Report: Cowboys trade with Panthers for 2023 second-round WR

From @ToddBrock24f7: Jerry Jones made good on a vow to be “buying, not selling” at the trade deadline, acquiring the Panthers’ 2nd-round pick from last year.

After all the “we like our guys” talk and “only so much pie” explanations, the Cowboys just couldn’t help themselves when trade deadline day hit.

With a 3-5 record, tons of A-list injuries, and a starting quarterback headed to the shelf for at least a month, most Cowboys fans had come to accept that the 2024 season is probably a wash, and a rebuild (of at least some sort) is coming. As such, offloading brand-name players on expiring contracts seemed far more likely than doing the kind of last-minute deals that genuine playoff contenders hope will push them over the hump come January.

But owner Jerry Jones has zigged when everyone else had decided it was finally time to just zag, mere minutes after promising Dallas radio station 105.3 The Fan that he’d be “buying, not selling” at the deadline.

The Cowboys are trading with the Carolina Panthers to acquire wide receiver Jonathan Mingo, as reported Tuesday by NFL Network insider Tom Pelissero.

Dallas will receive Mingo and a 2025 seventh-round draft pick from the Panthers; Carolina will receive a 2025 fourth-round draft pick from the Cowboys.

The Ole Miss product was one of the Cowboys’ 30 pre-draft visitors in 2023.

Mingo ended up going to the Panthers in the second round, taken 39th overall. He started 14 games for Carolina last season as a rookie, recording 43 receptions for 418 yards. This season has been rough; the 23-year-old has 12 catches for 121 yards through nine games.

He has two years remaining on his rookie contract.

At 6-foot-2 and 220 pounds, Mingo joins a wide receiver room in Dallas led by CeeDee Lamb, who suffered a shoulder sprain in the team’s most recent loss and is considered week-to-week. Veteran Brandin Cooks has hinted that his return is imminent; Jalen Tolbert, Jalen Brooks, KaVontae Turpin, and Ryan Flournoy make up the rest of the Cowboys’ WRs.

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Cowboys’ CeeDee Lamb gets encouraging news on shoulder injury

From @ToddBrock24f7: An MRI has confirmed that Lamb has a sprained AC joint, but he may not miss any time. History shows he’ll be just fine with Cooper Rush.

While the hamstring injury suffered by quarterback Dak Prescott in Sunday’s loss will cost the Cowboys multiple games without their leader, the team’s top offensive weapon appears to have dodged a bullet.

Wide receiver CeeDee Lamb played through a shoulder injury for most of the game and even caught a two-point conversion late in the contest despite being in obvious pain.

Lamb has a sprained AC joint, according to multiple reports, news that would confirm the team’s early suspicions. Last season’s receptions leader will have a sore shoulder, but the injury is not considered serious. He is being called “week-to-week” and may not even miss any time.

“I’ll be out there,” Lamb told reporters. “I’ll be playing.”

The initial injury came in the second quarter after a hard fall to the turf while making a catch. A fourth-quarter dive on a deep ball aggravated the injury further, causing him to stay down momentarily and even miss several plays.

He was able to return.

Lamb totaled eight catches on 12 targets Sunday, gaining 47 yards and that two-point conversion from backup passer Cooper Rush in the waning moments of the 27-21 loss in Week 9.

Now it appears that Rush will take over in Dallas, barring a surprise roster change by the team to go with third-stringer Trey Lance.

But assuming Rush gets the gig, there may not be the dropoff for Lamb that many fans would expect at first blush. The 30-year-old quarterback out of Central Michigan has started six games as a Cowboy, and Lamb’s receiving numbers in that relatively small sample size are… actually… just fine.

Tgt Rec Yds TD
2021 at MIN 8 6 112 0
2022 vs CIN 11 7 75 0
2022 at NYG 12 8 87 1
2022 vs WAS 8 6 97 1
2022 at LAR 8 5 53 0
2022 at PHI 10 5 68 0

In Rush’s six starts, Lamb has averaged six catches on 11 targets for 82 yards per outing.

Over 74 career games, Lamb has averaged six catches on nine targets for 78 yards per outing.

