Albuquerque Journal

Cowboys keep focus

Dallas shakes off adversity, wild turn of events to defeat Kansas City

- BY CLARENCE E. HILL JR. FORT WORTH STAR-TELEGRAM

ARLINGTON, Texas — Dallas Cowboys coach Jason Garrett preaches daily, weekly, incessantl­y and seemingly boringly every week about staying focused, poised and controllin­g what you can control no matter the situation.

It’s worked well for Cowboys all season as they dealt with a roller coaster that is running back Ezekiel Elliott’s legal battle with the NFL in federal court over his six-game suspension for violating the league’s personal conduct policy for allegedly committed domestic violence against a former girlfriend.

After being suspended again on Monday, Elliott got back on the field with another court ruling on Friday.

But it was in Sunday’s 28-17 victory against the Kansas City Chiefs in which the Cowboys put Garrett’s lessons to the test on the football field with character building, big-boy answers in the face of seeming incredulou­s circumstan­ces before a packed house of 93,273 fans at AT&T Stadium.

Imagine being ahead 14-3 with 21 second left in the first half following an 82-yard scoring drive. It was a drive that included a 21-yard pass to Dez Bryant on a third-and-15 play from their 15 and a 56-yard pass to Terrance Williams on a broken play before quarterbac­k Dak Prescott scrambled 10 yards to the end zone on a third-and-goal play from the 10.

“Terrance stepped up, got some opportunit­ies, and took advantage of them,” Garrett said. “He was a big part of our success today.”

The drive gave the Cowboys confidence, momentum and seemingly control of the game.

Then imagine being down 17-14 the next time you touched the ball.

“Staying focused,” Prescott said. “We expect points. Nothing changes our focus. We just didn’t have a chance to get the ball.

“We’re still growing. We’re still not there yet.”

The Chiefs got the ball at their own 37 following a late-hit penalty on safety Byron Jones on the kickoff following the Prescott touchdown. A delay of game penalty followed by a pass for 12 yards put the ball at the 44 with 2 seconds left in the half.

So Chiefs quarterbac­k Alex Smith tossed a screen to Tyreek Hill against a defense that was backed up at the end zone waiting for the Hail Mary pass.

Hill ran 30 yards before he encountere­d a defender and then darted left and back to the middle to the end zone through at least six flailing and flatfooted Cowboys as time expired.

Jones compounded the gaffe by the defense with an unsportsma­nlike conduct penalty after the play.

The Chiefs got the ball to start the second half and started at the 38, thanks to Jones’ penalty.

They promptly marched 62 yards to the end zone, making the score 17-14 on 2 yard pass from Smith to tight end Travis Kelcie, who beat Jones in coverage.

The Chiefs added fun to the insult with an end zone celebratio­n mocking a children’s sack race with Kelcie winning against Hill.

It was character showing time for the Cowboys and, led by Prescott, they didn’t blink.

A 12-play, 75 — yard scoring drive, capped by a 2-yard scoring run by Elliott, was followed by a 13-play, 87-yard drive, capped by a 7-yard pass from Prescott to Cole Beasley.

They will be looking for their fourth consecutiv­e win against the Atlanta Falcons next Sunday.

“We just got to keep banging away,” Garrett said. “It’s all in front of us.”

 ?? MICHAEL AINSWORTH/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Cowboys wide receiver Cole Beasley (11) dives into the end zone in front of Kansas City’s Marcus Peters during the second half of Sunday’s game. Beasley caught four passes, two of them for touchdowns.
MICHAEL AINSWORTH/ASSOCIATED PRESS Cowboys wide receiver Cole Beasley (11) dives into the end zone in front of Kansas City’s Marcus Peters during the second half of Sunday’s game. Beasley caught four passes, two of them for touchdowns.
 ?? BRANDON WADE/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Cowboys safety Jeff Heath (28) intercepts a pass in front of teammate Orlando Scadrick (32) that was intended for Kansas City tight end Travis Kelce. The Cowboys won 28-17 in front of 93,273 fans in Arlington.
BRANDON WADE/ASSOCIATED PRESS Cowboys safety Jeff Heath (28) intercepts a pass in front of teammate Orlando Scadrick (32) that was intended for Kansas City tight end Travis Kelce. The Cowboys won 28-17 in front of 93,273 fans in Arlington.

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