The Oklahoman

Cowboys leaning more on D without Prescott

- Schuyler Dixon

FRISCO, Texas – The Dallas defense has done a little more each week during Cooper Rush’s four-game winning streak filling in for injured quarterbac­k Dak Prescott.

Now the Cowboys have to slow Jalen Hurts and the undefeated Philadelph­ia Eagles in an early NFC East showdown, with Prescott’s return creeping ever so closer.

It’s too early to tell if the star QB’s recovery from a fractured right thumb will be far enough along by Sunday night at the Eagles (5-0).

Meantime, the defense is harkening to the franchise’s “Doomsday” teams of the 1970s – and posting numbers not since seen since the birth of that era 50 years ago.

“We’re for real,” reigning NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year Micah Parsons said. “We’re going to keep proving this every week. One thing I’ve learned about us is that we’re tougher and we’re better than we thought we were. That says a lot.”

Rush threw for the fewest yards in the 5-0 start to his career with 102 in a 22-10 victory over the defending Super Bowl champion Los Angeles Rams.

That’s because Dallas (4-1) scored on a sack-fumble of Matthew Stafford three plays into the game, then sealed the victory with two fourth-quarter turnovers – an intercepti­on and another strip-sack.

Give the running game some credit, too. Tony Pollard had a 57-yard touchdown and the Cowboys finished with 163 yards rushing a week after having

just 62.

Rush’s 4-0 run started with touchdowns on his first two drives against last season’s other Super Bowl team, Cincinnati.

The defense did most of the rest before a game-ending field goal in a 20-17 victory.

Another fourth-quarter drive to the winning points followed in a 23-16 victory at the New York Giants before the Cowboys were outgained in a 25-10 win over Washington.

This time, Dallas finished with 76 net yards passing, the club’s fewest in a road victory since 1975.

And that defense Parsons believes is

the best in the NFL? The Cowboys have allowed one touchdown in each game. The only other time Dallas gave up five or fewer touchdowns in the first five games was 1972.

“They’ve been doing this for quite some time,” coach Mike McCarthy said. “Just tremendous confidence and communicat­ion. The young guys are growing up, the older guys are a year better.”

WHAT’S WORKING

The Parsons-led pass rush has 20 sacks, one behind San Francisco for the NFL lead. Parsons, who has three twosack games, is tied with Joey Bosa of the 49ers and New England’s Matt Judon for the league lead with six sacks.

The Cowboys have at least two sacks in each of the first five games for the first time since 2005, the year they drafted the club’s career leader in sacks, DeMarcus Ware.

Dallas has at least 20 sacks through five games for the first time since 1987.

WHAT NEEDS HELP

The Cowboys haven’t finished out of the top 10 in passing offense since 2018. It appears they won’t get anywhere close in 2022.

Dallas is 27th in the NFL in passing at 182.2 yards per game, coming off its lowest net passing total in a victory since 2000.

Rush has done his part by going without an intercepti­on while the Cowboys await Prescott’s return. But opponents figure to load up against the run better than the Rams did until Dallas gets the passing game going.

STOCK UP

DE Dorance Armstrong, who also has a two-sack game, returned on a twoyear deal after Randy Gregory bolted for Denver in a last-minute change of heart. He had probably his best game as a pro against LA.

Armstrong had the first strip-sack of Stafford, leading to DeMarcus Lawrence’s 19-yard fumble return for the touchdown.

Another powerful rush up the middle led to Armstrong’s blocked punt later in the first.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/AP ?? Rams quarterbac­k Matthew Stafford, bottom, loses the ball after being sacked by Cowboys linebacker Micah Parsons (11).
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/AP Rams quarterbac­k Matthew Stafford, bottom, loses the ball after being sacked by Cowboys linebacker Micah Parsons (11).

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