Todd Archer is an NFL reporter at ESPN and covers the Dallas Cowboys. Archer has covered the NFL since 1997 and Dallas since 2003. He joined ESPN in 2010. You can follow him on Twitter at @toddarcher.
Jordan Raanan
Close
Jordan Raanan
Advertisement
ESPN Staff Writer
Jordan Raanan is a reporter for NFL Nation at ESPN. Raanan covers the New York Giants. You can follow him via Twitter @JordanRaanan.
Sep 27, 2024, 11:22 PM ET
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Entering Thursday night’s game, the New York Giants and Dallas Cowboys shared last place in the NFC East at 1-2, a game behind the 2-1 Washington Commanders and Philadelphia Eagles.
The Cowboys scored two first-half touchdowns and limited the Giants to three field goals to lead 14-9 at the half. It was a defensive battle the rest of the way, as neither team scored a touchdown in the second half.
Dallas picked up its second win of the season with a final score of 20-15, but star edge rusher Micah Parsons was carted off the field late in the game with a left ankle/foot injury. He said afterward that X-rays were negative and he will get an MRI on Friday.
Giants’ rookie receiver Malik Nabers also exited the game in the fourth quarter after suffering a concussion.
Here are the most important things to know from Thursday night for both teams:
Dallas Cowboys
Dak Prescott did not speak to the media prior to Thursday’s game against the Giants. He said he would speak “post win.” The Cowboys got the win, but it wasn’t an artistic beauty. However, after Dallas was embarrassed in back-to-back home losses to the New Orleans Saints and Baltimore Ravens, the only thing that mattered was getting a win on a short week.
Advertisement
Being 2-2 is so much better than 1-3. Had the Cowboys lost, it would have marked the first time they lost three September games since 2001, and they would have been in last place in the NFC East.
Prescott was sharp, especially in the first half with touchdown passes to CeeDee Lamb (55 yards) and Rico Dowdle (15 yards). The defense finally stopped the run and stiffened in the red zone, holding the Giants to five field goals.
Prescott has now won 13 straight against the Giants. His last loss came in 2016 as a rookie. He tied the second-longest win streak by a quarterback against a single opponent since quarterback stats were first tracked in 1950. Tom Brady beat the Buffalo Bills 13 straight times from 2003 to 2010, and Steve Young beat the Rams 13 straight from 1987 to 1998. Prescott will get a chance at No. 14 on Thanksgiving.
Promising trend: When Lamb has some sideline issues, the best seems to come out of him. During last year’s loss at San Francisco, Lamb kept to himself on the sideline and then followed with six games with at least 11 catches and seven games with more than 100 yards. In last week’s loss to New Orleans, Lamb had a spat with Prescott and did not speak to the media after the game. On Tuesday, Lamb was apologetic and said he would be better. In the first half alone, he had six catches for 94 yards (both season highs) and a touchdown.
Eye-popping stat: Brandon Aubrey has played 21 games for the Cowboys. He has three field goals of 60 yards in his career, including a 60-yarder in the third quarter against the Giants. That’s one off the NFL record held by Brett Maher, who made four with the Cowboys over two different stints. Aubrey made a 60-yarder last week against the Ravens. He is 2-for-2 from 60 yards this season. The rest of the league is 0-for-2, according to ESPN Research.
Advertisement
Silver lining: The Cowboys will have 10 days to get ready for the presently undefeated Pittsburgh Steelers. The time will help because there is still a lot that needs to be corrected, even with the win. In the past three games, opposing quarterbacks have missed on only 19 passes. Against the Saints and Ravens, that was understandable because both teams were so dominant on the run. Giants quarterback Daniel Jones had too much time to throw for much of the game after previously being tormented by the Cowboys, who sacked him 24 times in eight games prior to Thursday. Oh, and they were penalized nine times in the first half alone. —Todd Archer
Next game: at Pittsburgh Steelers (8:20 p.m. ET, Sunday, Oct. 6.)
New York Giants
The Giants kept it close against the Cowboys, but they still didn’t come away with a win. After last season, when the Giants were outscored 89-17 in their two meetings with the Cowboys, this has to be viewed as progress, right?
Sure, there are no moral victories in the NFL, but this was the third straight step in the right direction for the Giants (1-3) after an ugly opener.
The gap, at least to some degree, has narrowed between the division rivals. Dallas still owns the Giants. It has won 14 of the past 15 matchups, and Prescott has beaten them 13 straight times. New York still isn’t quite there yet, but this proved it’s at least improving.
Advertisement
QB breakdown: Jones was efficient, completing 29 of 40 passes (73% completion) for 281 yards with an interception on a Hail Mary in the final seconds. But the Giants were kept out of the end zone, and Jones was short on most of his deep throws. It’s especially notable considering this was a problem early in training camp. There was a lot of good for Jones, but it was not quite enough. Jones is clearly playing better since the opener. Having rookie wide receiver Malik Nabers (12 catches for 115 yards) certainly helps.
Eye-popping stat: Prior to leaving the game in the fourth quarter with a concussion, Nabers kept adding to his records. He became the first player in NFL history with at least 25 receptions and three touchdowns in his first four career games when he caught a 3-yard pass early in the second quarter. He now has 35 receptions for 386 yards and three touchdowns in four games.
Troubling trend: Top Giants cornerback Deonte Banks has been the nearest defender on four touchdown passes already this season, according to NFL Next Gen Stats. Banks was beat again on Thursday night, this time by Lamb for a 55-yard score in the second quarter. The Giants were hoping Banks would step into the CB1 role this season. Instead, it has been a struggle so far.
