The Cowboys are sticking with Brett Maher despite their special teams coach saying he has the yips

Cowboys fans should be really, really nervous.

If you’re a sports fan of any kind, the last thing in the world you want to hear associated with your team is the yips. It’s the same vibe that Voldemort had in Harry Potter — you just can’t say it. If you do, it’s never a good thing.

So Cowboys fans should probably be terrified at this point. Because, according to special teams coordinator John Fassel, Brett Maher has a case of the yips.

Maher missed four extra point attempts against the Buccaneers in Dallas’ opening playoff game. Luckily, the game wasn’t close at all so the points didn’t actually matter. But, it seems, Maher’s confidence was shot.

At least, that’s what Fassel makes it sound like in this latest report from ESPN’s Todd Archer. Here’s what the coach had to say about Maher.

“I believe in the hot hand, and I believe in the yips, absolutely,” Dallas special teams coordinator John Fassel said. “And you know, you wonder sometimes how you get into the yips, and you wonder sometimes how you get back into the hot hand. I think it’s keep stepping up to the line and shooting that thing. We missed a couple of free throws [Monday] … He had a hot hand. Let’s face it, he only missed [six] kicks all season. The yips happen, so I expect a hot hand coming up.”

Yikes, man. Absolutely none of that sounds good. It’s all the opposite of what you want to hear about the situation if you’re a Cowboys fan.

Here’s the thing about the yips — it doesn’t just…go away. It’s very rarely just a one-game thing. Often times, it can last years. It may never actually go away at all.

We’ve got plenty of evidence available showing us how this works. Remember when Markelle Fultz forgot how to shoot? Or how about when Nick Anderson forgot how to shoot free throws? Here’s Chuck Knoblauch throwing a ball into the stands because he just forgot how to throw to first base.

These problems persisted for years in each case. Maybe Maher gets luck and he’ll be able to make those kicks come Sunday. But if not? Whew, boy. Dallas might be in serious trouble.

‘Expecting to make every kick’: Brett Maher embracing latest ride with Cowboys

Cut in 2019 over accuracy issues, Brett Maher has hit all his field goal tries so far this season, all from 50-plus and one a game-winner. | From @ToddBrock24f7

Many in Cowboys Nation were dubious when the club opted to head into the regular season with Brett Maher as their kicker. Things, after all, had ended badly toward the end of the 2019 season, when Maher was released due to a sudden lack of accuracy.

But the Nebraska native, now 32, was brought back to Dallas for this summer’s training camp and won the job over undrafted rookie Jonathan Garibay and ex-CFL star Lirim Hajrullahu. He’s been nothing sort of perfect after two games, sinking all three of his field goal attempts thus far, including the game-winner on Sunday versus Cincinnati.

“You do go out there expecting to make every kick,” Maher told media members after securing the Week 2 victory. “I feel like I’m in a good rhythm right now. Jake [McQuaide, long snapper] and Bryan [Anger, punter/holder] are absolutely money on the operation, gave me a great look at it. It’s just a really fun group to be a part of. That whole last sequence was awesome: Bryan pinning them deep with a punt, the defense getting a stop, getting a good punt return, and then getting in position and coming through. That was a very fun moment to be a part of.”

Maher’s 50-yard make is, incredibly, his shortest field goal of the young season so far; he hit one from 54 earlier in the Bengals game and was good from 51 in the season opener versus Tampa Bay.

The Cowboys’ special teams coordinator said his big-legged specialist would have been given the greenlight from even further away.

“We said 45-yard line. That was our goal,” said John Fassel on Monday. “There’s always a little bit of fudging if there’s [weather] conditions involved. But that big line is a nice target for the offense to think, ‘Let’s get past that big line of the 45,’ and then we feel good about a decision to potentially kick if it’s a walk-off. If there’s 10 or more seconds- just in case of a miss- then [the opponents] get a shot at it. So for end of half, end of game, walk-off kick, make that big line at the 45 our target for Brett, in our stadium. It could change in a road stadium that’s outdoors.”

