Chicago Sun-Times

Vikings’ 3-game win streak over

- BY DAVE CAMPBELL

MINNEAPOLI­S — The refreshed Cowboys had a steady hand back at quarterbac­k, eager to initiate the same post-bye bounce the Vikings had been enjoying this month.

For as badly as the first half of the schedule went for the Cowboys, they’re still alive and well in the well-below-average NFC East.

Andy Dalton returned from a two-game absence to throw three touchdown passes, hitting tight end Dalton Schultz for a two-yard score with 1:37 left to lift the Cowboys over the Vikings 31-28 on Sunday to stop their four-game losing streak.

“Everything’s in front of us. It doesn’t matter what we’ve done up to this point. It’s all about these next seven games,” said Dalton, who went 22-for-32 for 203 yards with one intercepti­on after fill-ins Ben DiNucci and Garrett Gilbert started the previous two games.

After taking over for the injured Dak Prescott a month ago and missing games himself because of a concussion and COVID-19, Dalton directed an 11-play, 66-yard drive down the stretch that was extended with a fourth-and-six completion to Amari Cooper at the 19.

Kris Boyd stepped in front of Schultz and nearly picked off a first-and-goal pass, but Dalton delivered to a wide- open Schultz two plays later. That put the Cowboys (3-7) in a three-way tie for second place behind the Eagles (3-6-1).

After three straight wins over NFC North foes following their bye to climb back into contention, the Vikings (4-6) were plenty wary of the Cowboys despite entering as seven-point favorites.

They trailed 16-7 at halftime, more because of bad breaks than poor performanc­e. Kirk Cousins and Dalvin Cook lost fumbles forced by hard-hitting safety Donovan Wilson that Dallas converted into nine points. Minnesota also had six penalties for 60 yards in the first half.

“There are positives to point to, but ultimately when you don’t win, you leave the stadium feeling sick to your stomach,” Cousins said.

Dodging pressure all afternoon, Cousins completed 22 of 30 passes for 314 yards and three touchdowns to punctuate drives of 75, 81 and 85 yards to start the second half. Adam Thielen caught the first two touchdown passes, the first one a falling- down, one-handed grab in the back corner of the end zone while being held by Cowboys cornerback Anthony Brown.

Justin Jefferson had the third score, a 39-yarder that gave the Vikings the lead right back with 9: 37 left in a confident response to Tony Pollard’s 42-yard touchdown run.

Cook had 115 rushing yards and a touchdown plus 45 receiving yards for the Vikings, who remained two games out of the last wild- card spot and in ninth place in the NFC.

“I really felt like we were going to win,” coach Mike Zimmer said, “throughout the whole course of the game, even as bad as we started off offensivel­y.”

When it counted the most, though, the Vikings stalled out on their last two possession­s, when Cousins went 2-for-7. His fourthand-six throw to Thielen from the 29 fell incomplete with 1:18 left.

 ?? HANNAH FOSLIEN/GETTY IMAGES (ABOVE), BRUCE KLUCKHOHN/AP (RIGHT) ?? Cowboys quarterbac­k Andy Dalton (above) completed 22 of 32 passes for 203 yards and three touchdowns with one intercepti­on Sunday against the Vikings. Cowboys safety Donovan Wilson (right) sacks Vikings quarterbac­k Kirk Cousins, who also threw three touchdown passes.
HANNAH FOSLIEN/GETTY IMAGES (ABOVE), BRUCE KLUCKHOHN/AP (RIGHT) Cowboys quarterbac­k Andy Dalton (above) completed 22 of 32 passes for 203 yards and three touchdowns with one intercepti­on Sunday against the Vikings. Cowboys safety Donovan Wilson (right) sacks Vikings quarterbac­k Kirk Cousins, who also threw three touchdown passes.
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