- they hope- indicate improvement.

It’s profoundly telling that after a two-touchdown loss to a division rival who had won only two games, the Dallas Cowboys coaches and players spoke unanimously about the exponential progress shown in Sunday night’s 23-9 loss.

“Moving in the right direction,” coach Mike McCarthy said in his postgame press conference.

“I feel like we took another step tonight,” defensive end DeMarcus Lawrence told reporters before leaving Philadelphia.

“It was a step in the right direction, but not good enough,” running back Ezekiel Elliott explained.

“I think we made some really good strides,” said linebacker Leighton Vander Esch.

About the only thing missing was orange wedges handed out to everyone afterward.

It’s clear that the tone in the Cowboys locker room has changed dramatically over the past two months. The electrifying potential of Team FortyBurger rode out on the cart with Dak Prescott. In its place is an offense whose only touchdown in the past thirteen quarters came in garbage time of Week 6 and has now been held to single digits two weeks in a row. A defense loaded with promising personnel and a new-and-improved scheme was quickly exposed as a leaky sieve. They’ve allowed the most points in the league, three players have already been sent packing, and there are questions about whether some of the coaches should follow.

Indeed, expectations in Dallas have been recalibrated. Chatter before the season about Super Bowl odds and scoring records have turned into praise and congratulations for the moral victory of winning the turnover battle for one game.

“A lot of improvement, in a number of areas,” McCarthy said afterward.

“Clearly, our defense took a huge step. It looked like our gap integrity- our run defense- was the best that we’ve had all year. And not only the four takeaways, but we were all over the ball a number of times. I thought we definitely took a step on defense.”

For Vander Esch, the takeaways- two interceptions by Trevon Diggs and a pair of fumble recoveries- were of little solace as the team fell to 2-6.

“I don’t think it has anything to do with the amount of turnovers that you get; it’s the frustration of just losing,” the third-year veteran said. “Whether you lose by one point or you lose by 20 points, you have 100 turnovers or you have no turnovers, losing sucks. Just a simple answer. Being a competitor, you don’t like to lose. And I don’t like losing.”

But for a team that has seen so much go so wrong in half a season of play, the Cowboys are in a position where they must find the silver linings where they can.

Now, even the smallest thing- like the defense forcing more turnovers than the offense commits- can serve as an important building block for the second half of the 2020 campaign.

“Division game, we needed to win this one,” Elliott reflected. “We were right there. We were in a good position to go and get this game. We’ve got to find ways to win these tough games, and it’s not always going to be pretty. But we’ve got to find a way to pull it out.”

The Cowboys may still be- mathematically speaking- alive in the race for an NFC title, but this team isn’t ready to talk about wins. Not realistically. Heck, McCarthy is talking about just playing with pride.

“We’re running out of time. We understand that, as far as where we are in the season,” the coach offered to media members on the conference call. “I thought our defense played with tremendous pride. We knew we needed to stop the run, and I thought our guys hit the mark there. We needed takeaways. That’s the brand of football and the team identity we’re focused on playing: winning the turnover differential margin for the first time this year, and that was led by the defense. Defense pretty much held them to- what- 15 points? You keep the opponent to 15 or less, you should win the game.”

It’s a fair point. The defense wasn’t on the field for the Eagles’ fumble recovery that they returned for a touchdown to effectively ice the game. And the defense had nothing to do with snapping the ball out of the end zone for an intentional safety, a last-ditch gambit to try to regain possession via the ensuing free kick.

So when compared to the defense’s past several performances- six straight games of allowing 25 or more points- Sunday night did feel, to borrow the Cowboys’ new favorite phrase, a step in the right direction.

“Obviously, the game wasn’t perfect and we’ve still got to clean a couple things up,” Vander Esch maintained. “But as far as effort and play style, I think we’re getting on the right track. And I think it showed.”

“We’re doing a better job understanding our coaches, understanding each other, and playing together all as one,” Lawrence added. “We showcased that tonight, and I feel like we’re getting better each and every week.”

The defense senses improvement. The coaches see progress. The latest game wasn’t an embarrassing, hopeless rout. Perhaps that’s a start.

McCarthy, who famously took a year off just to prepare for this head coaching gig, seems to similarly be taking a long-view approach to building his new team.

“I think, like anything in life, the game of football will teach you humility in every form or fashion that you can imagine. To me, that’s just part of the course of this season, it’s part of our challenge. I clearly believe we’ll be better off in the future because of these hard times.”

Probably. It’s hard to imagine the Cowboys being much worse.

[vertical-gallery id=657139]

[lawrence-newsletter]

Cowboys defense tightens, but no saving offense in 23-9 loss to Eagles

The Dallas Cowboys entered their Week 8 game with an anemic offense and a beleaguered defense. With a seventh-round rookie quarterback starting his first career game, there wasn’t much hope that things would change in their matchup with their …

The Dallas Cowboys entered their Week 8 game with an anemic offense and a beleaguered defense. With a seventh-round rookie quarterback starting his first career game, there wasn’t much hope that things would change in their matchup with their division rivals, the Philadelphia Eagles. Ben DiNucci was taking over an offense where veteran QB Andy Dalton was only able to manage 10 points in the last two weeks and the Eagles have one of the league’s pass rush.

