Post-Tribune

Ones to watch: 2nd-place teams

- By Rob Maaddi

Dak Prescott was nearly perfect in directing a balanced, dynamic offense. Micah Parsons again wreaked havoc in leading a dominant defense.

Behind Prescott and Parsons, the Cowboys dismantled the Vikings and put the rest of the NFL on notice with a convincing 40-3 victory on the road Sunday against a team that had won seven straight games.

How ’bout them Cowboys! No team owns a more impressive win this season.

“This is exactly what I expected,” Cowboys safety Jayron Kearse said. “We knew we were going to come in here and knock them down. We showed them who the tougher team is, and it is us.

“That is the type of football that we can play week in and week out if we continue to stay together and do our job.”

The Cowboys (7-3) are unlikely to win the NFC East. They trail the Eagles (9-1) by two games and already lost to them. But they proved why they’ll be a dangerous team that nobody will want to face in January following the biggest road win in team history.

The Cowboys have averaged 28.8 points per game in Prescott’s five starts. Tony Pollard and Ezekiel Elliott, who scored two touchdowns apiece against the Vikings (8-2), provide a strong 1-2 running attack.

They may end up adding wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. to join CeeDee Lamb, giving Prescott another weapon.

“Right now the challenge is handling success,” Prescott said. “... We’ve got to turn the page and go put another one together on Thursday.”

The Cowboys host the Giants (7-3) on Thanksgivi­ng in a fight for second place in the division.

For now, the Bills are the best second-place team in the NFL. They rebounded nicely from a mistakefil­led, overtime loss at home to the Vikings with a 31-23 victory over the Browns.

Despite a chaotic week that saw them forced to play a “home” game in Detroit because a storm dumped several feet of snow in western New York, the Bills (7-3) got back on track against the Browns.

Josh Allen didn’t turn the ball over after a rough three-week stretch and the offense scored on all five possession­s in the second half.

The Bills may eventually surpass the Dolphins (7-3) in the AFC East — the Dolphins won the first matchup and the teams meet in Buffalo on Dec. 18.

Like the Cowboys, the Bills also play Thursday, when they face the Lions (4-6).

The Bengals are another second-place team finding its groove.

The reigning AFC champions beat the Steelers 37-30 for their fourth win in five games.

The Bengals are one game behind the Ravens (7-3) in the AFC North. The Ravens won in Cincinnati in October and the division could be on the line when the teams meet in Baltimore in Week 18.

“I think we’re playing as good as anybody,” Burrow said. “We’re hitting our stride offensivel­y. Still left some points out there. There’s always room to improve, obviously.”

In a season filled with close games and comeback wins, the last team standing may be one that doesn’t finish the regular season in first place.

 ?? ADAM BETTCHER/GETTY ?? Ezekiel Elliott celebrates with QB Dak Prescott after rushing for a touchdown in the Cowboys’ 40-3 rout of the Vikings on Sunday in Minneapoli­s.
ADAM BETTCHER/GETTY Ezekiel Elliott celebrates with QB Dak Prescott after rushing for a touchdown in the Cowboys’ 40-3 rout of the Vikings on Sunday in Minneapoli­s.

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