The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Cowboys face same questions after another early playoff exit

- By Schuyler Dixon

ARLINGTON, TEXAS » Mike McCarthy’s future as Dallas Cowboys coach wasn’t something Jerry Jones wanted to discuss after a wild-card loss that left the owner saying “I can’t remember” when asked if he’d ever been more disappoint­ed in defeat.

Questions about McCarthy come in part because the Cowboys could lose both coordinato­rs to head coaching jobs in Kellen Moore on offense and Dan Quinn on defense. Moore is getting interviews for a second consecutiv­e year, and Quinn took Atlanta to a Super Bowl in that role.

The 23-17 loss to San Francisco on Sunday was another uneven performanc­e from franchise quarterbac­k Dak Prescott and Moore’s offense. It was punctuated by the hotly debated decision to run Prescott up the middle without a timeout with 14 seconds remaining believing there was time to spike the ball and run one more play.

After it didn’t work and McCarthy, Prescott and other Dallas players criticized officials for the clock running out, Jones flatly rejected the supposed controvers­y with a dose of reality.

“I think this is a time that when you get this combinatio­n of players together, you need to have success, because we all know how it goes in the NFL,” Jones said after Sunday’s game. “The whole thing is set up to take away from the best, and add to the ones that need improvemen­t, and personnel-wise, I think we have one of the best (teams).”

The Cowboys haven’t even reached an NFC championsh­ip game since winning the last of the franchise’s five Super Bowl titles during the 1995 season. It’s quite a drought for Jones, also the club’s general manager, after Dallas won three championsh­ips in four years early in his ownership.

Dallas had the No. 1 offense and an opportunis­tic defense that led the NFL in takeaways. Now Prescott has a 1-3 playoff record after the club’s first wild-card defeat since Tony Romo infamously flubbed the snap on a potential go-ahead field goal late in a loss at Seattle 15 years ago. Add the frantic failure to get off a final snap to the growing list of playoff lowlights.

“In all my years I don’t know that I’ve had a better chance or a better full team than this,” Prescott said. “It’s hard to accept knowing every year that a team’s not going to be the same, some of those guys won’t be back. It’s just hard for me to accept right now.”

SO MUCH FOR EXPERIENCE

The Cowboys hoped McCarthy’s experience of leading Green Bay to four NFC title games in 12-plus seasons would help end the long drought.

Instead, he faces mounting questions about game management after the finishing sequence, and a strange attempt to keep the punt team on the field for an offensive play after a successful fake. The Cowboys

ended up getting a delay of game after the offense came back out.

McCarthy won his Super Bowl at the home of the Cowboys 11 years ago, and his last playoff victory with the Packers was at AT&T Stadium during the standout rookie year for Prescott and running back Ezekiel Elliott in 2016. Aaron Rodgers led that divisional­round win.

No such warm, fuzzy feelings in the retractabl­eroof venue now. The loss to the 49ers gave the Cowboys a finishing 2-4 stretch at home in the second year of McCarthy’s five-year contract. The NFC East champs were 12-6 overall.

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