It turns out that the Dallas defense woke up for the first time all season, but forcing four turnovers from Carson Wentz was hardly enough as the Cowboys offense was unable to mount much of an attack. They pulled out all of the stops, from double reverses to wildcat formation to attempted wide receiver passes, but in the end there just wasn’t enough firepower from DiNucci and, with some wild help from the referees, the Eagles came out on top 23-9.

Dallas was able to have a 9-7 halftime lead on the strength of three Greg Zuerlein field goals, including a 59 yarder a few seconds before halftime. The play of the defense was inspired, with sacks, strip sacks and interceptions of Carson Wentz. DeMarcus Lawrence and Trevon Diggs had incredible games for a defense that had been maligned the entire year.

The defensive end had six tackles, a sack, a forced fumble and three tackles for loss. Meanwhile the rookie corner had his first two career interceptions and four pass deflections as his roller coaster season continued. He was also beaten badly on two plays by rookie WR Travis Fulgham, including a touchdown that gave the Eagles the win for good.

The game had some weird moments, including a play in the fourth quarter where the Eagles jumped off side, strip sacked Ben DiNucci and recovered the ball. The neutral zone infraction went uncalled. The Eagles lineman was on his back on the ground when Connor Williams knocked the ball loose and it bounced downfield before an Eagles defender scooped it and ran with it. Somehow the refs let the play go and Philadelphia stretched their lead from 15-9 to 21-9 and it was a wrap.

The loss drops Dallas to 2-6 on the season as Philadelphia improved to 3-4-1. The Cowboys will host Pittsburgh next week and the Steelers are the NFL’s last remaining undefeated team, coming in at 7-0.

Watch: Cowboys’ Diggs brings in over-shoulder INT for 2nd pick vs Eagles

Dallas Cowboys cornerback Trevon Diggs intercepts Carson Wentz for the second time on Sunday Night Football.

Dallas Cowboys cornerback Trevon Diggs is having himself a day, picking off his second Carson Wentz pass in the end zone on the opening drive of the Philadephia Eagles opening drive of the third quarter.

Diggs has been tested frequently this year, but tonight it’s not gone the way it had gone for every other quarterback in he’d faced to date.

Diggs is now the team’s leader in interceptions, tying and then surpassing Chidobe Awuzie’s seemingly insurmountable one pick lead.

The Cowboys now have more turnovers in this one game than they’d forced all year to this point. If November is a time to be thankful, the Dallas defense is giving thanks for Carson Wentz.

Watch: Zuerlein 59-yard knuckleball gives Cowboys halftime lead

Dallas Cowboys kicker Greg Zuerlein hits a 59-yarder, his third of the half to give his team the lead.

Dallas Cowboys kicker Greg Zuerlein was named a captain for tonight’s game against the Philadelphia Eagles. It seems that head coach Mike McCarthy is omniscient as he has accounted for the entirety of the scoring output through the first half.

The Cowboys gave up on the drive after the Eagles failed a fourth-down-conversion, handing the ball to Ezekiel Elliott despite seemingly needing another 10 yards at least to make a field goal attempt comfortable. Given the windy scene at Lincoln Financial, the odds were long that Zuerlein would be able to knock it home.

And McCarthy is hyped.

Cris Collinsworth summed it up best, saying as the game was heading to halftime, “How are the Cowboys leading this game?” No one knows, Cris. No one knows.

WATCH: Cowboys rookie Trevon Diggs makes incredible INT, first of career

Dallas Cowboys cornerback Trevon Diggs records the first interception of his career against the Philadelphia Eagles.

Dallas Cowboys cornerback Trevon Diggs has just recorded his first interception of his rookie season. The incredible catch in the end zone gives the defense the hat trick in terms of takeaways against Carson Wentz and the Philadelphia Eagles on the night.

Throughout the season Diggs has found himself inches away from big plays. Tonight he finally got one. Here’s hoping that this can be a confidence boost for a green player who needs as much of it as he can get given the way this season has gone defensively.

The three turnovers on the night matches the season total for the Cowboys coming into the game. All three have come at the hands of Carson Wentz. The Dallas offense has yet to capitalize on any of the errors and still trail by one as the second half winds down.

Watch: Cowboys’ Vander Esch records 1st career sack, forces fumble

Dallas Cowboys linebacker Leighton Vander Esch gets home for a sack and forces a fumble against the Philadelphia Eagles.

The Dallas Cowboys now have two turnovers in the same night. Perhaps the power of the blue moon on Halloween is having residual affects, or maybe it has to do with Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Carson Wentz being a big fan of turnovers.

Either way, it’s nice to see for a change. The Eagles decided to go for it on 4th-and-3 early in the second quarter when linebacker Leighton Vander Esch got home on a delayed blitz, running through Wentz like a wet paper bag.

That is the first unassisted sack of Vander Esch’s career and just the second forced fumble. The Dallas offense again failed to capitalize with great field position, starting with the ball on the plus side of midfield. They settled for the second Greg Zuerlein field goal of the game and now trail 7-6.