The Denver Post

Dak-led Dallas back on track

COWBOYS 28, CARDINALS 17

- By Bob Baum

The Associated Press

GLENDALE, ARIZ.» Dak Prescott threw two touchdown passes and flipped head over heels into the end zone on a 10-yard run for another TD and the Dallas Cowboys pulled away in the fourth quarter to beat the Arizona Cardinals 2817 on Monday night.

The Cowboys (2-1), bouncing back from a 42-17 pummeling in Denver in Week 2, began the game kneeling at midfield with team owner Jerry Jones in a show of unity that followed widespread protests across the NFL of critical comments by President Donald Trump over the weekend.

After they kneeled, they stood and walked to the sideline for the national anthem.

Prescott, 13-of-18 passing for 183 yards, broke a 14-14 tie with a 37yard scoring pass to Brice Butler with 11:52 remaining.

Arizona, with a spectacula­r catch by Larry Fitzgerald for 24 yards on a third-and-18 play, moved downfield but the drive stalled. Phil Dawson’s 37-yard field goal cut the Cowboys’ lead to 21-17 with 6:35 left.

Ezekiel Elliott, who gained 8 yards on nine carries against Denver and drew criticism for not hustling after a couple of late intercepti­ons, was bottled up for much of Monday’s game but still gained 80 yards on 22 attempts, 30 yards on one play. He ran 8 yards for the final Dallas touchdown.

The Cardinals (1-2), in their home opener, got a big game from Fitzgerald, who caught 13 passes for 149 yards, in the process moving ahead of Marvin Harrison into eighth in career receiving yards.

Carson Palmer had a big first half, completed 15-of-18 for 145 yards and finished 29-of-48 for 325 yards and two scores. He was sacked six times, a career-high three by DeMarcus Lawrence.

The Cardinals dominated the first half statistica­lly, but were deadlocked with the Cowboys at 7-7. Arizona had a 152-57 advantage in total yards and dominated time of possession 19:34 to 9:41.

Arizona took the opening kickoff and went 82 yards in eight plays. Palmer was 5-for-5 on the drive, capped by a 25-yard touchdown pass to Jaron Brown.

Before Dallas even had a first down, Arizona mounted a nearly nine-minute drive but a touchdown pass to Brown was negated by a holding penalty and Dawson’s 36-yard field-goal try was wide right. It was the third midrange miss for the 41-year-old kicker this season.

And the miss left the door open for the Cowboys to get back in it.

Prescott scored on a 10-yard run, flipping head-first over the goal line to tie it at 7-7 with 3:33 left in the first half.

Jones has been a staunch supporter of Trump, so the speculatio­n was that he would not allow his Dallas players to kneel during the national anthem.

Following a weekend of kneel- ing and protesting across the NFL, the Cowboys and their owner displayed their own version of unity Monday, kneeling on the field before rising as a group and going to the sideline for the anthem.

Numerous boos rang out across University of Phoenix Stadium as the Cowboys kneeled and continued as the players rose, still arm in arm, and stepped back to the sideline as the U.S. flag was unfurled.

The Cardinals had their own symbol of unity after a weekend of protests in the NFL, gathering along the goal line arm in arm during the national anthem. They were joined by team president Michael Bidwell, his family and general manager Steve Keim.

 ?? Jennifer Stewart, Getty Images ?? Dallas quarterbac­k Dak Prescott finds himself heels over head on his 10-yard touchdown run against the Cardinals during the second quarter of Monday night’s game.
Jennifer Stewart, Getty Images Dallas quarterbac­k Dak Prescott finds himself heels over head on his 10-yard touchdown run against the Cardinals during the second quarter of Monday night’s game.

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