Forces both mystical (Mother Nature, the injury bug) and man-made (turnovers, red-zone woes) were seemingly working against the Dallas Cowboys in their Sunday night showdown against the Pittsburgh Steelers.
In the end, though, the Cowboys were able to overcome the dark clouds and put together a come-from-behind 20-17 victory over the Steelers in this physical clash between storied franchises.
But first, can it get any worse for the Cowboys at defensive end? They lose Sam Williams for the season during training camp, both Micah Parsons and DeMarcus Lawrence are sidelined multiple weeks after being injured in the team’s previous game, and then on the Steelers’ very first possession of this one, rookie Marshawn Kneeland is carted to the locker room with a knee injury. Put out the Help Wanted sign.
If that wasn’t enough, injuries then plagued the Cowboys offensive line. On their first drive of the second quarter, rookie left tackle Tyler Guyton came up hobbling with a knee injury as well and was lost for the game. That forced Pro Bowl left guard Tyler Smith to bounce out to left tackle with backup T.J. Bass coming in to play left guard.
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Then in the fourth quarter, perennial All-Pro right guard Zack Martin provided a scare when he left the game with cramps, forcing backup Brock Hoffman to come in and fill that void. Thankfully, Martin returned for the Cowboys’ next offensive series.
Perhaps it was no surprise then that quarterback Dak Prescott was under pressure for most of the game, leading to an up-and-down night. He largely moved his team at will between the 20-yard lines in the first half, but couldn’t get the ball in the end zone.
That changed late in the game when he orchestrated a pair of scoring drives, including the game-winner in the final seconds of play. Overall, Prescott completed 29 of 42 passes for 352 yards with two touchdowns. He also had three turnovers, a fumble and two picks, but overcame those obstacles to pull out the victory.
His primary target on the night was wideout Jalen Tolbert, who stepped up in the absence of veteran Brandin Cooks. Tolbert had seven catches for 87 yards, both personal bests, and hauled in the deciding score.
However, it was really a coming-out party for running back Rico Dowdle. He made an impact on the ground, rushing 20 times for 87 yards, both career highs as well, for a 4.4 yards per carry average. But he also hauled in two passes for 27 yards and his second receiving touchdown of the year.
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On the other side of the ball, despite all the injuries, the Dallas defense got the job done. Steelers quarterback Justin Fields threw for only 131 yards and the Pittsburgh running attack was kept under the century mark.
Play got underway with KaVontae Turpin returning the opening kickoff 38 yards, and with an illegal formation penalty called on Pittsburgh, Dallas was set up for its first possession at its own 43-yard line. And although the offense marched into enemy territory, the drive stalled at the Steelers’ 36-yard line. No worries, Brandon Aubrey split the uprights from 55 yards out to give the Cowboys an early lead.
While Dallas needed six plays to get its three points, Pittsburgh came back and tied things up with an 11-play drive. But the Cowboys kept their opponent out of the red zone, so the Steelers settled for a 41-yard field goal.
Just before the end of the first frame, the Dallas offense was knocking on the door, having marched down to Pittsburgh’s 11-yard line. But on third-and-6, Prescott couldn’t find an open receiver before the Steelers’ T.J. Watt and Nick Herbig strip-sacked the Cowboys quarterback. Once Herbig then fell on the fumble, the Dallas threat was done.
After the Cowboys defense forced a three-and-out, the offense went right back to work. Helped by a 27-yard pass to tight end Jake Ferguson, which featured some outstanding down-field blocking from CeeDee Lamb, Dallas reached the Pittsburgh 15-yard line. But again, the offense couldn’t get across the goal line, so Aubrey provided three more points with a 33-yard field goal.
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Despite reshuffling their offensive line after the Guyton injury, Prescott kept his troops in form. Another big pass, this time a 48-yarder to Tolbert down the left sideline, helped pushed the Cowboys deep into the red zone once again. But in a case of déjà vu, a turnover negated any thought of scoring a touchdown. This time Prescott attempted a pass to Lamb on the right side of the end zone, but the two weren’t on the same page, which left an easy interception for Pittsburgh cornerback Donte Jackson.
