Good, Bad, Ugly: Cowboys latest defensive debacle draws team closer to finish line

The Dallas Cowboys didn’t have much to feel good about in their latest embarrassing and ugly loss, this time to the Baltimore Ravens, 34-17.

The Dallas Cowboys got closer to playoff elimination in their 34-17 loss to the Baltimore Ravens on a rare Tuesday night appearance. Still sitting in last place in the NFC East and after another turd-like performance, the season is mercifully nearing its conclusion for Dallas.

It was going to be a tall task to beat the Ravens, but the Cowboys hung in the game for the first 30 minutes, despite more major problems on defense. Dallas proved they aren’t capable of making plays to win games, instead once again showcasing the traits that lose them.

Here is the good, the bad and the ugly for in the Cowboys’ latest loss.

Final Injury Report: Cowboys Anthony Brown, Greg Zuerlein questionable

The latest injury reports ahead of Dallas and Washington’s Thanksgiving showdown.

With both teams sitting at 3-7, it seems impossible the Thanksgiving game will decide who moves into first place, but somehow that is the reality of the NFC East in 2020. If first place in the division isn’t enough motivation, the Dallas Cowboys will be looking to exact revenge on the Football Team, after Washington rolled up the Cowboys 25-3 in their first meeting.

The Thursday game means the two clubs are both on short weeks, and health could be an X-factor in this pivotal matchup. Based on the injury reports from Wednesday’s practice, the Cowboys might be without just one player on the active roster, cornerback Anthony Brown.

Brown was limited in practice Wednesday with an injury to his ribs sustained in the team’s Week 11 win over the Minnesota Vikings. Brown was listed as a nonparticipant during Monday and Tuesday’s team activities, so his limited status on Thursday is encouraging. However, Dallas used both of their two weekly roster promotions to bring cornerbacks to the game day roster, which isn’t a great sign for Brown’s availability.

According to Michael Gehlken of the Dallas Morning News, the club is preparing to be without Brown on Thursday evening.

Kicker Greg Zuerlein is the second Cowboys that was given the questionable tag, as he has been limited with a back injury all week. While both Zuerlein and Brown are questionable, Zuerlein’s game status seems less up in the air, as head coach Mike McCarthy said on Monday that he is not worried about the former Rams availability for Thursday.

TE Blake Bell, T Brandon Knight, LB Joe Thomas, and RB Ezekiel Elliott were all able to practice in full, and appear good to go. Dallas Cowboys staff writers reported that Elliott, along with LB Sean Lee, “were working on the resistance cords with the athletic training staff during the open portion (of practice)”.


For the Washington Football team, there are a number of players already ruled out, and a few key contributors that are questionable.

Starting safety Deshazor Everett is out, as well as defensive end Ryan Anderson, and linebacker Jared Norris.

Tackle Cornelius Lucas is questionable with an ankle injury. Lucas started at tackle for Washington each of their last three outings. Kicker Dustin Hopkins is another game-time decision with a groin issue.

The biggest name on the Football Team’s injury report this week is WR Terry McLaurin, who in his second season has emerged as a budding star in Washington. McLaurin (ankle) is officially listed as questionable, and his status will be closely monitored.

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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’ 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.

Cowboys vs Eagles Inactives, Captaing: No Lane Johnson, Sean Lee back

The inactives and captains for Week 8’s Sunday Night Football game between the Dallas Cowboys and Philadelphia Eagles

The Dallas Cowboys injury situation has been catastrophic in 2020. Still, they did receive a fair bit of positive news on that front this week with the return of linebacker Sean Lee who was activated from injured reserve and Zack Martin who practiced all week after recovering from a concussion that kept him out of last Sunday’s game.

The two veterans, something Dallas has sorely needed in 2020, are active and ready to go against the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday Night Football. There are no surprise inactives for the matchup tonight as there’s not many tough choices that need to be made. However, rookie defensive end Bradlee Anae returns to active duty after the team traded Everson Griffen earlier in the week.

The team’s rotating cast of captains honors goes to linebacker Leighton Vander Esch, running back and kick return Tony Pollard and kicker Greg Zuerlein.

The Eagles are missing some key pieces offensively, missing right tackle Lane Johnson who was ruled out earlier in the day with an ankle injury. They’re also without running back Miles Sanders and wide receiver Alshon Jeffery.

It hasn’t mattered who has lined up at running back for opponents of the Dallas defense to date, but Boston Scott will assume the lion’s share of those duties. First-round draft pick wide receiver Jalen Reagor will be active for the first time since Week 2 after having surgery to repair a torn UCL in his right thumb.

