Santa Fe New Mexican

So much for the Cowboys

Coach’s calls, quarterbac­k’s pick doom Dallas in season-ending loss to N.Y. Giants

- By Schuyler Dixon

Mike McCarthy will take lingering questions about game management into the offseason rather than the momentum of a four-game winning streak to finish a difficult first season as coach of the Dallas Cowboys.

McCarthy didn’t challenge a catch that set up a 50-yard field goal by New York’s Graham Gano when it appeared the ground aided Dante Pettis’ 10-yard grab in the Giants’ 23-19 victory Sunday. Dallas (6-10) was eliminated from the playoffs with the loss.

A reversal would have forced New York to punt, and the Cowboys could have gone ahead with a field goal in the final two minutes. Instead, Dallas was down four points when Andy Dalton forced a throw into the end zone on third-and-goal from the 17 after a sack. The Giants (6-10) ran out the clock after Xavier McKinney’s intercepti­on.

“We just felt it was too close,” McCarthy said. “We felt it was kind of a bang-bang-type situation. We were in a tight game. And the three timeouts was obviously of high value there. We just didn’t think it was enough informatio­n to overturn it.”

McCarthy, who made some questionab­le decisions when the Cowboys were in the midst of six losses in seven games after quarterbac­k Dak Prescott’s season-ending ankle injury, chose not to go for a 2-point conversion trailing by five after Ezekiel Elliott’s 1-yard touchdown plunge with 8:39 left in the third quarter.

“It was too early in the game to go for 2 in my opinion there,” said McCarthy, who settled for a 20-16 deficit that was cut to a point early in the fourth quarter on a 36-yard field goal from Greg Zuerlein, who made four to tie the club season record of 34.

The Cowboys might have had a chance do more than take a four-game winning streak into the offseason. They would have won the NFC East and hosted a playoff game if Washington lost to Philadelph­ia later Sunday. Instead, the Giants waited to see if they would get in with a Washington loss. Washington would advance with a victory.

“We’re upset that we didn’t do what we needed to to put ourselves in a situation to get in,” said Ezekiel Elliott, who fell short of 1,000 yards rushing when playing at least 15 games for the first time in his fiveyear career. “Just disappoint­ing.”

One of the NFL’s worst teams at converting touchdowns inside the 20-yard line had trouble again. Dallas had to settle for Zuerlein’s first field goal after recovering a fumble at the New York 27 and quickly getting a first down at the 16.

On the final possession, the Cowboys had a first down at the New York 7 when Leonard Williams was unblocked and dropped Dalton for a 10-yard loss. Rookie receiver CeeDee Lamb had a drop that kept Dallas from a more manageable situation on third or fourth down.

“Things like that have changed the outcome of the game,” said Dalton, who stayed in the game after his left (non-throwing) hand was stepped on at the end of a scramble, an injury that required stitches after the game. “We have to be better in the red zone, and we weren’t today.”

McCarthy believes a four-game winning streak to finish a rough season in Green Bay when he was a rookie head coach in 2006 helped catapult the Packers to the NFC championsh­ip the next year.

These injury-plagued and sometimes mistake-prone Cowboys rallied with three straight victories after falling to 3-9, but couldn’t match McCarthy’s first team. “We’ll take the step back and go through a thorough evaluation of everything in our football operations.” McCarthy said. “I like the look of our guys. I think just the way they worked, continued to fight.”

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 ?? COREY SIPKIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dallas Cowboys quarterbac­k Andy Dalton reacts after being sacked Sunday against the New York Giants.
COREY SIPKIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Dallas Cowboys quarterbac­k Andy Dalton reacts after being sacked Sunday against the New York Giants.

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