USA TODAY International Edition

Cowboys must solve TB and Bucs

- Chris Bumbaca

They are the lower seed and playing on the road, but due to their opponents’ own inconsiste­ncies this season, the Dallas Cowboys will be the betting favorites – 2 points according to the Tipico Sportsbook line – against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in Monday night’s NFC wild- card round matchup.

The 12 wins the Cowboys accrued during the regular season won’t mean much with quarterbac­k Tom Brady, undefeated in seven games against Dallas, on the other side.

That won’t make things easier for a team coming off its worst offensive performanc­e of the season against the Washington Commanders.

Here are four things that must happen for the Cowboys to advance in the playoffs for the first time in four years.

Dak Prescott, Kellen Moore find rhythm

For the Cowboys to advance past the Buccaneers, quarterbac­k Dak Prescott will have to be far better than the tape he put out eight days earlier.

The 37.8% completion percentage was the worst of his career. He has thrown intercepti­ons in seven straight games and finished the regular season tied with Houston Texans quarterbac­k Davis Mills for the league lead. On Jan. 8, his misses weren’t close and his reads felt late.

Prescott and the Cowboys have opened each of the least two seasons against the Buccaneers, both losses. The first was a 31- 29 back- and- forth affair in which Prescott threw 58 times ( 42 completion­s) for 403 yards and three touchdowns. In 2022, Dallas could not even find the end zone and lost 19- 3.

Offensive coordinato­r Kellen Moore will have to find a way to settle Prescott into the passing game and build early confidence. Play action will help, but that would require establishi­ng the

run, which brings us to point No. 2.

Run game gets grooving

The Cowboys ran the ball seven times on first down against Washington and were held to 10 total yards. Neither Ezekiel Elliott ( eight rushes, 10 yards) nor Tony Pollard ( seven attempts, 19 yards) could find much room to run. The complete lack of production on first down,

Moore said, made sustaining drives difficult.

Dallas had 10 three- and- outs with Prescott on the field ( 12 total) and went 4- for- 18 on third down ( 22%). The Cowboys finished the season fifth in thirddown conversion percentage ( 45.5%) and a main reason involves success running the ball on early downs.

The health of the offensive line will have an obvious impact on the rushing attack’s performanc­e, and the good news is that center Tyler Biadasz is expected to return for the playoffs. But the absence of tackle Terence Steele will make things more difficult against an average Buccaneers rushing defense.

Special teams flushes bad game

Mistakes by special teams in what turned out to be a meaningles­s Week 18 game can be glossed over. Specialtea­ms screwups in the playoffs will cost people jobs, though.

The transgress­ions against Washington were noticeable. Bryan Anger mishandled a snap and couldn’t get the punt away, turning the ball over inside the red zone. Returner KaVontae Turpin signaled for a fair catch but forgot the most important part – catching the ball – and set Washington up with prime field position once again. Kicker Brett Maher missed an extra point. Turpin returned a punt he should have let roll into the end zone.

Against a team with Brady calling signals, special- teams mishaps can be a death knell.

Breaking Brady curse

This is a simple one. Brady is 7- 0 against the Cowboys, with the latest two wins coming in a Buccaneers uniform. This will be the first time Dallas faces Brady in the postseason.

 ?? GEOFF BURKE/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Dak Prescott was 14- for- 37 passing for 128 yards, one touchdown and one intercepti­on in the 26- 6 loss to the Commanders in Week 18.
GEOFF BURKE/ USA TODAY SPORTS Dak Prescott was 14- for- 37 passing for 128 yards, one touchdown and one intercepti­on in the 26- 6 loss to the Commanders in Week 18.

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