 

Relive highlights of Cowboys game-winning drive over Giants

Backup QB Andy Dalton finds Michael Gallup for two big plays on the game winning drive for the Dallas Cowboys against the New York Giants.

By year’s end it’s unlikely that the result of the Week 5 game between the Dallas Cowboys and New York Giants will mean much for either team. But after the loss of Dak Prescott it certainly seemed important for the players on the field to finish this game for their fallen leader.

So after the defense got off the field in a tie ball game to give the offense a chance to get their second win on the year, back up quarterback Andy Dalton went to work with just 52 seconds left and the ball at his own 12-yard-line. He started with completion to Amari Cooper who got 15 yards. The next play following a Dallas timeout, Dalton was forced from the pocket and threw a dart to Michael Gallup who somehow got two feet down.

Gallup wasn’t done yet. The very next play Dalton went right back to the well, throwing the ball up to the best deep threat on the roster. Gallup didn’t disappoint.

Mike McCarthy and company let the clock wind down before sending Greg Zuerlein out to win the game with his leg.


Twitter reacts to Dak Prescott’s devastating leg injury

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Good, Bad, Ugly: 2 of 3 phases fail Cowboys in 38-31 loss

The Dallas Cowboys were done in by a poor defense and putrid special teams in their 38-31 loss to the Seattle Seahawks

It was a tall task asking the Dallas Cowboys to go into Seattle and win a game without their top two offensive tackles and two of their top corners. Seahawks QB Russell Wilson has been one of the games best since he’s entered the league and he’s gotten off to an incredible start in 2020.

The Cowboys were behind the eight ball before the contest started, but there was hope the offense could keep up with Wilson and the beleaguered Seahawks defense. Dallas came up just short in a messy affair where they were lucky to even have a chance to win the game.

Here’s the good, the bad and the ugly in the Cowboys’ 38-31 loss that drops their record to 1-2 on the season.

The Good: Downfield passing game thrives

For the second consecutive week, QB Dak Prescott surpassed 450 yards passing. The intermediate and deep passing game for the Cowboys worked well against the battered Seahawks secondary. Cedrick Wilson and Michael Gallup each went over 100 yards receiving, combined for three scores and were close to unstoppable. Wilson broke free on two inside catches and scored his first two NFL touchdowns.

Amari Cooper was banged up but still caught nine passes for 86 yards and rookie CeeDee Lamb caught six passes for 65 yards as well. Prescott and the offense struggled on the underneath and short routes all game long, but when throwing down the field, they were successful.

The Bad: Defense struggles mightily

It wasn’t pretty for the defense, especially in the secondary. Rookie CB Trevon Diggs was burned on multiple occasions, although he made an outstanding play knocking the ball away from WR DK Metcalf to save six points, and Jourdan Lewis was flagged twice for pass interference while looking like he didn’t have a clue what he was doing most of the game.

The secondary lost track of Tyler Lockett three times in the first half and was nowhere to be found on TE Jacob Hollister’s touchdown or two-point conversion.

Getting beat by better players happens in the NFL, but completely losing focus on a number of plays that cost the team points in inexcusable. The Dallas safeties were putrid against the Seahawks.

The Ugly: Special Teams were anything but special

The Cowboys lost four points due to special teams miscues. RB Tony Pollard’s bumbling of a kickoff pinned the offense deep and eventually cost the team two points when the Seahawks got a safety on RB Ezekiel Elliott’s slip on an end zone run. It’s difficult to understand why Pollard was returning the kick in the first place and it turned out to be an expensive mistake.

New kicker Greg Zuerlein cost the Cowboys two points by not converting on two extra points. One went off the upright and another was blocked. Those two misses caused the Cowboys to chase points and made life tougher on the offense.

The Cowboys were believed to be fortunate to be able to hire John ‘Bones’ Fassel, but his group cost the Cowboys four points, which turned out to be a huge four points. Instead of being within a field goal on their final possession, the Cowboys needed a touchdown late in the fourth quarter. It was a challenge the Cowboys couldn’t overcome.

You can chat with or follow Ben on twitter @BenGrimaldi.


Game Recap: Seahawks 38, Cowboys 31; Here’s what we know

Winners and Losers: John Fassel chief complaint as Cowboys fall again

Instant Analysis: Game balls, key stats from Cowboys 38-31 loss to Seattle

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Cowboys ST ace on onside kick: ‘I knew we were going to get that ball’

The Dallas player who recovered Sunday’s crazy kick was one of several Cowboys who had a feeling the ploy would work, including the kicker.

In a game full of huge moments and critical turning points, it was perhaps the biggest. With less than two minutes to play, down by two points and with no timeouts left, there was only one possible option. The situation was clear. The Cowboys’ valiant and methodical comeback on Sunday would all be for naught if the special teams unit doesn’t recover an onside kick.

