The Commercial Appeal

Quinn guides Cowboys past Saints

- Jori Epstein

NEW ORLEANS — Cowboys owner Jerry Jones sat in the passenger seat of a golf cart in the Caesars Superdome tunnel, three family members situated a row behind him. It was after 11 p.m. local time, and Jones was set to leave the stadium. But he waited a couple of minutes and explained: How did he feel after the Cowboys’ 27-17 victory over the Saints?

“I don’t know that I felt good but about 5 minutes out of 60 all night,” Jones admitted. “But it really is important. We needed to win the game. We did need to win the game.”

The Cowboys needed to win in spite of head coach Mike Mccarthy missing the trip due to COVID-19, a November stretch featuring three losses in four weeks and a slew of on-field issues hampering their efficiency. They needed to win with a shuffled offensive staff and a defense dominant enough to overcome an offense managing just 2 conversion­s on 13 third-down attempts. And they needed to win even amid allowing an easy 24-yard touchdown to New Orleans early in the second quarter and 101 rushing yards to Saints quarterbac­k Taysom Hill in his first start of the season.

So with defensive coordinato­r Dan Quinn assuming head coach-style communicat­ion channels, and his defense swiping a whopping four intercepti­ons, the Cowboys traveled home from New Orleans at 8-4 with a 2.5-game lead atop the NFC East. Quinn was pleased to avoid telling Mccarthy: “Hey, here’s your car keys, man. Sorry I screwed it up.”

“That was the only thing I was nervous about,” Quinn said in his postgame press conference. “I didn’t want to let down Mike.”

In New Orleans, the Cowboys showed flashes of the skills that buoyed their six-game win streak earlier in the season. Take the third offensive series of the game. Quarterbac­k Dak Prescott found Amari Cooper downfield up the middle for 41 yards on third-and-7 with 2:50 to play in the first quarter, two plays later hitting receiver Ceedee Lamb in the backfield for what would officially be deemed a 33-yard rush courtesy Lamb’s elusive juking skills. The two big gains marched Dallas down to the 1-yard line, where Prescott roped a fade ball to Michael Gallup, who flexed his athleticis­m with an airborne touchdown catch.

The three-headed Cowboys receiving threat was back. Could the return of Cooper from COVID-19 and Lamb from a concussion re-energize this struggling offense? Prescott and the Cowboys, however, failed to convert a third-down attempt after halftime.

“I’ve got to stay discipline­d,” said Prescott, who completed 26-of-40 pass attempts for 238 yards, a touchdown and an intercepti­on. “Just playing play by play and not trying to put the dagger in them and knock them out of the game. That’s why I was sloppy there. I was trying to do more than what was within the play and what they were giving me. I’ve got to be more discipline­d in those moments.

“(The defense) played their asses off. Credit this win to them.”

Indeed, this victory demonstrat­ed the wealth of defensive playmakers the Cowboys possess and the effective packages Quinn and his staff are designing for them. Rookie linebacker Micah Parsons continued to star while lining up in a multitude of assignment­s, including a key drive-killing sack — Parsons’ franchise-record 10th — on the first play of the fourth quarter.

Parsons also clung tightly to receiver Kenny Stills as he traveled downfield late in the second quarter. The rookie hybrid defensive end/linebacker who more closely resembled a cornerback on the play, tracked Stills downfield on a 30-yard pass attempt and tipped the ball Saints quarterbac­k Taysom Hill intended for him. Cowboys safety Jayron Kearse, closing in on Stills from behind, dove for Parsons’ tip and snagged in just in time to drag his toes inbounds for Dallas’ first intercepti­on of the day.

“Just quarters coverage, and Micah ran with the guy, the ball came off his hands, and I (grabbed) the ball off his hands,” Kearse said. “The rest is history. I can’t really explain it. I tried to make a play, and it just happened to go how it went. Kept 3 points off the board.”

The Cowboys scored a field goal before halftime to extend that swing to 6 points in what would ultimately be the 10-point victory.

In the fourth quarter, this trend only magnified.

Parsons’ sack set the tone after Hill had gashed the Cowboys defense for 75 rushing yards on seven attempts in the third quarter.

As the fourth quarter continued, Dallas gave Hill reason to doubt throwing at all on a day in which both starting offensive tackles and running back Alvin Kamara were out due to injury.

Hill escaped a strip-sack after officials reversed the call on review, but three plays later, trailing by 10 with 6:32 to play, Hill succumbed to a corner blitz from 5-10 Jourdan Lewis, who tipped Hill’s pass. Cowboys safety Damontae Kazee caught that deflected prayer. On the next series, cornerback Trevon Diggs nabbed his Nfl-leading ninth intercepti­on of the season.

Oh, and the drive after that, six-footfive, 305-pound defensive tackle Carlos Watkins disengaged from his block to swallow a pass intended for receiver Deonte Harris. Watkins powered his swipe 29 yards for a touchdown.

“Carlos had pretty good hands,” said Quinn, who recruited him out of high school when Watkins played basketball. “Any time you see one of the big guys rumbling and bumbling ... that was a really cool play and those don’t happen that often.”

It was a fitting day for a defensive tackle to score a touchdown, Parsons to impersonat­e a member of the secondary and Cowboys’ second running back Tony Pollard to escape for a 58-yard score. Because on a week in which coaches and players needed to bandage holes left by the COVID-19 outbreak, the Cowboys set aside what their typical responsibi­lities might be in favor of what was necessary to win.

“We had to have everybody say, ‘No job is not your job right now,’” Quinn said. “We’ve got to get this thing done by any means necessary when moving parts come.

“The cool part about when you deliver — which the guys did — (is) there’s a lot of trust that gets built.”

 ?? STEPHEN LEW/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Cowboys quarterbac­k Dak Prescott (4) passes against the Saints at Caesars Superdome on Thursday night. Dallas won 27-17.
STEPHEN LEW/USA TODAY SPORTS Cowboys quarterbac­k Dak Prescott (4) passes against the Saints at Caesars Superdome on Thursday night. Dallas won 27-17.

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