USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Dallas digs a hole:

- Lorenzo Reyes

Errorprone Cowboys have fallen to 3-3 and now face a ‘season-defining’ game with the Eagles.

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. – Dak Prescott dropped his eyes to the carpet, sighed and shook his head.

He paced by his stall. He draped his crimson jacket around his shoulders. Two stalls over to his left, tight end Jason Witten faced a half-moon group of reporters asking about slow starts, injuries and stagnancy in the red zone.

“I don’t know what’s going on, man,” Prescott told USA TODAY by his locker. “We’re out here trying to get a (expletive) win. We’ve gotta figure this out.”

Just 40 or so minutes earlier in Week 6, they had just lost their third game in a row, this one to a previously winless Jets team, 24-22. Recurring problems sank the Cowboys’ chances of winning.

Dallas fell into an early hole, scoring just six points before halftime. That brought its scoring average before intermissi­on during the three-game skid to three points.

“I wish I could give you a better answer, but it’s just execute better on the earlier downs,” Witten said.

But even when Dallas did get in position to score, its drives often stalled. The Cowboys scored touchdowns in just two of its four trips inside the red zone and, worst yet, were one of two in goal-to-go scenarios.

Tied closely to the inefficien­t red zone play are the slow starts.

“That’s what’s hurting us,” Prescott told reporters in a news conference. “We’re putting ourselves behind. We’re putting our defense in a tough spot and we’re not playing complement­ary football. It’s as simple as that. We’ve got to start faster. We have to get points. We have to get touchdowns and allow our defense to play from (ahead).

“As long as we keep having these slow starts and getting in our own way, we’re going to struggle.”

A 16-point second half brought the Cowboys near a comeback, but the attempt failed when the Jets blitzed during a failed two-point conversion in which Prescott barely had enough time to get off a pass to Witten.

Perhaps nothing better encapsulat­ed Dallas’ issues than a sequence in the middle of the second quarter. The Cowboys marched to the Jets’ 6-yard line. Facing a 3rd-and-1, running back Ezekiel Elliott was stuffed for a loss of 1. Then, on 4thand-2, offensive coordinato­r Kellen Moore dialed up a designed rush for Prescott to the left. He lost 2 yards and Dallas turned the ball over on downs.

On the following play, Jets receiver Robby Anderson cooked Cowboys corner Chido Awuzie with a double move. Darnold slid up the pocket and lofted a pass just out of the reach of safety Jeff Heath, who dove to the turf. Heath slowly propped himself up onto his knees and could only watch as Anderson scampered into the end zone for a 92-yard touchdown, the longest score from scrimmage in the NFL all season.

Even in the second half, Dallas couldn’t overcome self-inflicted errors.

A 4-yard Witten touchdown that materializ­ed with 8:02 left in the third quarter was negated by offensive pass interferen­ce. Two plays later, the Cowboys had to settle for a field goal.

The Cowboys were, however, significantly short-handed. The team declared left tackle Tyron Smith (ankle), right tackle La’el Collins (MCL sprain) and receiver Randall Cobb (back/hip) – all of them starters – inactive before the game. Then, after star wide receiver Amari Cooper appeared to be slightly hobbled during the team’s opening series, the Cowboys kept him on the sideline and later ruled him out with a quad injury.

Though the Cowboys rushed for 129 yards, they required 34 carries to get there.

“We practice this a lot, to make sure that everyone is ready in a situation like this,” center Travis Frederick said. “But it is difficult. Those guys are starters for a reason. Those guys did a nice job on the outside as far as I know, but we’ll go back and make sure that everyone is on the same page moving forward so that we can get better from this.”

Without their two starting tackles, the Cowboys faced a constant pass rush. The Jets hit Prescott eight times and sacked him once.

Dallas’ wounded starters are on the mend and should be nearing their respective returns.

And before it heads into its Week 8 bye, Dallas has the chance to take control of the division with a Sunday night showdown at home looming against Philadelph­ia.

“I don’t know if I can say it is a season-defining game, but we’re still tied for the lead in our division, so we’ve just got to go out there and get a win,” Elliott said. “Next week is a must win.”

 ?? BRAD PENNER/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott is stopped by Jets defensive tackle Steve McLendon and safety Jamal Adams, right.
BRAD PENNER/USA TODAY SPORTS Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott is stopped by Jets defensive tackle Steve McLendon and safety Jamal Adams, right.

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