Problem is, the onside kick happens to be just about the most difficult play in football to properly execute. After a 2018 rules change forbidding overloading one side and getting a running start, the chances of the kicking team retaining possession- already a low-probability proposition- fell to about six percent.

The entire world knew an onside kick was coming. They just didn’t know how… except for a select few wearing the silver and blue.

Since the manner in which a kicking team can legally cover an onside attempt has been altered, it has fallen to kickers to come up with a new way to actually make the kick.

“With the new rules, you’ve got to have something slow where your guys can get to the ball,” Cowboys kicker Greg Zuerlein said, per the team website. “In years past you could run, so you could do different things. But now, you’ve got to have something slow. It gives our guys a chance to block and hop on it.”

What Zuerlein did in the waning moments of Sunday’s improbable win was something that almost no one had seen. Even Daryl Johnston in the Fox Sports booth professed that he’d never seen a ball kicked directly off the turf before, with no tee.

The Falcons certainly looked as though they’d never seen anything like the kick that sputtered off Zeuerlein’s foot.

But a few on the Cowboys sideline confessed after the game that they had a sense of what was coming.

“Honestly, you may not believe me,” linebacker Jaylon Smith told reporters in his postgame remarks, “but I called it in pre-snap, because I saw us run it in practice, and it just looked amazing. So from the jump, just understanding the opportunity, I knew that was the kick that was going to occur. I had 100% faith. I wish I could have bet on it, if that was legal.”

“I knew we were going to get that ball,” said C.J. Goodwin, the man who actually recovered the kick. “I told some of my teammates, ‘They’ve never seen an onside kick like that.'”

“I’ve seen it in practice,” coach Mike McCarthy echoed in his press conference, “but that’s the first time I’ve seen it in live action. It was a beauty, that’s for sure.”

“We had to call an onside kick, obviously, if we wanted to win the game,” explained wideout Amari Cooper. “I think it was a great kick, though. It was a great scheme, if you will, to kick the ball like that and have it kind of rolling or twisting a little bit at around seven yards. Kind of playing that mind game with the hands team because they know that we can’t touch it if the ball doesn’t reach ten yards. So they’re not going to touch it. It was just a great kick; it kept spinning until it got to that ten-yard mark, and as soon as it got there, C.J. was able to hop on it.”

“Just swing confidently and the rest will take care of itself,” said Zuerlein, the nine-year veteran who signed with the Cowboys in the offseason. “Anytime you get in a hurry or don’t swing confidently, bad things happen.”

According to Sports Illustrated‘s Albert Breer, the kick is something that Zuerlein and Fassel concocted last year while they were both still in Los Angeles.

In this week’s MMQB column, he writes:

“In 2019, then-Rams special teams coach John Fassel had to adjust an onside kick strategy he had in his bag after the Ravens and Justin Tucker used something similar—it was a funky dropkick that froze the hands team and sent a knuckler their way off a high bounce—and it was subsequently banned by the league. So Fassel, kicker Greg Zuerlein and punter Johnny Hekker devised a new way to force the hands team to think quickly.

“The idea was to tee the ball up at a 45-degree angle and boot the front tip, so it would spin back-to-front to cover the 10 yards it needed to go before the kicking team could legally recover it, but cover that 10 yards as slowly as possible. The logic went that the hands team would have to decide whether to charge the ball (and risk touching it but not covering it, making it a live ball) or let it go 10 yards, with the kicking team around it (making it a 50/50 ball).

“Since the ball would be moving slowly, the kicking team would have time to surround the ball and have time for players to position themselves to cover it 10 yards downfield—with the hands team, the hope went, still wondering what the hell to do.”

The funny part is, the Rams tried the kick against Dallas in Week 15 last season. Punter Johnny Hekker made the attempt that day; it dribbled out of bounds.

On Sunday, though, off of Zuerlein’s foot, it all worked, right down to the receiving team’s reaction.

 

Atlanta coach Dan Quinn addressed his squad’s kick coverage after Sunday’s game.

“The front three are usually blocking as they’re going,” Quinn said after the game, per the Falcons website. “The high-bouncers go to the second side, so the front line, generally on an onside kick, they’re looking to get a block first and then the hop goes to the next player. When that instance happens, and it’s not one that is a high-hopper then you just transfer in and go to your ball. You’re looking at your assignment first of who you have to go block. Certainly the ball and then your assignment, they definitely know the rule.”

Rest assured that every team in the league will be working in a reminder or two this week about the rules regarding how to cover an onside kick attempt.

And every kicker not named Greg Zuerlein will likely be playing around with ways to boot a ball that’s still lying on the turf.