Trying from the 45 would have made it a 63-yarder, equaling Maher’s career-best and the current franchise record. But long-distance bombs haven’t been Maher’s issue.

He’s responsible for four of the five longest field goals ever from a Cowboys kicker, and when the team cut him loose in 2019, Maher had booted two field goals from beyond 60 yards in back-to-back games about six weeks prior. But he had made only one of five from 40 to 49 yards out.

To be sure, Cowboys fans will let Maher hear it when he eventually pushes one wide or hooks a PAT. But for now, the new and improved Maher is making the most of his scoring chances… and is making the most of what is technically his third stint with the organization.

He was first on the Dallas practice squad briefly during the 2013 preseason as Dan Bailey rehabbed an injury. He was brought back in 2018 and outkicked Bailey for the starting job prior to that season.

But the fact that he’s back in the building again to prove himself to a new coaching staff doesn’t necessarily make this latest clutch kick any more rewarding, he says.

“Every opportunity is rewarding to be honest with you,” Maher confessed. “I’m happy to do my part with this group. The guys in the locker room are awesome. This whole game was a ton of fun to be a part of. This whole locker room is a ton of fun to be a part of. I’m embracing the ride and doing my part.”

And his coordinator is loving the comeback story, even if he’s just getting to know Maher for the first time.

“I was as happy as I could be. I’ve known Brett since he came out of college and kind of followed his career, like most guys, even if I haven’t coached them,” Fassel told reporters. “I wouldn’t say he’s exceeded my expectations because I thought he was always a really, really good kicker, but just his mental toughness and poise has been really cool to witness, because you don’t really get to know somebody like that until you’re coaching them. He’s a pro kicker, you know? Ups and downs and ups and downs.”

So far this time around with the Cowboys, it’s been all ups for Maher.

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Oklahoma Sooners Kicker Gabe Brkic named a finalist for Lou Groza award

Oklahoma Kicker Gabe Brkic was named as a semifinalist for the Lou Groza award for the third consecutive year.

The most interesting man in the Oklahoma football program is getting some national accolade. No, we’re not talking about Caleb Williams. We’re talking about the Sooners’ mustache man, kicker Gabe Brkic.

Today, Brkic was announced as a semifinalist for the Lou Groza Award honoring the nation’s best kickers.

This marks Brkic’s third year in a row as a semifinalist. Only two others kickers hold the distinction of having been nominated as semifinalists three times; Wake Forest’s Nick Sciba and Nevada’s Brandon Talton.

Brkic has been excellent on the season making 17 of 20 field goals and has been perfect on his extra points this season. He is kicking at an 80 percent clip on field goals 40 yards or longer while also 5 of 6 from field goals on longer than 50 yards. His 56-yarders against Tulane and Western Carolina remain as the longest kicks of the season by any kicker in the NCAA.

He’s been clutch this season and in season’s past making game-winners like his winner against the West Virginia Mountaineers after Spencer Rattler and a struggling offense orchestrated a game-winning drive to get in Brkic’s range.

The finalists for the award will be announced on November 23rd effectively giving Brkic the rest of the Sooners regular season to make his case as one of the three finalists.  With the way the Sooner offense has been moving the ball of late, it stands to reason there will be many more opportunities for Brkic to showcase his talents.

Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes, and opinions.

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3 Stars of the game: Sooners shine on both sides of the ball vs. Kansas State

The Oklahoma Sooners had several players who stood out in their 37-31 win over Kansas State, but who earned our 3 stars of the game?

The Oklahoma Sooners just keep winning games. It may not always be pretty, but here they are six days away from a date with their Red River rivals undefeated. College Football Playoff rankings will be making their appearance soon, and the Sooners are starting to build a strong case.

To stay undefeated, three guys elevated themselves to help the Sooners get over a foe that’s been quite a hassle the last few years. Let’s look at who stood out and earned one of our 3 stars from the 37-31 win over Kansas State.

