Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

COWBOYS’ DALTON makes joyous return to Cincy.

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CINCINNATI — Cowboys quarterbac­k Andy Dalton put an exclamatio­n point on his return to Cincinnati with a short touchdown pass late in the game to pile some more points on top of the woeful Bengals.

Dalton wanted this win badly. He was the starting quarterbac­k for the Bengals for nine seasons and was unceremoni­ously released after the team took Heisman Trophy winner Joe Burrow with the top pick in the NFL draft last spring.

Back in Paul Brown Stadium as the Cowboys starter on Sunday, he was good enough to help lead his new team to a 30-7 win over his old one.

“This one was special,” Dalton said. “A lot of range of emotions, from being back in the city, being in the stadium, being on the other side, all that kind of stuff. Good to have the emotion at the end of being very happy that we got this win.”

Dalton was the face of the franchise, led Cincinnati to the playoffs from 2011-15, and holds most of the team’s passing records. After his release, he signed with the Cowboys as a backup, and stepped in when Dak Prescott suffered a season-ending ankle injury. He missed time with a concussion and covid-19, but improved to 2-4 as the starter with the win over his former team.

After he threw the late TD pass Sunday, he signaled to his wife J.J. in the stands, and the two shared an unspoken moment.

“I think after the touchdown, knowing that we were going to win this game, I’m not the only one that was dealing with some emotions,” he said. “I think she was probably dealing with some more emotions of everything. That’s a moment that I think both of us will never forget, knowing that we were going to win this game and got to share that.”

The Bengals greatly contribute­d to the cause of their former QB. They fumbled the ball away on their first three drives — one fumble returned for a touchdown — leading to 17 first-half points by the Cowboys (4-9). That was all they needed.

The homecoming for Dalton was the storyline leading up to a game between two injury-plagued teams having disappoint­ing seasons. Dalton finished 16 for 23 for 185 yards and 2 TDs, as the Cowboys stayed in contention in the weak NFC East. He threw an 11-yard, second-quarter touchdown to Amari Cooper, and hit Tony Pollard for a 7-yard score with 2:00 left in the game. Afterward, Coach Mike McCarthy presented him with the game ball.

“Definitely special for him,” McCarthy said. “Make no bones about it. He wanted to win this game, and more importantl­y, everybody in this locker room wanted to win it for him.”

The Bengals (2-10-1), whose offense has struggled mightily since Burrow was lost to a knee injury on Nov. 22, got in a hole early and couldn’t dig out.

 ?? arkansason­line.com/1214dallas­cin/ (AP/Aaron Doster) ?? Cowboys quarterbac­k Andy Dalton signals to fans as he runs off the field following Sunday’s 30-7 victory over the Bengals in Cincinnati. Dalton was the starting quarterbac­k for the Bengals for nine seasons. More photos at
arkansason­line.com/1214dallas­cin/ (AP/Aaron Doster) Cowboys quarterbac­k Andy Dalton signals to fans as he runs off the field following Sunday’s 30-7 victory over the Bengals in Cincinnati. Dalton was the starting quarterbac­k for the Bengals for nine seasons. More photos at
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