The Day

Prescott has been doing a number on the Giants

- By TOM CANAVAN AP Sports Writer

East Rutherford, N.J. — It's easy to assume games between Dallas and the Giants are going to be a running backs' showcase featuring Ezekiel Elliott of the Cowboys and Saquon Barkley of New York.

The two finished 1-2 in rushing last season with Elliott gaining 1,434 yards and Barkley 1,307. They also were 1-2 in yards from scrimmage with Barkley leading the way with 2,028 and Elliott getting 2,001.

What's interestin­g is Barkley and Elliott haven't been the stars in the past three games between the NFC East rivals.

It's been Cowboys quarterbac­k Dak Prescott, and he will get another chance at having his way with the Giants when the teams play tonight.

The division-leading Cowboys (43) are coming off a bye week, while

COWBOYS AT GIANTS 8:15 p.m., MetLife Stadium (ESPN)

the Giants (2-6) will be looking to snap a four-game losing streak.

The Cowboys have owned the Giants in recent seasons, winning five straight, including a 35-17 victory in Dallas in the season opener.

Prescott has been phenomenal in the past three. He is 68 of 101 for 1,053 yards, nine touchdowns and no intercepti­ons.

"Ouch," Giants coach Pat Shurmur said after hearing the statistics. "He's a really good player. That's something that we have to get fixed this week when we play them. He's an outstandin­g player. He has outstandin­g players around him. He has people that will block for him. Oh by the way, when it breaks down, he can run. So, he's a challenge."

The Cowboys also are facing a challenge, going against rookie quarterbac­k Daniel Jones in his first start against Dallas. He played some in the opener in finishing up for Eli Manning.

"It's pretty cool to go against somebody that you didn't go against before," Cowboys defensive end DeMarcus Lawrence said. "He can move around. He's got a strong arm. He's athletic. He can be good in this league, but he's also got to play against us twice a year."

Anthem question again

A trade for a defensive lineman has again raised the question for the Cowboys of how a player will handle protesting during the national anthem. When the issue flared two years ago, Jerry Jones was the first owner to say he would bench any player who protested during the anthem. Players have kneeled, sat and raised fists during "The Star-Spangled Banner" to protest police brutality, social injustice and racial inequality.

The first test was Robert Quinn, who was acquired in the offseason. The defensive end had raised a fist during the anthem when he was with the Dolphins and Rams. Quinn was vague about what he would do anytime the question came up, and he has not protested so far.

Now it's Michael Bennett, acquired during the open week from New England for a conditiona­l late-round pick in the 2021 draft and set for his Dallas debut against the Giants. He stayed in the locker room with Philadelph­ia and the Patriots. Coach Jason Garrett said he didn't anticipate it being an issue. "There's one thing," Quinn said this week. "It's called freedom of speech."

Slow starts

The Giants have been showing up 15 minutes late during their skid. They have been outscored 38-0 in the four games, including 14-0 by both Arizona and Detroit in the past two games. There have been too many mistakes. Jones had a lateral returned for a touchdown by the Lions early and a first-quarter intercepti­on the week before led to a Cardinals' TD. The Patriots got an early touchdown on a blocked punt.

The Williams factor

The Giants got help earlier this week, acquiring defensive end Leonard Williams from the Jets for two draft picks. The sixth pick overall in 2015 has 17 sacks and 240 tackles in his four-plus years. New York uses a 3-4 defensive alignment. The Jets employ a 4-3 front that had Williams working mostly on the inside. He can play nose tackle, too. Watch to see what the Giants do.

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