Third Star – Isaiah Thomas, Defensive Line

Isaiah Thomas has proven that he is indispensable to this defense’s growth and evolution for two years in a row. He’s so versatile and can play inside and out.

Whether it was setting the edge or penetrating gaps and allowing his linebackers and safeties free to fill, he did it all against Kansas State. The absence of their other uber versatile defensive lineman Jalen Redmond has only highlighted how awesome Thomas is.

He finished with two tackles for loss and this sack of Kansas State quarterback Skylar Thompson in the red zone to force a Wildcats field goal.

Up Next: Second and First Stars of the Game

Oklahoma Sooners pick up big win over Kansas State 37-31

In one of their most complete performances of the season, the Oklahoma Sooners beat Kansas State 37-31 to move to 5-0 on the season.

As crazy as it may sound, this was the best Oklahoma Sooners win of the season. They went to Manhattan, Kansas for their first road game of the season and took care of business against a tough Kansas State team, 37-31.

The game wasn’t necessarily as close as the score indicated.

The Wildcats got the ball to start the game and methodically worked the down the field with some timely completions by super senior quarterback Skylar Thompson, who played despite a week-long game of smoke and mirrors from head coach Chris Klieman about the quarterback’s availability.

Kansas State made its way into the red zone before a forced fumble by defensive end Reggie Grimes and subsequent 60 yard return by Nik Bonitto set the Sooners up nicely.

After making it inside the 10, penalties, a botched snap, and poor blocking would result in the Sooners settling for three points off of a field goal from Gabe Brkic.

The Wildcats would answer on a touchdown pass from Thompson to star running back Deuce Vaughn.

The Sooners would respond with a 12 play 75-yard touchdown drive of their own capped off by a very creative run play involving Jeremiah Hall.

The Sooners and Wildcats swapped field goals before halftime. Oklahoma went into the locker room with a 13-10 lead.

Neither team punted until the 3rd quarter. Kansas State kept opting to go for it and the Sooners defense couldn’t get off the field. Conversely, Kansas State simply could not stop Oklahoma as every drive ended in points.

Things would get weird in the third quarter thanks in part to two different reviews.

Trailing 27-10, Kansas State attempted and recovered an onside kick, and referee Kevin Hassell went to confirm the ball traveled 10 yards. It did, but Lincoln Riley smartly and probably due to information he was receiving via his headset challenged the play again.

Riley argued that kicker Ty Zentner had accidentally kicked the ball twice (which he had). The illegal touching gave Oklahoma the ball. They would do nothing with it and instead turned it over on third and long on a Spencer Rattler interception putting Kansas State deep in their own territory. The pick amounted to nothing more than a punt as Rattler threw it up there hoping to make a play or catch a defensive pass interference call.

Another review came on a 4th down completion from Thompson to receiver Landry Weber. A superb attempt to catch it was ruled incomplete as the ball hit the ground as he attempted to secure it.

A slick Jeremiah Hall TD reception on a shovel pass from Rattler put the Sooners in front 34-17.

The Wildcats would eat up a lot of clock while scoring to make it 34-24.

The Sooners responded with another field goal from Brkic, which was followed by a kick return for a touchdown from Malik Knowles. Knowles now has three return touchdowns this year. Kansas State had one last attempt to get an offside and the attempt was unsuccessful as wide receiver Jadon Haselwood calmly caught the kick and took a knee.

Spencer Rattler threw for 243 yards and two touchdowns, running back Kennedy Brooks was the lead back of the day posting 91 yards and a touchdown while Jeremiah Hall scored twice and Marvin Mims re-emerged with four catches for 71 yards.

Oklahoma can now return to Norman and prepare themselves for the Red River Shootout with the 4-1 Texas Longhorns. Kansas State will have a bye before playing Iowa State on October 16th.

