Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cowboys aren’t comfortabl­e while leading the NFC East

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FRISCO, Texas — Dallas safety Jeff Heath figures there’s a world outside his locker room where people seek comfort in their jobs.

The Cowboys are about to get a test of the notion that they’re never supposed to get comfortabl­e in their line of work.

“I think the coaches do a good job kind of keeping us sharp, keeping us on edge,” Heath said. “You just have to understand that comes with this game.”

Before the four-game winning streak that propelled them to sole possession of first in the NFC East, the Cowboys (7-5) were on the verge of losing touch with the playoff race early for the second consecutiv­e year.

Two games ago, Dallas trailed Washington by a game with the Redskins visiting on Thanksgivi­ng. Now it’s the Cowboys with that one-game lead, this time over Philadelph­ia with the defending champion Eagles (6-6) coming in Sunday.

Once the chaser, now the chased. No difference, says quarterbac­k Dak Prescott.

“We’re not necessaril­y thinking about we’re getting chased now,” Prescott said Thursday. “Our backs were against the wall a few weeks ago and they haven’t changed. This is a team that looks to go out there every week and put that on display every week.”

Human nature will always suggest otherwise, and the New Orleans Saints might argue that point after their 10-game winning streak was stopped by the Cowboys. Dallas was tied with Washington then, and convention­al wisdom gave the Redskins a shot to get back in first place alone.

Instead, the Cowboys had their best defensive showing of the season in a 13-10 victory over the high-scoring Saints while the Redskins lost another quarterbac­k to a season-ending injury in a 28-13 loss to Philadelph­ia that left them tied with the Eagles.

“Nobody’s really thinking about a letdown or anything,” Cowboys receiver Cole Beasley said. “They’re all big. We’ve got to worry about what we have to do to get better as a team each week and put our best out there. We put our best out there, we’ll be fine.”

While the Eagles have back-to-back victories for the first time this season, the defending champs badly need a third if they want a shot at another Super Bowl.

With a victory, Philadelph­ia would pull even with Dallas and have a season split with a better division record, the first tiebreaker between two teams. Lose, and the Eagles will trail the Cowboys by two games with just three remaining.

The Cowboys would counter that they’re fighting to maintain control of their playoff fate.

“We don’t have a margin,” offensive coordinato­r Scott Linehan said. “We approach it no different than we did when we were, whatever it was, 3-5. Coach [Jason] Garrett’s been obviously talking that every minute of every day.

“We all need to know that in the NFL, things change quickly, for the better or for the worse, if you don’t keep your foot on the gas pedal.”

Whatever Garrett is sharing with his team, as usual, he’s not sharing it publicly.

“I don’t really understand what you’re talking about,” Garrett said when asked about preaching against any tendency for the team to ease up. “Our backs are to the wall. They’re always to the wall and that’s how we look at it.”

 ?? AP/ROGER STEINMAN ?? Dak Prescott and the Dallas Cowboys are in first place in the NFC East with four games remaining in the regular season. The Cowboys face the Philadelph­ia Eagles on Sunday at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.
AP/ROGER STEINMAN Dak Prescott and the Dallas Cowboys are in first place in the NFC East with four games remaining in the regular season. The Cowboys face the Philadelph­ia Eagles on Sunday at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

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