Houston Chronicle

Cook’s all-around play denies Dallas

- By Schuyler Dixon

ARLINGTON — Dalvin Cook did plenty to fortify his hold on the NFL rushing lead.

The Minnesota running back might have enjoyed his biggest plays in the passing game while easily outdueling two-time rushing champion Ezekiel Elliott.

Cook ran for 97 yards, including the go-ahead touchdown on fourth down, and had 86 yards receiving that helped produce three other scores, leading the Minnesota Vikings over the Dallas Cowboys 28-24 on Sunday night.

Cook’s 183 scrimmage yards gave him the league lead that category at 1,415 as the Vikings (7-3) beat a winning team on the road for the first time in almost two years. Minnesota was 0-9-1 in its previous 10 such games.

“Dalvin handled everything great,” Vikings coach Mike Zimmer said. “He played outstandin­g. Had some unbelievab­le runs, tough, competitiv­e runs. I think Dalvin believes that he’s really good. I believe that, too.”

Amari Cooper had the most circus catches on a night full of them for both teams, including a toe-tapping TD for Dallas’ only lead in the third quarter.

Kirk Cousins threw for two touchdown passes, both to tight end Kyle Rudolph, for just his second victory in nine prime-time road games.

Elliott had 47 yards on 20 carries after three straight 100-yard games as the Cowboys (5-4) fell into a firstplace tie with Philadelph­ia in the NFC East.

“From the standpoint of numbers, from the standpoint of where you stand, this was a big game for us, and it’s going to make it that much harder to get where we want to go,” Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said.

Despite throwing for 397 yards and three TDs, Prescott lost to Cousins for the first time after going 4-0 against the former Washington quarterbac­k as a division rival.

“We had to do that,” Zimmer said. “We had to make them be one-dimensiona­l. I wish we had played better in pass defense than what we did. I thought we did a really good job with our run (defense) and the way that we tackled.”

Cousins, who had 220 yards passing, beat the Cowboys for the second time in eight tries as the Vikings kept pace in the NFC North, a game behind division-leading Green Bay.

Trailing by four in the final two minutes, the Cowboys had a first down at the Minnesota 19-yard line but insisted on continuing to force the ball to Elliott when the Vikings had made it clear they were stopping him first.

Two runs netted minus-3 yards, and the Cowboys went to Elliott again on fourth down even though it was a pass. Linebacker Eric Kendricks broke up the sideline throw to Elliott, a dual threat like Cook but not on this night. Elliott had two catches for 16 yards.

The Cowboys got the ball back with 17 seconds left, but Jayron Kearse intercepte­d Prescott’s desperatio­n pass from near midfield in the end zone.

The Vikings thought they had gone ahead on what was ruled a 17-yard TD by Alexander Mattison, but he was ruled down at the 1 on review. After a false start and a third-down stuff of fullback C.J. Ham from the 1, Cook scored on fourthand-goal from the 2 on the final play of the third.

Rudolph’s 14 points were the most in 122 career games for the ninth-year player.

 ?? Richard Rodriguez / Getty Images ?? Dalvin Cook scores the go-ahead touchdown on a 2-yard run in the third quarter of the Vikings’ road victory over the Cowboys on Sunday. Cook finished with a game-high 97 yards rushing on 26 carries.
Richard Rodriguez / Getty Images Dalvin Cook scores the go-ahead touchdown on a 2-yard run in the third quarter of the Vikings’ road victory over the Cowboys on Sunday. Cook finished with a game-high 97 yards rushing on 26 carries.

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