New York Post

BIG DISASTER

Cowboys drop another game leaving coach, playoff spot in limbo

- By SCHUYLER DIXON

ARLINGTON, Texas — The upstart Bills exposed just how far the Cowboys have fallen.

John Brown became the first Buffalo receiver to throw a touchdown pass, Josh Allen set a franchise record by producing at least two touchdowns in an eighth consecutiv­e game and the surging Bills beat the fading Cowboys, 26-15, on Thursday.

Allen ran for a TD and threw a scoring pass to former Cowboys receiver Cole Beasley, who had 110 yards receiving in the stadium where he spent his first seven seasons as the Bills (9-3) got their first Thanksgivi­ng win since 1975 in their first appearance on the holiday in 25 years.

Buffalo is 5-1 on the road for the first time since 1966, and the nine wins through 12 games are the most since the Bills finished 10-6 in Hall of Fame quarterbac­k Jim Kelly’s final season in 1996.

“It’ll be the most satisfying day when we win a Super Bowl,” said Beasley, who was critical of the Cowboys after leaving, then had six catches and finished 2 yards shy of his career high against them. “It’s just another win, another step in the right direction.”

The Cowboys (6-6) stumbled after scoring a touchdown on their opening drive, giving Philadelph­ia a chance to rejoin them atop the NFC East after their fourth double-digit loss in the past six Thanksgivi­ng games.

A lackluster showing for Dallas’ sixth loss in nine games came four days after owner Jerry Jones blasted the coaching staff following a loss to New England from a team that entered the season with lofty expectatio­ns.

Jones remained supportive of embattled coach Jason Garrett, who is in the final year of his contract in his ninth full season for a franchise that hasn’t been past the divisional round since the last of its five championsh­ips to finish the 1995 season.

“This is not the time for me,” said Jones, who made an in-season change when Garrett got the job in 2010. “I’m looking ahead at winning four or five straight. Every decision that I make over the next month will be with an eye in mind to get us in the Super Bowl now.”

Allen, whose 15-yard run put Buffalo ahead 23-7 late in the third quarter, was 19of-24 for 231 yards and a career-best 120.7 passer rating as the Bills won their third straight game and solidified their hold on an AFC wild-card spot. The second-year quarterbac­k found the ball at the bottom of a pile after fumbling a snap on fourth-and-1 in the second quarter, quickly reached the ball over the first down spot and then stumbled forward 3 yards to the Dallas 28, pumping his arms emphatical­ly afterward.

“On fourth down, fourth and short, fumbling the snap, I got to do a better job with that, and get the ball to our running back and let him do the job there,” Allen said. “But I wanted it. I wanted it really bad.”

On the next play, Brown took a pitch on a double reverse and lofted the ball to wide-open running back Devin Singletary for Buffalo’s first lead at 13-7 in the second quarter.

“I played a little backup quarterbac­k in Pop Warner, but I wasn’t all that,” Brown said becoming the first non-QB with a touchdown pass for the Bills since Fred Jackson 10 years ago.

“Dropped a dime,” Beasley said. “We had two great quarterbac­ks today.”

The Cowboys couldn’t blame a sputtering offense on the conditions after the windy and rainy loss to the Patriots. Dak Prescott threw an intercepti­on, lost one fumble and had another on fourth down as Dallas was outscored 26-0 over a 50minute stretch.

Ezekiel Elliott had 54 yards rushing and another 20 receiving in the first nine minutes, but wasn’t much of a factor the rest of the way. He finished with 71 yards rushing and 66 receiving.

Singletary became the latest back to have a splashier day than the two-time rushing champion, rushing for 63 yards with 38 more receiving. The 28-yard score was the easiest play he had all day, waiting for Brown’s throw to come down and waltzing into the end zone. —

 ?? Getty Images ?? BAD ’BOYS: Amari Cooper looks in a similar position to the Cowboys, as Dallas’ 26-15 loss to the Bills on Thursday in Arlington, Texas, continued to flip their once promising season on its head.
Getty Images BAD ’BOYS: Amari Cooper looks in a similar position to the Cowboys, as Dallas’ 26-15 loss to the Bills on Thursday in Arlington, Texas, continued to flip their once promising season on its head.
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