Santa Fe New Mexican

Cowboys in D.C. with NFC East in shambles

- By Stephen Whyno

LANDOVER, Md. — The previous time the Dallas Cowboys and Washington faced off with a combined record worse than this, the longtime NFC East rivals were each 0-4 and the 2001 “Gutter Bowl” got off on the wrong foot.

During pregame warmups, Dallas kicker Tim Seder collided with a horse who was on the field for some reason. The horse backed into his kicking leg, Seder missed two field-goal attempts but wound up scoring all of the Cowboys’ points, including a 26-yard game-winner to make it 9-7 when time expired.

“Could’ve been ugly, but I think we survived and it ended up being OK,” Seder told the Associated Press by phone Wednesday night. “You’re just proud of your team that they keep fighting and you’re in a position to win at the end of the game, and you want to put your best foot forward, so to speak, to finish the deal.”

Dallas-Washington won’t have a horse on the field — or fans in the stands — this time, but it could go a long way to determinin­g which team wins a bad division.

The Cowboys (2-4) and now nick-nameless Washington (1-5) are in the thick of the race, even though each team has a different starting quarterbac­k than it began the season with.

Dak Prescott’s broken ankle forced Andy Dalton into action

for Dallas under first-year coach Mike McCarthy. Ron Rivera saw how the NFC East was sputtering and pulled the plug on 2019 first-round pick Dwayne Haskins’ developmen­t because he believed Kyle Allen gave Washington a better chance to win in his first season in D.C.

If anything, the QB situations are under the microscope given what’s at stake. Dalton tossed two intercepti­ons in a 38-10 defeat to Arizona on Monday night in his first start since replacing Prescott, and Allen had a pick, lost a fumble and threw an incomplete pass on a last-minute 2-point conversion attempt to lose to the Giants 20-19.

Yet, Washington can still say it’s in the running for the NFC East title more than a third of the way through the season despite a five-game skid.

“For us to have those growing pains and still at this point be only one game out of first place is incredible,” Allen said. “We’re looking at that very hopeful and understand­ing the situation that we’re in.”

The Cowboys look at it like they’ve fumbled away their chance to build a substantia­l division lead. Running back Ezekiel Elliott, who lost two fumbles against the Cardinals, said he and his teammates “are going to get this thing right.”

“The beauty of it though is we’re still first place in the division,” Elliott said. “We still hold the keys to our future. Now it’s up to us to get this thing right.”

That’s how Seder, now a high school football coach in the Dallas area, looked at it 19 years ago. It hasn’t changed for his beloved Cowboys and Washington Football Team in the first of at least two games — and maybe more — without a real name.

“You’ve just got to find a way to win a ballgame,” he said. “Sometimes you just got to step back and say, ‘Hey, let’s do something well,’ and when you get an opportunit­y, take advantage of the opportunit­y.”

 ?? STEPHEN BRASHEAR/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Cowboys quarterbac­k Andy Dalton, second from left, threw two intercepti­ons in a 38-10 loss to Arizona on Monday night in his first start since starter Dak Prescott was injured.
NFL
STEPHEN BRASHEAR/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Cowboys quarterbac­k Andy Dalton, second from left, threw two intercepti­ons in a 38-10 loss to Arizona on Monday night in his first start since starter Dak Prescott was injured. NFL

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