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If Lamb is to play this Sunday when the Eagles come to Arlington, he’ll likely need a positive week of rehab work with the Cowboys training staff and at least one full practice under his belt by the weekend.

“It hurts, no need to shortchange it,” Lamb said of his right shoulder. “But that’s no excuse for my performance. I could have played better overall, and I’ll be better. I’m not going to put so much emphasis on it as far as me catching the ball because overall, that’s my job, but yeah, it definitely hurt.”

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‘Something I’ve never felt’: Cowboys’ Prescott details Week 9 hamstring injury

From @ToddBrock24f7: The Cowboys QB missed the 4th quarter with a hamstring injury, but he also took a blow to his throwing hand in the 27-21 loss to Atlanta.

When the Cowboys lost Dak Prescott at the end of the third quarter of Sunday’s game versus Atlanta, a hamstring injury was the official reason given.

But it may not be the only costly hit the quarterback took in the 27-21 loss.

TV viewers saw the team’s training staff tending to Prescott’s throwing hand on the sideline as the fourth quarter got underway, with blood visible around the knuckle where the right pinkie meets the hand bones. Within minutes, Prescott was announced out of the game… but with a hamstring issue.

Prescott himself told reporters about a sensation he felt while trying to evade a sack by Falcons linebacker Kaden Elliss on the final drive of the third quarter.

“I felt it when I was getting it up from the run,” Prescott said in his postgame press conference. “I can’t even say that I felt it running. Maybe the tackle, maybe something on the tackle, I don’t know. But standing up from that, I felt something, but actually, I didn’t think it was much.”

Prescott seemed to realize otherwise, however, on the very next play. As he stepped through a throw to the far sideline- a 10-yard completion to Jalen Brooks- he pulled up noticeably. Replays show Prescott’s face contorted in pain.

“I felt a pull, felt something I’ve never felt,” he explained.

He dumped out of a pass on the next snap, a third-down play, and looked rather gimpy doing it.

“Tough to walk on it at that point,” Prescott would say later. “Saw the medical team and asked, ‘Could I make it worse?’ At that point, they said I wouldn’t be able to protect myself, and they made the call to hold me out.”

The quarterback had been under fire for weeks for not using his rushing and scrambling skills more often. Prior to the injury on Sunday, he was credited with three runs for 30 yards, his highest ground total since Week 6 of last season.

Prescott was scheduled for an MRI on Monday to determine the severity of the leg injury, but the apparent harm done to his throwing hand is worth following up on as well.

Prescott was not asked about his hand during his Sunday afternoon presser, nor did he bring it up. But the few images broadcast from the sideline seemed to show a very swollen right hand. The passer missed five games in 2022 after breaking the thumb on that same hand in a Week 1 game versus Tampa Bay.

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The bigger worry is that hamstring. Owner Jerry Jones told reporters, “I am concerned about that. It concerned me when I saw the play, or saw him have a reaction to any weakness there.”

Backup Cooper Rush came on in relief and went 13-for-25 passing, compiling 115 yards and a touchdown in a comeback effort that fell short and sent the Cowboys to 3-5.

Rush has a 5-1 career record as the Cowboys starter. His only loss came in his most recent start, 2022’s Week 6 visit to Philadelphia, the last game that Prescott’s thumb injury caused him to miss.

The Cowboys are set to host the Eagles next Sunday. No matter what Monday’s tests reveal about Prescott hamstring and hand, Rush will almost certainly be taking extra snaps as a precaution.

Prescott, for his part, hopes to be able to suit up without missing any time at all.

“I would say that I’ll be out there next week. I’ve got to see. Luckily, I can say I’ve healed fast, I’ve progressed fast on injuries and things, so I’m thankful for that,” Prescott said.

“It’ll take a lot for me not to be out there, I’ll tell you personally.”

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Sideline video catches Prescott’s blunt assessment of how bad things are for Cowboys

From @ToddBrock24f7: Prescott was seen sharing his NSFW thoughts on the team’s Week 9 performance after he was ruled out with a hamstring injury in Atlanta.

Dak Prescott was only repeating the conclusion most Cowboys fans had already come to themselves.

It was late in the fourth quarter of the team’s 27-21 loss in Atlanta, and the Dallas quarterback was watching from the sideline as backup Cooper Rush was embarking on his third series with the offense.