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Instant Analysis Week 2: Cowboys catch fire, suffocate Falcons 40-39

The Dallas Cowboys came back to stun Atlanta in Week 2, winning 40-39 off a Greg Zuerlein kick as time expired.

The first win of the Mike McCarthy era was a wild one, coming via last-second kick after the team was down big. This week was the shootout many expected, with the Dallas Cowboys and Atlanta Falcons combining for 79 points and 950 total yards of offense.

There were many points where it looked like the Cowboys were done, but this game showed how Dallas is never truly out of it with an offense like this.

It was over when . . .

. . . Greg Zuerlein’s 46-yard field-goal attempt went through the uprights as time expired, capping off one of the most improbable Cowboys comebacks in recent memory. Trailing 20-0 in the first quarter, Dallas rally to outscore the Falcons 30-10 in the second half to steal the win.

Game balls

Game Ball No. 1: K Greg Zuerlein

It wasn’t a great day from a special teams standpoint, but Zuerlein’s two huge kicks saved the day. His (tee-less) onside kick the team recovered set them up, and his game-winning field goal brought them home.

Game Ball No. 2: TE Dalton Schultz

The third-year tight end’s previous career-receiving high was 37 yards, but he filled in for Blake Jarwin nicely in Week 2, despite his early fumble. Schultz hauled in nine catches on 10 targets for 88 yards, and scored the first touchdown of his professional career. He served as a nice underneath for Prescott throughout the game.

Game ball No. 3: QB Dak Prescott

Prescott rallied after an ugly first quarter fumble to rack up 450 passing yards (third-most in any game of his career), completing 34 of 47 passes and scoring four total touchdowns (1 passing, three rushing). He overcome a shaky offensive line to keep the team in the game, and ultimately did enough to get the win.

Key stat: 570

The Cowboys’ 570 total yards of offense are the most they put up since Week 14 of the 2018 season, a 29-23 overtime victory over Philadelphia. They needed every single one of them considering they had a -3 turnover differential and lost the time of possession battle by over seven minutes.

Quick Hits:

  • The Cowboys lost three fumbles within their first 14 offensive plays. A fourth by Tony Pollard was overturned. Those turnovers directly led to the huge hole Dallas constantly found themselves in last year, but this time, they were able to climb out, signaling this is no longer Jason Garrett’s team.
  • It obviously all worked out, but Mike McCarthy made several questionable decisions that in the moment made him look foolish. The Cowboys attempted two embarrassing fake punts that didn’t come close, and set Atlanta up with short fields that fortunately resulted only in six total points. But the game could’ve been very different had the Falcons came away with a TD on either of those drives, or if they had made a 2nd quarter two-point conversion.
  • McCarthy’s seemingly ill-timed aggressiveness also seemed to backfire after Schultz’s TD reception with five minutes left in the game. An extra point would’ve brought Dallas within 8, but instead McCarthy went for two and came up short, leaving the Cowboys down 9 and still needing two scores to win. The Cowboys won’t be bailed out by recovering an onside every week, so McCarthy will have to do a better job of putting this team in a position to win
  • LB Joe Thomas filled in nicely for Leighton Vander Esch, not seeming too out of place. He finished second to Jalyon Smith in total tackles (12, six solo, one for loss), and also recorded one QB hit. He continually seemed to make plays around the ball.
  •  It was an uncharacteristically quiet game for Julio Jones vs Dallas, who caught only two passes for 24 yards and seemingly played through injuries. His day could’ve been very different had he managed to haul in a 41-yard bomb off a Russell Gage direct snap in the third-quarter, but the ball mercifully went through his hands.
  • Next up for the Cowboys in Week 3 is the Seattle Seahawks, fresh off their Sunday Night showdown against the Patriots. The game should be a good test and measuring stick for Dallas early in the season.

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Dallas Cowboys pull off miracle comeback, stun Atlanta Falcons

The Cowboys overcame a 20-point deficit, executed an onside kick and got a last-second field goal to stun the Falcons

The Dallas Cowboys were down 20-0 and 29-10 and thanks to the Atlanta Falcons practicing social distancing on an onside kick, Jerry Jones and America’s Team are 1-1 following a miraculous 40-39 victory Sunday.

Dak Prescott scored his third touchdown of the game to bring the Cowboys within 39-37 in the final minutes. All Atlanta had to do was recover the onside kick.

And the odds have gone to the favor of the receiving team. It can touch the ball anytime. The kicking team has to wait for it to go 10 yards. Someone forgot to tell the Falcons.

A few plays later and Greg Zuerlein, who executed the onside kick, drills the 46-yard field goal for the win.

The Falcons actually led by 15 with less than five minutes left. And then the earth fell out from beneath them.