Dave Toub says Chiefs fixed ‘operational glitch’ causing Harrison Butker’s missed kicks

The Kansas City Chiefs had their own “Ace Ventura: Pet Detective” moment in the divisional round.

Kansas City Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker’s troubles with extra points returned during the AFC’s divisional round, but this time it was a different issue causing the problem.

During the regular season, Butker missed a total of six PATs but hadn’t missed once since Week 9. Chiefs special teams coordinator Dave Toub blamed those issues on the weather in some cases or even Butker “toeing the ball.” This time around they’ve identified the issue as an “operational glitch.”

“Had nothing with what happened earlier,” Toub told reporters on Thursday. “It was an operational glitch that we had with the rotation of the ball; the laces came down in a weird spot. Not one time all year did that happen or in practice for that matter and it happened twice and both of those kicks we rotated a different way. It was just an operational glitch that we cleaned it up, he had a great week of practice and he was on point this week so we’re good.”

Toub shared a great amount of detail about why this kick failed and how they’ve gone about correcting it in this particular situation.

“(James) Winchester is so good as a snapper, he can count the rotations with his snap where the laces never appear for him for the hold, but in this case the laces appeared,” Toub explained. “Now there was a combination with the weather and a little bit short, whatever we did there, we figured it out this week. The laces showed up to where they were facing (Harrison) Butker and then Tommy (Townsend) has to deal with getting them out of the way which is a matter of which way we’re going to rotate the ball so rotated to where Butker could see the laces for a longer period of time. That’s not what we want to do so we want to rotate it the opposite way, so it goes away. I didn’t want to get real technical with it, but I guess you forced me to, but that’s really what it is. Like I said, it’s just an operational thing that we got ironed out and fixed.”

In layman’s terms, the laces were the wrong spot when the ball got to the holder, then the holder spun the ball the long way to account for it. If you’ve ever seen the film “Ace Ventura: Pet Detective” you know that kickers always want the laces facing out and away from them.

Butker explained why it’s important, specifically for him, to have the laces in the right spot. But he also shouldered the blame as well because he’s trained for the ways that he can adjust to overcome issues with the laces and otherwise.

“So every kicker is different, but for me I’m looking at the ground, the spot basically where the holders going to put the ball and then once the ball’s down my eyes normally raise up to look at the sweet spot of the ball so in a perfect world that ball is still so I can just hone in on the sweet spot and swing away,” Butker said on Thursday. “If the laces are a little bit off, then the ball’s going to be moving, but I’ve been very fortunate to have such a great operation the past couple months, past couple weeks so that in a game when the ball is moving, I didn’t handle it well and that’s on me because I do practice that during the week. Since our operation is so good, I do practice seeing bad laces, seeing the ball moving because at the end of the day, as a kicker, if the ball’s on the ground it’s your job to make the kicks so when that balls moving or whatever or if it’s perfectly still, you got to make the kick. We got a lot of good reps this week, and as I said as a kicker, you got to be able to handle everything no matter what.”

Both Toub and Butker believe this is a quick fix and something that they’ve already accounted for in this practice week leading up to the AFC Championship Game against the Buffalo Bills. As the stakes get higher in the playoffs, this unit will want things to be airtight.

“Yeah definitely, I mean we’re not going to try and reinvent the wheel,” Butker said. “I think there are some minor adjustments we can all make, and we’re focused in for this next AFC Championship game and the biggest thing is just learning from past mistakes and correcting it and getting better and moving on.”

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McCarthy on Cowboys’ total team ineffectiveness: ‘We’re kicking field goal attempts, and they score touchdowns’

The Dallas coach and players were unhappy about the team’s missed field goals and overall lack of scoring against Baltimore on Tuesday.

The Cowboys got trounced by 17 points. Field goals were not the difference. But having to repeatedly settle for three-point tries instead of putting the ball in the end zone assuredly put Dallas in a hole that they never climbed out of.

Missing three of those tries may have also put kicker Greg Zuerlein in a hole with his teammates and coaching staff.