Down two touchdowns when he came in, Rush had started 8-of-15 for 54 yards in relief to that point. Upon tossing another incomplete pass to Jalen Brooks to bring up a third down, TV cameras caught Prescott- clad in a baseball cap and done for the day with a hamstring injury- sharing his observation of things with third-string emergency option Trey Lance.

“We [expletive] suck,” Prescott seemed to say with a shake of his head.

Yep, that pretty much sums it up.

The loss dropped the Cowboys to 3-5, looking way up at both the Commanders and Eagles in the NFC East.Team owner Jerry Jones made a rare away-game locker-room visit to address the team and called the Cowboys’ current situation “bleak.”

Already perilously thin due to injuries on both sides of the ball, the Cowboys now face the very real possibility of Prescott missing time, too.

Last year’s leader in completions and touchdown passes will undergo an MRI on Monday to determine the severity of his injury, which he apparently suffered on a five-yard scramble late in the third quarter.

He told reporters he felt something not during the run or even the tackle, but when he got up. On the next dropback, he said, he “felt something I’ve never felt.”

Though he wanted to return to the field, Prescott was told by trainers that he wouldn’t be able to protect himself and was pulled in favor of Rush to start the fourth quarter.

Over his three quarters of action, Prescott went 18-of-24 passing for 133 yards and a touchdown. Rush finished 13-of-25 for 115 and a score.

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As the leader of the team and face of the franchise, Prescott will no doubt face criticism for his NSFW assessment of the Cowboys’ outlook. He’ll likely own the moment and suggest that his teammates all feel the same way about how they’ve performed thus far this season. He’ll explain that it was an honest response to a disappointing day, but he’ll point out that his job- and the responsibility of every man in the Dallas locker room- is to now flush the loss, turn the page, leave that negativity in the past, and look ahead to preparing for Philadelphia’s visit to Arlington in Week 10.

It’s the right approach. But it doesn’t mean what Prescott said was wrong.

Cowboys fans have been saying it for months.

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Report: Ezekiel Elliott’s reaction to being inactive led Cowboys to leave him in Dallas

From @ToddBrock24f7: Elliott will be a healthy scratch for the first time. He apparently did not react well to the news and will not travel to Atlanta.

“Zeke Who?”

More like: Zeke… Hoo boy.

The Cowboys’ rushing attack has been utterly toothless thus far in 2024, and now not even Ezekiel Elliott will get fed in Week 9 when the team visits the Falcons hoping to get back to .500 ball.

The team website confirms that the ninth-year veteran will not travel to Atlanta with the team. He’ll be inactive for “disciplinary reasons,” according to a report first filed by ESPN’s Todd Archer.

David Moore of the Dallas Morning News reports that Elliott was told he’d be inactive and that, ostensibly based on Elliott’s reaction to the news, “a mutual decision was then made that he not accompany the team to Atlanta.”

It will mark the two-time rushing champ’s first healthy scratch in a game that’s not a “meaningless” season finale.

The 3-4 Cowboys currently rank dead last in the NFL in rushing yards and yards per carry. Elliott, in particular, has struggled in his return to Dallas after spending 2023 as a New England Patriot. The former fourth-overall pick is averaging fewer than seven rushing attempts and just 21.3 rushing yards per game, both career-worst numbers (by far) for the three-time Pro Bowler.

The Cowboys have been unable to make a planned running back by committee work through seven games this season. After signing Dalvin Cook prior to Week 1, the team left him inactive until last Sunday’s matchup with the 49ers. Once he finally took the field, Cook gained 12 yards on six carries in his Dallas debut.

Rico Dowdle, the team’s leading rusher, was a late inactive due to what the team called an illness; Deuce Vaughn was active but did not play.

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Cook was elevated once again for Sunday’s game in Atlanta. Dowdle has not been listed on any of the week’s practice reports and carries no gameday designation.

No Cowboys ball carrier has had a run longer than 13 yards this season.

Whether the Cowboys win or lose on Sunday, Elliott’s benching, his apparent reaction to that development, and the fallout from that move will be a major storyline moving forward at The Star, just the latest chapter in a season that has turned dramatic for all the wrong reasons.

