Times Colonist

Tricky Bills add to Cowboys’ woes

- SCHUYLER DIXON

BUFFALO 26 DALLAS 15

ARLINGTON, Texas — Cole Beasley savoured a little extra time on the field with his former teammates after what had to be one of the most satisfying days of the Buffalo receiver’s career.

And to think he didn’t even have the most noteworthy play for the Bills’ pass-catchers.

John Brown became the first Buffalo receiver to throw a touchdown pass, Josh Allen set a franchise record by producing at least two touchdowns in an eighth consecutiv­e game and the surging Bills beat the fading Dallas Cowboys 26-15 on Thursday.

Allen’s TD pass was to Beasley, who had 110 yards receiving in the stadium where he spent his first seven seasons as the Bills (9-3) got their first Thanksgivi­ng win since 1975 in their first appearance on the holiday in 25 years.

Buffalo is 5-1 on the road for the first time since 1966, and the nine wins through 12 games are the most since the Bills finished 10-6 in Hall of Fame quarterbac­k Jim Kelly’s final season in 1996.

“It’ll be the most satisfying day when we win a Super Bowl,” said Beasley, who was critical of the Cowboys after leaving, then had six catches and finished two yards shy of his career high against them. “It’s just another win, another step in the right direction.”

The Cowboys (6-6) stumbled after scoring a touchdown on their opening drive, giving Philadelph­ia a chance to rejoin them atop the NFC East after their fourth double-digit loss in the past six Thanksgivi­ng games.

A lacklustre showing for Dallas’ sixth loss in nine games came four days after owner Jerry Jones blasted the coaching staff following a loss to New England from a team that entered the season with lofty expectatio­ns.

Jones remained supportive of embattled coach Jason Garrett, who is in the final year of his contract in his ninth full season for a franchise that hasn’t been past the divisional round since the last of its five championsh­ips to finish the 1995 season.

“This is not the time for me,” said Jones, who made an in-season change when Garrett got the job in 2010. “I’m looking ahead at winning four or five straight. Every decision that I make over the next month will be with an eye in mind to get us in the Super Bowl now.”

Allen was 19-of-24 for 231 yards and a career-best 120.7 passer rating as Bills won their third straight game and solidified their hold on an AFC wild-card spot.

The second-year quarterbac­k found the ball at the bottom of a pile after fumbling a snap on fourth-and-one in the second quarter, quickly reached the ball over the first down spot and then stumbled forward three yards to the Dallas 28, pumping his arms emphatical­ly afterward.

“On fourth down, fourth and short, fumbling the snap, I got to do a better job with that, and get the ball to our running back and let him do the job there,” Allen said. “But I wanted it.”

On the next play, Brown took a pitch on a double reverse and lofted the ball to wide-open running back Devin Singletary for Buffalo’s first lead at 13-7 in the second quarter.

“I played a little backup quarterbac­k in Pop Warner, but I wasn’t all that,” Brown said becoming the first non-QB with a touchdown pass for the Bills since Fred Jackson 10 years ago.

“Dropped a dime,” Beasley said. “We had two great quarterbac­ks today.”

The Cowboys couldn’t blame a sputtering offence on the conditions after the windy and rainy loss to the Patriots. Dak Prescott threw an intercepti­on, lost one fumble and had another on fourth down as Dallas was outscored 26-0 over a 50-minute stretch.

Ezekiel Elliott had 54 yards rushing and another 20 receiving in the first nine minutes, but wasn’t much of a factor the rest of the way. He finished with 71 yards rushing and 66 receiving.

Singletary became the latest back to have a splashier day than the two-time rushing champion, rushing for 63 yards with 38 more receiving. The 28-yard score was the easiest play he had all day, waiting for Brown’s throw to come down and waltzing into the end zone.

Bears 24, Lions 20

DETROIT — Mitchell Trubisky started and closed strong to overcome some shaky decisions and plays in between to keep the Chicago Bears in the NFC playoff picture.

Trubisky threw a go-ahead, three-yard touchdown pass to David Montgomery with 2:17 left, lifting Chicago to a 24-20 win over the slumping Detroit Lions.

The Bears (6-6) have won three of four games.

 ??  ?? A young fan holds up a sign asking Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones for a new head coach during the game in Arlington, Texas, on Thursday.
A young fan holds up a sign asking Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones for a new head coach during the game in Arlington, Texas, on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada