The Peterborough Examiner

First course for the Cowboys

Tie atop NFC East after Cooper, Elliott lead way for Dallas

- SCHUYLER DIXON

ARLINGTON, TEXAS — Ezekiel Elliott made the $21 donation after his touchdown. Amari Cooper took the freebie following the first of his two scores.

The bonus for the Dallas Cowboys: They’re all the way back in the NFC East race.

Cooper had a 90-yard touchdown after celebratin­g with a free throw following his first scoring catch, Elliott ran for 121 yards with his TD and the Cowboys pulled even with Washington atop the division with a 31-23 National Football League Thanksgivi­ng win on Thursday.

The Cowboys (6-5) won their third straight game since the first home loss, to Tennessee in the Dallas debut of Cooper following a trade dropped them two games under .500.

Dallas’ eighth win in nine Thanksgivi­ng games against Washington, and second in three seasons, earned a season split.

Washington (6-5) lost for the third time in four games in Colt McCoy’s first start in four years coming off Alex Smith’s season-ending leg injury.

The former Texas Longhorns star threw three intercepti­ons to offset two touchdown passes. McCoy won his two previous starts at the home of the Cowboys, one for the 2009 Big 12 championsh­ip and the other his most recent NFL victory with Washington in 2014.

Cooper, the former Oakland receiver had much more fun in his second home game, finishing with a Dallas Thanksgivi­ng-best 180 yards receiving — 105 of those coming after the catch on his two touchdowns.

First, Cooper ran away from Quinton Dunbar after the Washington cornerback slipped on a short pass, turning it into a 40yard TD for a 17-13 lead. Cooper celebrated by mimicking a free throw, shooting the football through the goalpost.

On the 90-yarder, Cooper made the catch just outside the Dallas 30, spun out of the arms of Fabian Moreau and won the race to the pylon against Ha Ha Clinton-Dix, who tried to shove him out of bounds around the 5. It was his longest career catch and the longest completion in Dak Prescott’s three seasons.

McCoy looked as if he hadn’t started a game in a long time early, throwing into double coverage on his first play and fumbling while trying to scramble on his third, with the Redskins recovering and punting.

But McCoy settled in with a couple of third-down passes to Jordan Reed to keep drives going, then hit Vernon Davis in stride on a 53-yard touchdown — the longest Washington completion of the season — for a 7-7 tie.

The Cowboys were having all the fun before the Redskins pulled even, with Elliott scoring on a 16-yard run and dropping US$21 into a giant Salvation Army red kettle behind the end zone. The cash was handed to him by a team photograph­er.

As a rookie in 2016, Elliott jumped into the kettle on the same part of the field after a touchdown in a 31-26 win against Washington.

That season’s NFL rushing champion, who wears No. 21, was fined for the stunt and later donated $21,000 to the Salvation Army.

After scoring on a scrambling five-yard run for the third Dallas touchdown in less than eight minutes and a 31-13 lead, Prescott let Elliott help him into another kettle on the other end of the field, drawing the same unsportsma­nlike conduct penalty Elliott did two years ago.

Elliott missed the Thanksgivi­ng game last year on his six-game suspension over domestic violence allegation­s.

 ?? RON JENKINS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dallas Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott, right, runs past Washington’s Ha Ha Clinton-Dix for a touchdown on Thursday.
RON JENKINS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Dallas Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott, right, runs past Washington’s Ha Ha Clinton-Dix for a touchdown on Thursday.

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