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Cowboys: CB Trevon Diggs has calf muscle tear; will be gametime decision vs Atlanta

From @ToddBrock24f7: Diggs sat out practice this week with what he first thought was calf tightness. Jerry Jones isn’t ready to rule him out for Sunday’s game.

With a road trip to Atlanta on the schedule for this weekend, the Cowboys shouldn’t expect much in the way of Southern hospitality from Falcons quarterback Kirk Cousins.

His loaded offense currently ranks in the top 10 leaguewide in points scored, total yards, yards-per-play, first downs, and passing yards. With DeMarcus Lawrence, Micah Parsons, and DaRon Bland all set to sit out once again, this is not the week for the Dallas defense to have any more of its superstar players pop up on the questionable list.

But that’s exactly where top cornerback Trevon Diggs is, with word coming from the top of the organization about the new injury that kept him out of practice earlier in the week and jeopardizes his status for Week 9.

Diggs made news after the team’s loss to the 49ers by getting into a heated exchange with WFAA reporter Mike Leslie outside the visitors locker room. While the two did publicly make up, it put extra eyes on the two-time Pro Bowler this week. Those eyebrows were then raised when Diggs later appeared on the practice report as a non-participant Wednesday and Thursday with some sort of calf issue.

“What none of us knew when that was going on was that he had a tear in his calf, and [it] was going to maybe limit him,” Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said Friday on 105.3 The Fan.

Diggs had told the media that he believed he was dealing merely with tightness in the muscle, stemming from “one of the plays I got hit or something” in Santa Clara last Sunday night.

Jones wasn’t ready to say Diggs will join his other high-profile rehabbing teammates as an onlooker at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

“I’m not so sure he’s out [for Sunday], but… that’s why he wasn’t at practice the other day.”

Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy offered some optimism for Diggs’s status, calling him a gametime decision.

“There’s specific drills we’ll need him to do tomorrow,” the coach said Friday per ESPN’s Todd Archer, “but he was much better today than we could have anticipated. He’s doing everything he can to try to get ready for Sunday.”

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On the bright side for Dallas, it looks as if rookie cornerback Caelen Carson will return to action. He practiced in full all week and carries no official designation for the Atlanta tilt after a shoulder injury that kept him shelved for four games.

Amani Oruwariye was moved to IR earlier in the week with a back injury, leaving nickel starter Jourdan Lewis, special-teams ace C.J. Goodwin, the much-maligned Andrew Booth, and practice-squadder Josh Butler as the only other cornerbacks in the building.

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Brotherly battle between Cowboys’ Trevon Diggs, Texans’ Stefon postponed again by injury

From @ToddBrock24f7: Last year, Trevon’s ACL injury scrapped a scheduled head-to-head between the two. This time it’s Stefon’s ACL tear, suffered last Sunday.

The highly-anticipated professional battle between the NFL’s Diggs brothers will have to wait… again.

Cowboys cornerback Trevon Diggs was set to square off against Houston wide receiver and older brother Stefon when the Cowboys hosted the Texans in Arlington in Week 11. The siblings’ first head-to-head showdown was supposed to take place last season, when the Cowboys visited Buffalo in December, but a knee injury suffered by Trevon shelved him early in the season.

Stefon’s move to Houston for 2024 had put a new Diggs-vs.-Diggs matchup in the spotlight, in a game that already carries an extra bit of juice as the two Lone Star State teams vie for the Governor’s Cup and bragging rights within the state.

Just like last year, a torn ACL has scrapped the brother-on-brother grudge match. But this time, it’s Stefon’s.

The Texans wideout, 30, suffered the injury last Sunday in the team’s 23-20 win over Indianapolis.

The Diggs brothers have always been close, often training together and competing against one another at events like the Pro Bowl skills challenge. Trevon even lobbied for Dallas to go acquire Stefon when the Bills wide receiver was unhappy with the Buffalo organization in a contract dispute.

Stefon wore a special message on his eye black after his younger brother’s injury last September; it would not be a surprise for Trevon to return the favor somehow when the Cowboys next take the field in Atlanta.

