Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Cowboys fall to Cardinals, lose NFC East lead

- By Schuyler Dixon

Brandon Weeden threw two intercepti­ons and couldn’t get the Dallas offense into the end zone until the game was out of reach, as the Arizona Cardinals defeated the Dallas Cowboys 28-17.

ARLINGTON, TEXAS >> Tony Romo is going to London. And the Dallas Cowboys are optimistic he will play.

After what they saw with Brandon Weeden under center, the Cowboys might not feel like they can wait out Romo’s third back injury in 18 months much longer.

Weeden threw two intercepti­ons and couldn’t get the Dallas offense into the end zone until the game was out of reach, while Carson Palmer had three touchdown passes to lead the Arizona Cardinals to a 28-17 victory Sunday.

Romo was relegated to headset-wearing sideline duty because of fractures of two small bones in his back. The injury is unrelated to a herniated disk sustained last year and to offseason surgery to remove a cyst earlier in 2013.

Coach Jason Garrett said Romo would make the long plane ride to Europe for next weekend’s game against Jacksonvil­le even though staying home would essentiall­y give the 34-year-old a month between games because of a bye the following week.

“People with similar in- juries have been on a little bit of a similar timetable where they missed the first game and they were getting close to being able to play in that second game,” Garrett said.

Weeden was 18 of 33 for 183 yards with a meaningles­s late score to Dez Bryant as the Cowboys (63) dropped their second straight following a sixgame winning streak.

“You can’t turn the ball over, and that is on me,” said Weeden, who was dumped by Cleveland just two seasons after getting drafted in the first round in 2012 and now has 25 touchdowns and 27 intercepti­ons for his career.

The Dallas running game wasn’t the same without Romo.

NFL rushing leader DeMarco Murray’s record streak of eight straight 100yard games to start the season ended against a defense that didn’t allow a back over the century mark for the 18th consecutiv­e time.

Murray, who rushed for 79 yards on 19 carries, was stuffed on fourth-and-1 at the Arizona 34 with the Cardinals leading 14-10 in the fourth quarter. Palmer took the Cardinals the other way for the last of his three scoring tosses, a 1-yarder to Andre Ellington.

“That was the turning point in the game,” coach Bruce Arians said. “It wasn’t a time to sit back. We had to continue to attack and we got ourselves some good, favorable plays and Carson made some good decisions.”

The Cardinals (7-1), who have sole possession of the best record in the NFC this late in the season for the first time since 1974, won their fourth straight, including back-to-back wins over the top two teams in the NFC East.

“This is a very good team,” said Palmer, 5-0 this season after missing two games with a shoulder injury. “We feel like we can play with anybody, and that’s important because we feel like we are improving.”

Palmer put his team in a 7-0 hole when undrafted Dallas rookie Tyler Patmon ducked under a route, made an over-the-head catch and ran untouched down the Arizona sideline, with some nice blocking from defensive end Anthony Spencer.

But that was his only mistake. He finished 22 of 34 for 249 yards with touchdowns of 7 yards to John Carlson and 11 to Jaron Brown before the short one to Ellington. All three TDs came on third down, with the Cardinals converting 9 of 15 in that situation.

“We didn’t get off the field when we were supposed to,” said Dallas defensive tackle Henry Melton, who had 1 ½ sacks. “It was miserable in that aspect.”

Elling ton outgained Murray on the ground with 95 yards and added another 39 receiving.

“You know we always want to outrush the opponent,” Ellington said. “It’s a credit to our defense for shutting him down and giving me a chance to get out there on the field and get more carries and get more yards.”

Weeden’s f irst intercepti­on, by Tyrann Mathieu, came with Dallas in scoring range early in the second half. The second wiped out any hope of a comeback when Antonio Cromartie stepped in front of Terrance Williams after the Cardinals had gone up 21-10 in the fourth quarter. NOTES >> The Cardinals beat the Cowboys for the fourth straight time, and this was the f irst that wasn’t on the final play. Two of the previous three victories were in overtime. .. Cowboys LB Rolando McClain and DT Tyrone Crawford left the game in the fourth quarter with knee injuries.

 ??  ??
 ?? BRANDON WADE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ed Stinson sacks Brandon Weeden during the second half of the Arizona Cardinals’ 28-17 victory over the Dallas Cowboys Sunday. The Cardinals improve to a league-best 7-1 with the win.
BRANDON WADE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ed Stinson sacks Brandon Weeden during the second half of the Arizona Cardinals’ 28-17 victory over the Dallas Cowboys Sunday. The Cardinals improve to a league-best 7-1 with the win.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States