Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Intrigue growing for Cowboys’ rookie

-

FRISCO, Texas — The role for versatile rookie Micah Parsons in the Dallas defense just got a little more intriguing after the linebacker essentiall­y replaced injured star pass rusher DeMarcus Lawrence in Sunday’s 20-17 victory over the Los Angeles Chargers.

While the Chargers cost themselves two touchdowns with penalties, there was no denying the impact of Parsons, particular­ly when matched up against right tackle Storm Norton.

Parsons’ first career sack came on a generous call by officials, who ruled quarterbac­k Justin Herbert was in his grasp when he threw a pass while backpedali­ng. Regardless, the 18-yard sack ultimately forced the Chargers to settle for a tying field goal.

That fourth-quarter possession ended up being the last for the Chargers as Dak Prescott led a drive to a game-ending field goal for his first victory since the star quarterbac­k’s severe ankle injury last October. Dallas earned an encouragin­g split of two road games to start the season.

Parsons’ role in new defensive coordinato­r Dan Quinn’s adjusted plan without Lawrence and fellow starter Randy Gregory was the talk of the locker room after the victory. The former Penn State player said it was his most work on the defensive line since high school.

“I mean, a lot of it was natural,” Parsons said. “Some people had a long day out there.”

When coming off the left side, Parsons had little trouble getting around Norton. He played 39 of 71 snaps, rushing Herbert on most of them — sometimes even in a threepoint stance — and finishing with the sack, a tackle for loss and a game-high four quarterbac­k hits.

Lawrence is likely sidelined until November after breaking his foot in practice Wednesday, which forced the midweek adjustment with Parsons. If Gregory returns from the covid-19 list for next Monday’s home opener against Philadelph­ia, the intrigue with Parsons grows.

“I’m just showing them different versatilit­ies of what I can do,” Parsons said. “We go into the playbook even more. I think my teammates and Coach Q put an unbelievab­le amount of faith in me.”

On offense, the Cowboys got the running game going after largely ignoring it in the opener, a 31-29 loss to defending Super Bowl champion Tampa Bay and its topranked run defense from the title season. Tony Pollard had his third career 100-yard game with 109, while twotime rushing champ Ezekiel Elliott had 71.

The 198 yards rushing were the most for the Cowboys under second-year Coach Mike McCarthy. The performanc­e also came a week after Prescott threw more than 50 passes for the third consecutiv­e time in a full game and finished with 403 passing yards. Prescott was 23 of 27 for 237 yards against the Chargers.

“We’re trying to build this thing to win a championsh­ip,” McCarthy said. “You have to have diversity and you have to have an understand­ing of what your opponents can and can’t do.”

But clock management was a problem for the Cowboys in the final minute. Dallas had plenty of time to get closer than the 56-yarder Greg Zuerlein made for the win. The Cowboys ran just one play in the final 33 seconds, choosing not to snap with about 10 seconds left and using their last timeout with 4 seconds to go. McCarthy said part of the problem was the scoreboard clock he was using went blank after that play, a 3-yard run by Pollard.

Dallas right tackle Terence Steele helped slow three-time Pro Bowl pass rusher Joey Bosa in the Cowboys’ first game without La’el Collins, who is serving a five-game suspension for violating the NFL’s substance-abuse policy. Steele got plenty of experience as an undrafted rookie last year when Collins missed the entire season with hip issues. That was part of the reason Dallas chose him to fill in this time. Bosa was shut out on sacks, tackles for loss and quarterbac­k hits.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Parsons
Parsons

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States