“The issue,” as head coach Mike McCarthy explained in his postgame press conference, “we’re kicking field goals- or attempting to kick field goals- and they were scoring touchdowns.”

Yikes.

With one pointed zinger, McCarthy managed to trash his anemic offense, insult his porous defense, and put his $2.5-million-dollar kicker on notice.

Zuerlein, a nine-year veteran with a career make percentage of over 82%, found himself in a serious slump in Baltimore on Tuesday night. Despite entering the game having connected on eight straight field goals, the 2017 Pro Bowler missed from 40, 53, and 52 yards against the Ravens on Tuesday.

It marked the first time Zuerlein has missed multiple field goals in a game since 2016, and it was the first time he’s missed three in a game since his rookie season.

The Ravens’ Justin Tucker also had a miss on the night. According to him, it’s become a not-uncommon problem in his home stadium in recent years.

The December air was chilly, with a noticeable wind coming in off the Inner Harbor. But Zuerlein couldn’t blame his performance on the weather or the stadium.

“I wouldn’t say it was anything, at all,” the kicker said, per the Cowboys team website. “I think the conditions were fine, even if there was wind. I’m good enough to make the kicks, I just didn’t do it.”

Kickers are often held at somewhat of a distance from the rest of the team, viewed as a separate entity. Even though they work hand in hand, so to speak, with the offense, every-down players are often hesitant to comment on the specialist’s job.

But Zuerlein’s teammates couldn’t help but notice the misses that left them empty-handed after three of their ten drives during the game.

“They’re definitely crucial,” wide receiver Michael Gallup said afterward of the missed kicks, “but we’re always thinking six and seven. We’re always thinking those touchdown plays. We’re not trying to settle for a field goal. It’s great to get field goals, but we want touchdowns. We want to score big.”

Scoring big has been a rare occurrence for Dallas in 2020. The team ranks in the bottom ten leaguewide in total scoring, averaging just over 22 points per game. They’ve averaged just 15 per game over their past seven outings; the only time they topped 20 in that span resulted in their lone win since mid-October.

Zuerlein may have blown his opportunities Tuesday, but the offense as a whole isn’t doing their job, either.

They had chances in Baltimore. The Cowboys ran 23 more plays than the Ravens, had ten more first downs, nearly matched them in total yardage, won the time of possession battle, and had the ball inside Ravens territory on all but two of their offensive drives.

“We’re getting good field position, we’re getting the ball on their side of the 50,” running back Ezekiel Elliott told the media after the game. “We’ve got to go score touchdowns. That’s kind of been the story this year.”

“We had the ball forever,” Gallup agreed. “We were moving the ball. We were running it, we were throwing it, we just didn’t get paydirt. That’s the biggest thing.”

“We kept getting stalled, kind of, right before the red zone,” noted quarterback Andy Dalton. “We made it tougher on the kicks. We’ve got to find a way to convert first downs on those situations, keep drives alive, and get down there and score touchdowns.”

Zuerlein’s last two misses- from 53 and 52- perhaps shouldn’t have come as a shock. The normally-dependable kicker nicknamed “Greg the Leg” has converted just one of his six attempts from beyond 50 yards this season.

Kickers, on the whole, though, are improving dramatically from long-range. Field goals of 50-plus yards were once a true novelty in the NFL. In 1960, for example, just five were made across the entire league that season. Through the first 13 weeks of this season, 88 of them have been made at a rate of nearly two out of every three attempts.

Once considered a highlight-reel sniper shot, a 50-plus-yard field goal is now a 65.6% proposition.

But it’s Zuerlein’s first miss from Tuesday night that will really stick in the craw of Cowboys fans. After an eleven-play drive put them in the red zone, Dallas lined up for a 35-yard field goal. Zuerlein had a 91.7% career make percentage from 30 to 39 yards. He connected.

But a terrible bit of pre-snap clock management brought a delay of game penalty. The Cowboys were moved back five yards to try again. Zuerlein’s make percentage from 40 to 49 yards was just 79.7%, but he’d been perfect from that range on the year up to that moment.

