Albuquerque Journal

Cowboys look to air it out to boost struggling offense

- BY SCHUYLER DIXON

FRISCO, Texas — Running back Ezekiel Elliott doesn’t think a demand for more carries is the answer for what ails a Dallas offense that’s threatenin­g to derail the Cowboys’ season early.

And if offensive coordinato­r Scott Linehan is ready to start “slinging it around” to ignite a paltry passing game, quarterbac­k Dak Prescott is all for it.

The underlying message of Linehan’s thinking is that the Cowboys (1-2) need to loosen up as they try again to bounce back from a rough road showing when Detroit (1-2) visits Sunday.

“I think our guys just need to just basically take the weight of the world off their shoulders and go out and play,” Linehan said Thursday. “Just start slinging

it around, and they’re ready to do that. We made a positive step a couple of weeks ago.”

Slingin’ Dak Prescott? Not even close in three games this year, and in most of the last half of the 2017 season. He says he’s ignoring the numbers, which is probably a good thing since his offense is ranked 31st in the NFL in passing and the Cowboys have their fewest points through three games (41) since 1990.

“When you play the game and you come out of it and you know the stats aren’t that great, I’m not necessaril­y going and looking at them and saying, ‘Oh, we’ve got to do this to win. We’ve got to do that,’” Prescott said. “It’s execution. We execute all the way across the board. Everybody does their job. The stats and everything will build up. The wins and everything are going to happen.”

They did two years ago when Prescott and Elliott were the dazzling rookie duo leading the Cowboys to an NFC-best 13 wins. The last victory was against the Lions, when Dallas broke a halftime tie with three touchdowns in a 42-21 win.

Elliott was quick to shoot down a correlatio­n, though.

“That’s so far gone in the past,” Elliott said. “I wouldn’t say as a team we will look back and see, ‘OK, this is what we did in ’16 and this is how we’re going to get better two years later.’ That really doesn’t make sense. We have a whole different group of guys.” So here’s the present. While Elliott is tied for the league lead with 274 yards rushing, that’s not helping a receiving group suffering under the expectatio­ns of trying to replace 15-year tight end Jason Witten, the franchise leader in catches, and 2014 AllPro receiver Dez Bryant, who has the most receiving TDs in club history.

Believe it or not, the Cowboys are averaging more yards per carry (6.0) than per catch (5.7) — all the more reason for Elliott to believe he should be getting more than the surprising­ly low average of 16 carries per game. Dallas probably figured it would be closer to 25.

Elliott won’t be knocking on Linehan’s door because he looks at the two losses and sees deficits of at least two scores in the fourth quarter of both.

“I would love to see it more, but I just think the nature of the games we played … we’ve been down,” Elliott said. “We’ve been having to try to come back. It’s hard to come back and try to run the ball.”

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