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Trevon, 26, would likely be all too happy to take the spotlight off himself after getting into a heated exchange with a Dallas reporter over a tweet following Sunday night’s Cowboys loss in San Francisco. Diggs later went on teammate Micah Parsons’s podcast and explained his emotional reaction while justifying his play; Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy said in a press conference that he would expect his players to “be better” when facing outside criticism.

Trevon, a two-time Pro Bowler and 2021’s league interceptions leader, signed a five-year contract extension with the Cowboys last summer. Stefon, a four-time Pro Bowler and the NFL’s receptions and receiving yards leader in 2020, is on a one-year deal in Houston and could be on the hunt for a new team following this season.

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Cowboys vs Bengals to get ‘The Simpsons’ treatment in special Week 14 stream

From @ToddBrock24f7: The two teams will square off using characters from the long-running show; real-time animation will help set the game in Springfield.

America’s Team is meeting America’s longest-running primetime scripted series.

The Cowboys’ Week 14 game — a Dec. 9 Monday night meeting with the Cincinnati Bengals —will feature an alternate broadcast set in the world of “The Simpsons,” it was announced during the Steelers’ win over the Giants to wrap up Week 8.

The NFL, ESPN, and Disney teamed up to present a similar “Toy Story” edition of a game last season starring the Falcons and Jaguars.

This season’s chapter of the experiment will have Homer Simpson and the Cowboys taking on son Bart and the Bengals using Sony’s Beyond Sports technology to provide a real-time simulcast of the actual game using characters and settings from the iconic animated series.

Marge and Lisa will interview players during the game and Maggie will fly the SkyCam for the Simpson-ized version of the game, set to be played in Atoms Stadium in Springfield while the real action takes place inside AT&T Stadium in Arlington.

Animated versions of ESPN’s Mina Kimes and Dan Orlovsky will provide commentary, while Drew Carter will handle play-by-play duties. “The Simpsons Funday Football” will stream on Disney+, ESPN+, and NFL+.

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The regular version will air, as usual with Joe Buck and Troy Aikman on the call, on ESPN and ABC’s “Monday Night Football.” Peyton and Eli Manning will do their alt-cast of the night’s action on ESPN2.

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Cowboys DE to serve 3-game suspension while on injured reserve

From @ToddBrock24f7: Sam Williams was arrested in August 2023 on marijuana and weapons charges. He’ll forfeit game checks for Weeks 8 through 10 of this season.

The NFL is adding insult- and a costly punishment- to injury for Cowboys defensive end Sam Williams.

Williams has been suspended three games without pay for violating the league’s personal conduct policy, according to a Monday announcement made by the Cowboys. Williams was already on injured reserve with an ACL and MCL tear suffered during training camp and will not play at all this season.

The suspension went into effect prior to Sunday night’s game versus the 49ers; the former second-round draft pick out of Mississippi will also miss game checks for Week 9’s game in Atlanta and Week 10’s home meeting with the Eagles. He will be eligible for official reinstatement following the Philadelphia game.

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The suspension follows a lengthy investigation for August 2023 charges of marijuana possession and unlawful carrying of a weapon. Williams, now 25, was arrested less than three weeks before the regular season opener but was nevertheless able to appear in all 18 of the team’s games (including playoffs) last year.

Williams will lose a total of $211,807 in salary as a result of the suspension but will not have to miss any games once he returns from his injury.

Next year will be Williams’s fourth season with the Cowboys.

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Cowboys’ Prescott takes blame for interceptions in loss: ‘I’ve got to clean that up’

From @ToddBrock24f7: Dak tossed 2 more picks in Week 8. One was a bad throw caused by pressure; one was a bad decision that both the QB and head coach owned.

On a night when so many things went wrong for the Cowboys, it’s easy (maybe even “lazy,” to recycle a recent buzzword from around these parts) to pin the team’s 30-24 loss in San Francisco on the two interceptions thrown by quarterback Dak Prescott.

The league’s highest-paid player now has eight picks through seven games, a figure currently topped by only three passers. That’s one less than Prescott threw all of last season, and it puts him ahead of his career-worst 2022 pace, when he had seven picks in his first seven games en route to a league-leading 15 total.