So despite the Cowboys outgaining the Steelers 202 yards to 89 in the first two quarters, Dallas went into the break with only a 6-3 lead.
Those Cowboys mistakes in the first half were quickly taken advantage of by the Steelers as the second half got underway. The home team took the third-quarter kickoff and promptly went 72 yards in six plays to the end zone. After a 15-yard roughing the passer penalty handed Pittsburgh 15 yards, Fields then hit tight end Pat Freiermuth for 19 yards with a pair of passes to receiver Van Jefferson adding 18 more. But tight end Connor Heyward scored the game’s first touchdown on a 16-yard reception, giving the Steelers the lead, 10-6.
For the Cowboys offense, though, it was more of the same – drive across midfield only to come away with no points. This time, they made it to the 20-yard line, but when Aubrey tried a 38-yard field goal, his attempt was blocked.
Prescott and company were again on the move when the clock ticked over into the final frame, and finally – finally! – they put a touchdown on the board. Dowdle actually did the heavy lifting in the 16-play, 90-yard drive, as he ran the ball eight times for 36 yards. But it was his 22-yard catch in the end zone that provided the score and gave the Cowboys a 13-10 advantage.
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But just when Dallas had the opportunity to really take command, another self-inflicted wound put the game in jeopardy. On first-and-10 at his own 27-yard line, Prescott tried to connect with Tolbert deep down the seam. Instead, he overthrew his mark, allowing cornerback Joey Porter to come down with the interception.
Now with the ball at their own 37-yard line, Pittsburgh used the gift to travel the 63 needed yards for a touchdown. Freiermuth completed the series by corralling a shuttle pass and rumbling the final 6 yards across the goal line to jump Pittsburgh back on top, 17-13.
With just under five minutes left in the game, though, the Cowboys still had plenty of time. And they stayed balanced on offense, using a mix of Dowdle runs and Prescott passes to reach the Pittsburgh 32-yard line where they faced a third-and-9.
That’s when Prescott connected with Ferguson on a 10-yard completion, and then on the next snap, the quarterback dumped off a screen pass to Hunter Luepke, the fullback barreling for an 18-yard gain down to the 4-yard line. First-and-goal with 52 seconds left.
It took all four downs, but they got in. Whew.
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The game was nearly lost when Dowdle had the ball knocked loose when trying to dive over the pile on second down. Fortunately, Prescott landed on the fumble to keep hope alive.
And then the quarterback put the game away with 26 seconds remaining when on fourth down he found Tolbert in the end zone for the winning score, 20-17.
DALLAS (AP) — Dallas star guard Luka Doncic returned to the lineup on Tuesday night in an NBA Cup game against the New Orleans Pelicans after missing the Mavericks’ previous game because of a right knee contusion.
The Mavericks go in on a two-game winning streak following a four-game losing streak. Their most recent win came at Western Conference-leading Oklahoma City on Sunday night, 121-119, the first game that Doncic has missed this season.
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In his previous outing last Saturday, Doncic played a season-low 28 minutes in a 110-93 home win over San Antonio and scored 16 points — one more than his season low. He sat out the final eight minutes with the Mavericks comfortably ahead.
Doncic won last season’s NBA scoring title, averaging 33.9 points per game, to go with 9.2 rebounds and 9.8 assists. He’s averaging 28.2 points, 7.8 rebounds and 7.8 assists this season.
Mavericks coach Jason Kidd, when asked before Tuesday’s game about Doncic’s lower averages, said, “He has shown that he’s human. (Averages of) 28, eight and eight – you sign up for that all day long.”
Every other year, the Aurora Biennial transforms Dallas into a dazzling display of lights, video and music. This year was special because it was the first time the event took play in-person since 2018. The free public event turned the Dallas Public Library, Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center, Dallas City Hall and other buildings into art installations with the theme “FuturePresentPast.”
Arts Access is an arts journalism collaboration powered by The Dallas Morning News and KERA.