The ensuing kick sailed wide right. And with it seemed to go much of the Cowboys’ momentum.

“We missed the field goal,” McCarthy said. “Those are the kind of mistakes you can’t make in a game like this. We needed points there. We had some opportunities for points that did not come out. At the end of the day, we’re kicking field goal attempts, and they score touchdowns.”

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After solid 2019, Seahawks kicker Jason Myers still has room to grow

Seattle Seahawks kicker Jason Myers had a relatively solid season for the team in 2019, but there is still room for improvement in 2020.

Seattle Seahawks kicker Jason Myers had a rough start to the 2019 season. However, he rebounded in a big way and became reliable in the second half of the year, helping the team make it to the divisional round of the postseason where they lost to the Green Bay Packers.

Myers made 23 of his 28 field goals in the 2019 regular season, good for 82.1 percent. He also made 40 of his 44 extra points (90.9 percent) on the year. After a particularly shaky performance in Week 9 against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, in which he made but also missed two field goals – including the game-winner that forced overtime – Seahawks fans were calling for Myers to be released.

He answered the outcry by making all 12 of his field-goal attempts through the next six games, which is how he finished the regular season. However, Myers has to clean up his misses to fulfill the four-year, $15.5 million contract the Seahawks signed him to in the 2019 offseason. He made only two of his four field goals in the postseason, which will not cut it in the playoffs.

Myers had a good year in 2019, but he must be more consistent with his kicks in the future to live up to his lucrative contract.

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Seahawks are resilient but have had numerous lucky breaks in 2019

The Seattle Seahawks have been incredibly resilient throughout the 2019 season, but have also caught numerous lucky breaks to help them.

The Seattle Seahawks (10-3) have had several lucky breaks over the course of the 2019 NFL season that have contributed to their success. Of course, Seattle has had to be incredibly resilient to compile a 10-3 record through 13 games, but the Seahawks have been fortunate, to say the least.

In addition to squeaking by most of their opponents, they have often had the opportunity of playing teams missing a key player or two. Examples of this are the Bengals without A.J. Green, the Falcons without Matt Ryan, the 49ers without George Kittle, and the Vikings without Adam Thielen. This is not to say that the Seahawks have been sufficiently healthy every game because they certainly haven’t been. However, the talents of certain injured opponents could have played a big role in games against Seattle if they were healthy.

At the end of the day, you have to play whoever is in front of you and try to win no matter the circumstances. However, the Seahawks have also been lucky due to crucial missed field goals by the other team.

Both the 49ers and the Rams missed game-winning field goals against Seattle that essentially gave them victory. Greg Zuerlein missed a 44-yarder as time expired to make the final score 30-29 in favor of Seattle in Week 5, and Chase McLaughlin hooked a 47-yard field goal wide left in overtime in Week 10 that gave Seattle kicker Jason Myers the opportunity to kick the game-winning field goal at the end of overtime, which he did.

The Seahawks are a good team, but they will have to be better in the next few weeks because it is likely they will catch fewer breaks heading into the postseason. Above all else, they must stay resilient and keep finding ways to win.

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Maher says ‘I feel fine’ after another miss; Garrett to take ‘a hard, close look’

The Cowboys kicker’s job may be in jeopardy after yet another missed field goal- and additional errors- in Thursday night’s loss to Chicago.

A long list of things went wrong for the Cowboys in Chicago on Thursday night. Among the most maddening for many fans watching the game was the performance of Brett Maher. The second-year kicker missed a 42-yard field goal try in the second quarter that would have tied the score. Later, Maher cost the Cowboys valuable field position when a kickoff dribbled out of bounds. And in the waning moments, his onside kick try- the team’s last-ditch chance at a miracle comeback- never even had a chance.

As poor a showing as he had in the team’s loss, it might be Maher’s casual attitude to all of it afterward that infuriates Cowboys fans the most.

