Texarkana Gazette

Cowboys can easily pin slide on slow starts

- By Schuyler Dixon

FRISCO, Texas — Before scoring touchdowns on five straight possession­s and cruising to a comfortabl­e win over the New York Giants in the opener on their way to a 3-0 start, Dak Prescott and the Dallas Cowboys stalled on their opening drive and fell behind.

The slow starts have been much worse during the three-game losing streak that has dropped Dallas back to .500. Combine the deficits against Green Bay and the previously winless New York Jets in the past two losses, and the Cowboys were down 52-6 before coming back.

It’s the biggest part of the puzzle the Cowboys must solve against Philadelph­ia on Sunday night with first place in the NFC East on the line. The teams are tied at 3-3.

“I’ve said it before, until we figure it out, that’s been what’s hurting us,” Prescott said after last weekend’s 24-22 loss to the Jets, who were 0-4. “We’ve got to start faster.

“I know we have the right men, the right coaches, and the right people to get it done. We’ve got a huge (game) next week, so that’s what matters now — getting it done before next week.”

Prescott pinpointed the offense as the key to the issue for not giving the defense a chance to play with a lead. But the defense shares plenty of responsibi­lity.

The best case in point came in the shocking loss to the Jets, when coach Jason Garrett passed on a field goal down 7-3 late in the first half and went for it on fourth-and-2 from the New York 7-yard line.

After Prescott was dropped for a loss on a sweep, Chidobe Awuzie was too aggressive and safety Jeff Heath took a poor angle on San Darnold’s 92-yard touchdown pass to Robby Anderson. Just like that, the Jets were up 14-3 on their way to an 18-point first-half lead.

“Ultimately, we haven’t executed,” Garrett said. “Everything we do goes into execution, so everyone has a responsibi­lity for that, every coach, every player who is involved in each of the units of our football team. So we haven’t executed well enough early on in games.”

Heath says the danger for a defensive player is getting anxious about making a game-changing play when things don’t go well early. The seventh-year player thinks the loss to Green Bay was the best example. The Cowboys were down 14-0 quickly, and 31-3 before rallying.

“We were down 14-0 early and then I think errors just started to pile up because we felt like we needed to make these difference-making plays to turn the whole game around,” Heath said.

“The way to win is you’ve got to keep hammering. You’ve just got to hunker down, focus on your job and just keep doing that and then hopefully there’s enough time to where you can come back.”

Each of the past two weeks, the Cowboys have been criticized by TV commentato­rs for appearing to be emotionles­s on the sideline during the first half. Cornerback Jourdan Lewis wasn’t saying that was the problem — but he was saying that’s the solution.

“Just go out there on fire,” said Lewis, whose intercepti­on sparked the comeback against the Jets. “Just clean up the details and be on our details earlier. Not having to clean up stuff at halftime that we know and we saw already.”

The trick is trying to understand why the Cowboys aren’t on the details earlier.

“I couldn’t tell you honestly,” Lewis said. “I can tell you that we’re definitely going to fine-tune those things.”

 ?? [STEVE LUCIANO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Quarterbac­k Dak Prescott said the Cowboys have “got to start faster” after a surprising loss to the New York Jets last week.
[STEVE LUCIANO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Quarterbac­k Dak Prescott said the Cowboys have “got to start faster” after a surprising loss to the New York Jets last week.
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