The Morning Call (Sunday)

Giants have to beat streaking Cowboys

- By Tom Canavan

Playing with a backup quarterbac­k and a defense that’s finally found itself, the Dallas Cowboys are the hottest team in the NFCEast entering the final weekend of the regular season.

It might not be good enough to get them back to the playoffs.

The Cowboys (6-9) will try to extend their winning streak to four games when they travel to the Meadowland­s to face the New York Giants (5-10) on Sunday. The winner could make the postseason. Or not.

Washington (6-9) has the inside track for the division title. It beat Dallas twice, so it has the head-to-head tiebreaker should the teams finish tied. A win in Philadelph­ia on Sunday gets Washington to the playoffs.

A Washington loss opens the door for Dallas and New York, which is on a three-game skid. A Dallas win and Washington loss gives the Cowboys and new coach Mike McCarthy the division. AGiants victory and a Washington loss gives New York the division crown based on head-to-head play among the three teams. The Giants would be 3-1, Washington 2-2 and Dallas 1-3.

Dallas, which lost quarterbac­k Dak Prescott to a major ankle injury in the first game against New York on Oct. 11, is the surprise. Andy Dalton and the offense are coming off a 500-yard performanc­e in a win over Philadelph­ia, while the defense has 10 takeaways in the winning streak after 11 in the first 12 games.

“If you can play your best football in December you obviously have the best chance if you have the opportunit­y to be in the tournament,” said McCarthy, who saw his team start 2-7. “The last three weeks we have accomplish­ed that. Our goal clearly is to go to NewYork and win this game, but hopefully we play our best football this week.”

The Giants, who started the season 1-7, were in first place at the beginning of December with a 5-7 record. However, they lost to Arizona (8-7), Cleveland (10-5) and Baltimore (10-5).

“I know the character of our locker room and how we’ve stuck together,” Giants defensive back Logan Ryan said. “We definitely earned the right, the ability to play in this game and it to mean something, and I think that’s just coming back around with everything we’ve endured this year.”

Pocket Passer

Giants quarterbac­k Daniel Jones has not been himself since pulling his right hamstring against Cincinnati on Nov. 29 and spraining his left ankle against the Cardinals on Dec. 13. He missed games against Seattle (Dec. 6) and Cleveland (Dec. 20).

New York’s second leading rusher, Jones has run once for 3 yards in his last two starts and has been sacked 12 times. He says the injuries have limited his running. He was averaging 7.3 yards.

Elliott chasing 1,000

Dallas running back Ezekiel Elliott needs 63 yards rushing to avoid falling short of 1,000 in what amounted to a full season for the first time in his five-year career. The two-time rushing champion never had fewer than 1,357 yards in any of the four seasons when he played at least 15 games.

The one time Elliott fell short was when he was suspended six games in 2017 over domestic violence allegation­s. Hehad 983 yards in 10 games and led the league by averaging 98.3 yards per game.

Twice previously, Elliott sat out the regular-season finale because the Cowboys had all but secured their playoff seeding. This year he missed a game because of injury for the first time, sitting in Week 15 with a calf issue. Elliott came back last week with his second 100-yard game of the season (105) against Philadelph­ia.

 ?? NICKWASS/AP ?? Injuries have limited the mobility of Giants quarterbac­k Daniel Jones.
NICKWASS/AP Injuries have limited the mobility of Giants quarterbac­k Daniel Jones.

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