This community-funded journalism initiative is funded by the Better Together Fund, Carol & Don Glendenning, City of Dallas OAC, Communities Foundation of Texas, The University of Texas at Dallas, The Dallas Foundation, Eugene McDermott Foundation, James & Gayle Halperin Foundation, Jennifer & Peter Altabef and The Meadows Foundation. The News and KERA retain full editorial control of Arts Access’ journalism.
Joe Mixon ran for three touchdowns to extend his TD streak to six games since coming back from injury, Derek Barnett returned a fumble 28 yards for a score, and the Texans beat the Cowboys 34-10 on Monday night.
The Texans (7-4) stopped just the second two-game losing streak of CJ Stroud’s young career while maintaining a two-game lead in the AFC South.
Houston pulled away in the second-half a week after a 26-23 last-play loss to Detroit at home, when the Texans let a 23-7 half-time lead get away from them.
“It’s not as bad as it ever seems, and it’s never as good as it ever seems,” Stroud said. “Those type of games, you have to come out with a win, especially going up like that at the half [against the Lions]. But what are we going to do about it?”
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Amid a woeful season for the Cowboys (3-7) on the field, debris fell from their stadium’s retractable roof as it was opening a few hours before the game. There was no delay and no injuries were reported, just another mishap to foreshadow a fifth consecutive defeat for a team that lost five games total in each of the past three seasons.
Cooper Rush threw a 64-yard touchdown pass to KaVontae Turpin but lost his second start since Dak Prescott’s season-ending hamstring injury.
The Dallas losing streak is their longest since a seven-game skid in 2015, and the Cowboys dropped to 0-5 at home. Dallas are the first team in NFL history to trail by at least 20 points in six consecutive home games, including last season’s wildcard playoff loss to Green Bay, according to Sportradar. The Cowboys had reached the playoffs in each of their previous three seasons, but that run is all but over.
“Well, they better be frustrated,” Dallas head coach Mike McCarthy said. “I mean, we’re all frustrated. I think there’d be something wrong if they weren’t frustrated. So just very honest with everything and stay in tune with what’s right in front of us. And that’s the only way I’ve ever done it.”
The Cowboys were down 20-10 early in the fourth quarter when Barnett knocked the ball out of Rush’s hand. Dallas rookie left tackle Tyler Guyton caught it and was trying to run when Jalen Pitre knocked the ball loose again. Barnett scooped up the ball and scored, although he almost stepped out of bounds.
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“The play he made really changed for game for us,” Texans coach DeMeco Ryans said. “It flipped the momentum. It got everybody juiced up on the sideline. It was just a huge play.”
Earlier, the Cowboys appeared to have pulled within a touchdown on a 64-yard field goal from Brandon Aubrey, but Barnett was penalized for slapping Terence Steele on the rush. Dallas erased the points by taking the penalty, but Rush’s fourth-down pass from the Houston eight-yard line was incomplete on the only good scoring chance of the second half for the the Cowboys.
“The defense played with elite energy,” Ryans said. “One big play that we gave up. Like to have that one back, but overall I think our guys played really well.”
Texans receiver Nico Collins returned after missing five games with a hamstring injury and took a screen pass 77 yards to the end zone on the first play of the game, only to have it called back because of an ineligible receiver downfield.
That possession ended with a touchdown anyway on Mixon’s 45-yard sprint up the middle, and he ran wide for a one-yard score and a 14-0 lead. Mixon had 109 yards rushing on the day and set up a field goal with a 37-yard catch-and-run on a screen.
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“I really love that first play because it showed what we could do in this game,” Ryans said. “Even though it got called back, I just told all our guys, ‘We can go score on these guys again. Just get it in your mind we’re going to score again.’”
Already without Prescott, the Cowboys lost tight end Jake Ferguson to a concussion and perennial All-Pro right guard Zack Martin and left guard Tyler Smith to ankle injuries. Rush was sacked five times, three on the same possession when Martin and Smith were injured.
Stroud, who has been in a mini-slump, threw for 257 yards while avoiding any mistakes after an early interception on fourth down. It was the third time in five games he has gone without a touchdown pass, and he has two TDs and three picks in that stretch.
Rush was 32 of 55 for 354 yards with a touchdown and an interception. Turpin had three catches for 86 yards.