Biggest hole in the game plan: The Giants weren’t able to get anything going in the running game against the league’s worst run defense. Dallas came into the contest allowing 185.7 yards on the ground per game. The Giants came into the game thinking they would have success but had only 29 yards rushing in the first half — and they finished with 26 yards on 24 carries. — Jordan Raanan
Next game: at Seattle Seahawks (4:25 p.m. ET, Sunday, Oct. 6)
In “Minerva’s Web,” Sarah Ann Weber’s 18 colored-pencil and watercolor works are hung in a single row that wraps around three of the room’s four walls at Gallery 12.26, windows into a lush world that pulses with life.
A floral profusion (peonies, daffodils, tulips, amaryllis, sunflowers and more) covers the surface of each panel, while a few female figures delicately emerge from among the flowers, visible only upon a closer look. The whole series is tied together by a web of pale white vines that crisscross in front of the garden-like scenes in the background.
Minerva is both the Roman goddess of weaving (who, in the poet Ovid’s telling, turned the girl Arachne into a spider in a fit of anger) and the name of Weber’s young daughter; the show’s title hints at a specifically female experience of intimate, web-like interconnectedness to other people that can be either life-giving (toward daughters) or deadly (toward rivals).
The series is introduced by two new oil paintings in the front gallery on the same theme, but these are more fluid, even oceanic, offering an interesting contrast of mediums.
Advertisement
News Roundups
Catch up on the day’s news you need to know.
Also on view is Rachel Marisa LaBine’s “Lockets,” a show of 13 collage and stained-glass works, whose title suggests the sentimental charge of special pictures kept safe inside small ornamental cases. LaBine’s reference to her teenage years as a source of inspiration, combined with the collages’ coy ambiguity, reminded me of the human urge to keep one’s most important secrets hidden from the wider world.
Feeling left somewhat on the outside of the collages’ full meaning, I engaged most easily with the gorgeous stained-glass pieces, which brought me back to the era of Louis Comfort Tiffany, one of the high points of American art. The two shows together also reminded me how much 12.26 has done to bring members of a younger generation of women artists to Dallas (Weber and LaBine are both Midwest-born millennials), helping to nurture our local connections to the national art scene. And, as a male viewer, I admired and somewhat envied the emotional openness and fluency with which these two artists constructed their artistic worlds.
Details
Sarah Ann Weber’s “Minerva’s Web”and Rachel Marisa LaBine’s “Lockets”continue through Feb. 1 at 12.26, 150 Manufacturing St. No. 205, Dallas. Free. Open Wednesday through Friday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday from noon to 5 p.m. 469-502-1710, gallery1226.com.
Dallas-based artist transforms doctors’ offices into spaces of calm and wonder for kids
Lisa Voight transforms sterile exam rooms with colorful murals, making doctor visits less daunting for kids.
Artist Chivas Clem’s new show is an elegy for Southern masculinity
The Texan explores an itinerant subculture with photographs of “Shirttail Kin” at the Dallas Contemporary.
Advertisement
Letters to the Editor — Three cheers for art students, a nonprofit, two giant pandas
Readers praise an art student project at Lovejoy High School; appreciate a nonprofit in Hunt County; and are glad China sent over two more giant pandas.
Jacob Hashimoto’s Talley Dunn show needs to be seen to be appreciated
A dozen of the artist’s intricate constructions are now on view at the Dallas gallery.
Friday night’s College Football Playoff semifinal at the Cotton Bowl between Ohio State and Texas is expected to be played as scheduled despite the impending snowstorm that will impact the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area.
Although the conditions inside of AT&T Stadium were never in question due to the game being played in a dome, the winter weather is expected to make travel plans difficult for those planning to attend the game.
According to Ross Dellenger of Yahoo, there has been “little to no serious discussion” about postponing the game. The current forecast is for snow to arrive in Dallas on Thursday, with three-to-six inches of snow and no ice. With the game being played Friday night, there is time to get the surrounding stadium area ready for the thousands of fans planning to attend the game.
Representatives from the Cotton Bowl released a statement on Monday saying that the weather was being closely monitored and that plans were in place if inclement weather became a factor for the logistics of the contest, and then followed up on Tuesday night reiterating that the game is still set to be played as scheduled on Friday night.
Advertisement
Kickoff is set for Friday, Jan. 10 at 7:30 p.m. ET.
The Dallas Mavericks are approaching some rough patches in their schedule as Luka Doncic and Kyrie Irving are both expected to be out for a while with their own respective injuries.
That’s part of the reason why The Athletic’s Law Murray placed the Mavericks one spot lower in his latest power rankings from No. 7 to 8.
READ MORE: Mavericks vs. Lakers: How to Watch, TV, Time, Odds, & Preview
“The Mavericks are 0-3 this season without both Luka Dončić and Kyrie Irving, and they will be without both stars for what appears to be most of January,” Murray writes. “For a team with title aspirations, Dallas must find a way to win games. Whether that is increasing the ball movement, finding another on-ball presence or tapping into better defense, this is an opportunity for the Mavericks to develop the skill sets of their role players so that when Dončić and Irving do come back, the team is even better equipped to support the stars.”
Advertisement
The only teams to rank higher than the Mavs were the Denver Nuggets, New York Knicks, Houston Rockets, Memphis Grizzlies, Boston Celtics, Cleveland Cavaliers and Oklahoma City Thunder.
If the Mavs can find some success, or at least just stay afloat, with Irving and Doncic out of the lineup, the team should be in good shape for the second half of the season.
The Mavs are back in action tonight against the Los Angeles Lakers. Tipoff is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. CT.
READ MORE: 3 Takeaways From Mavericks’ Loss to Grizzlies
Stick with MavericksGameday for more FREE coverage of the Dallas Mavericks throughout the 2024-25 Season
Advertisement
Follow MavericksGameday on Twitter and Austin Veazey onTwitter