Perhaps most troubling, though: Week 8 marked the third straight game in which Prescott has tossed multiple picks, the first time in his career he’s had a stretch that long.

Prescott was quick to take personal responsibility for the miscues.

“I don’t have to be perfect,” he said in his postgame press conference, “but I damn sure can’t be having the turnovers.”

Winning the turnover battle was a “huge, blinking light” for head coach Mike McCarthy during the team’s bye week; Dallas came into Sunday night’s contest with a minus-six differential in the category. After Prescott’s two giveaways in Santa Clara, the Cowboys are minus-eight; only the Raiders and Titans (three combined wins this season) are worse.

Good teams simply aren’t bad in that stat.

“[We] put ourselves behind in the turnover battle, and that’s on me,” Prescott said. “Can’t have that if we plan to win games, and I’ve got to clean that up, period.”

But McCarthy pointed out that the breakdown was bigger than just his passer, especially on the first-quarter deep ball attempt.

“When you look at interceptions, you can grade them, put them in buckets and categories,” McCarthy told reporters Sunday night. “The first one, he had pressure in the B-gap, hits his feet, which took him late, the safety got a jump on the ball, so he wasn’t able to get it to the back pylon.”

Prescott also hinted that the pressure from 49ers edge rusher Nick Bosa forced a bad throw in what might have otherwise been an ideal matchup downfield between speedy wideout KaVontae Turpin and San Francisco rookie cornerback Renardo Green.

“He was singled up. Obviously, the safety just got over there because I got hit as I was throwing the ball and left the ball hanging from the hit,” Prescott explained.

“That’s a potential of a big play right there. It just swings completely the other way… Thought I was going to be able to get it off with full strength on the throw. I wasn’t.”

McCarthy told media members that the Cowboys’ challenges with pass protection factored into his offensive plan as the game went on, citing “a little bit of my angst in play-calling because of [the 49ers’] ability to get pass rush with four rushers.”

San Francisco’s defense logged two sacks and two QB hits, plus numerous pressures on the night.

“A lot of conversation,” McCarthy said, “as far as our pass game was protection.”

Prescott has been sacked 18 times already this season and is under pressure on nearly one out of every four dropbacks, currently the highest rate since his rookie season.

With sketchy offensive line play and a mostly ensemble cast of third-tier receivers, Prescott was pressed once again to try to do too much as things started to slip away in the second half. That led to No. 4 forcing the ball to his only dependable target as he looked to provide a spark.

The result? A terrible decision that instead poured gasoline on a third-quarter fire that saw the 49ers go on a 21-point run.

“The second one was as boneheaded an interception as I feel like I’ve had,” Prescott claimed. “Trying to make a play. Too much confidence in myself in that moment right there. I obviously should have just thrown it away. Wish I’d have put a little more heat on it; it would have been CeeDee or out of bounds. That one hurt.”

Once again, McCarthy tried to share some of the blame for the play choice, deliberately putting his quarterback on the move to counter his O-line’s struggles.

“I called it too early,” the coach admitted. “What was it, 3rd-and-5? That’s a better 3rd-and-4-to-3rd-and-3 call. [Ed. note: It actually was 3rd-and-4.] So the leverage wasn’t there, and he’s trying to make a play. We’ve got to throw that ball away there, but I wish I had that play call back.”

Prescott similarly expressed regret over the part that his errant throws made in the team’s latest meltdown by the Bay.

“I’ve got to make throws, pressure or not. I’m capable of doing it, so I’ve got to do it,” he said.

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But he knows that it also comes down to making better decisions, even when the chips are down.

“I’ve just got to burn that ball or eat the sack and just play it play-by-play. A lot of times, big plays come from just taking something underneath, guys blocking in the secondary, and the guys going and breaking tackles. Big plays come from there, so we can’t necessarily chase them. We’ve got to stick to it, one play at a time. We’ll keep our heads up and do that.”

And so the dilemma continues for Prescott: whether to take command of the situation and play like the NFL’s first $60 million man on a squad that truly needs a hero… or just keep chipping away with the next right little decision and the next right little decision after that, trusting that something big will eventually break loose.

The reality is, the job requires both. But which moment calls for which mindset… that’s the whole key.

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