When asked about a possible injury or mechanics issues causing the preponderance of misses this season, Maher nonchalantly told reporters, “I feel fine.”

When pressed to come up with a reason, then, for blowing so many kicks, he answered with a shrug.

“I feel fine,” he repeated.

But he’s not kicking fine. He’s just 20-of-30 for field goal attempts this season, a dreadful 66 percent. Last season, he finished 29-of-36, or 80 percent. Yes, he has connected on several from extremely long range; he’s the only kicker ever with three field goals of 60-plus yards. But he’s just 1-of-5 this year on tries between 40 and 49 yards. Those are the misses that are costing the Cowboys games, wasting decent drives, flipping field position, causing the team to gradually fall behind by multiple scores, and forcing the offense to switch to catch-up mode too often and for too long.

That’s precisely what his 42-yard miss did against the Bears.

“Obviously, you have to make the kick,” coach Jason Garrett said from the podium Thursday night. “We’ve had that instance the last couple weeks where you drive the ball, you get yourself in a position to where you’re going to be competitive in the game, and we’re not able to cash in on the drive with a field goal.

“In regards to the ball that was kicked out of bounds,” Garrett continued, “we were trying to kick the ball away from 84 [Bears return specialist Cordarrelle Patterson]. He’s a big-time player, and [Brett] missed it a little bit left and it squirted out of bounds. Obviously, not what we wanted on that situation.”

The penalty gave the Bears fifteen extra yards of field position just moments after Dallas had reduced the deficit to 10 points and started to gain momentum. Working on a suddenly shorter field, Chicago promptly drove 60 yards in three plays and put the ball in the end zone to increase their lead to 17. Momentum, squelched.

A very late field goal from 31 yards out (on first down) brought the Cowboys to within seven points and left enough time on the clock for an onside kick attempt and a Hail Mary if they could recover.

The ensuing kick was so weak that media members had to ask Garrett during his press conference if it was an actual onside attempt.

“Yeah, it was,” Garrett replied. “He was going to try to bang it against the guy on the front line.”

It actually looked like Maher was trying to recover the kick himself, something that was done to perfection by Colts punter Pat McAfee back in 2014. Coincidentally enough, the play just made the rounds again on Twitter a couple weeks ago.

Whatever the intent, Maher’s onside try was scooped up immediately by Chicago. And the story of Maher’s game can be summarized by more missed opportunities.

The 30-year-old missed both of his field goal tries on Thanksgiving versus Buffalo. He missed one the week prior in New England. Week 14’s miss- his fourth in the last three outings- was his tenth on the year. No other kicker over the last four seasons missed ten field goals in a single year, and Dallas still has three more games to go in 2019.

When asked after the Chicago game to rate his confidence level, Maher seemed to shake off the question like it was an absurd thing to ask.

“Feel good.”

But the team may not feel as good. Garrett has always driven the “he’s made a lot of big kicks for us in the past” train. But after working out a trio of possible replacement kickers following the Bills loss, the coach allowed for the possibility of shopping once again after Maher’s latest miss.

“Obviously, we have to do a close evaluation of it,” Garrett said Friday morning during a phone call with 105.3 The Fan. “And Brett would be the first one to tell you that he’s got to make those kicks. Unfortunately, he didn’t do that for us. You know, we brought three kickers in earlier in the week; we decided to give Brett an opportunity this week. It didn’t work out. So we have to take a real hard, close look at that and determine what we want to do moving forward.”

For Maher’s part, he says he doesn’t think about the notion that his job may be in jeopardy.

“I can’t,” the Nebraska alum told reporters. “I felt like I did a good job staying in my lane this week. Felt like I hit every ball pretty well tonight, and I’ll put my head on the pillow tonight feeling good about what I did this week and moving forward.”

Maher may feel good about it. But the fans do not feel good about it. And with postseason play still very much on the table, the team may no longer be able to afford to pretend they feel good about it, either.