USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Dallas, Prescott continue troubling trend

- Chris Bumbaca Previews for all the wild-card matchups, Pages 13-15.

LANDOVER, Md. – In reality, the Dallas Cowboys had little to play for. The Philadelph­ia Eagles were taking care of business against the New York Giants, securing the NFC East crown – and the No. 1 seed – that was up for grabs at the day’s start.

The most troubling thing for the Cowboys is that it showed.

And for the offensive side of the ball, it’s part of a pattern that has plagued the team down the stretch and left the Cowboys limping to Tampa Bay to face Tom Brady and the Buccaneers for a wild-card matchup.

“You guys got a big vocabulary,” Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy said when asked to describe the offensive performanc­e in a 26-6 loss to the Washington Commanders. “Go for it.” Challenge accepted!

Here are a handful of quick thesaurus pulls to help paint a picture of how the unit played: unpropitio­us, cataclysmi­c, demoralizi­ng, execrable.

At the center of the conundrum is quarterbac­k Dak Prescott. His word to summarize his own performanc­e is not acceptable for print, unfortunat­ely, but it rhymes with “smitty.”

Prescott was a dreadful 14-for-37 for 128 yards with one touchdown and one intercepti­on. His longest completion went for 15 yards. The offense logged 10 three-and-outs (with Prescott on the field) thanks to a 4-for-18 (22.2%) showing on third down. Prescott has thrown 10 touchdowns and eight intercepti­ons over his last five games, a stretch over which the Cowboys went 3-2. Prescott finished tied for the league lead with 15 intercepti­ons this season.

The lowlight for Prescott came early in the second quarter after two nearly identical throws to the right. On the first attempt, Commanders cornerback Kendall Fuller almost pulled in an intercepti­on. Prescott wished the result of the next play was the same. This time, Fuller jumped the route again and walked into the end zone for a 28-yard return and six points.

At the start of the fourth quarter, Prescott was 10 of 29 for 93 yards. He was inaccurate all day, with the Commanders breaking up seven passes. He missed high, low, ahead and behind.

Washington’s defense sat six starters in a meaningles­s game for it. Prescott said he had “zero awareness” of the proceeding­s in Philadelph­ia, a 22-16 victory over the Giants that zapped the Cowboys’ chances of winning the NFC East.

But Dallas didn’t take care of its own business, regardless.

“Coming into this game, I feel like we knew we were going to win,” said receiver CeeDee Lamb, who caught the Cowboys’ lone touchdown six seconds before halftime. “We all got to flip the switch.”

Obviously, the Cowboys did not meet that standard.

“We play pro football, man,” right guard Zack Martin said on the topic of uncertain motivation­s entering the game. “If you come out and don’t go, this is what happens.”

McCarthy added that the Cowboys came into the week with little rhythm.

“It wasn’t our best week of practice, without a doubt,” he said. “We had moving parts trying to (play) guys at different (positions).”

“Our players are human,” McCarthy added.

Prescott’s struggles are one piece of the “pie” that owner and general manager Jerry Jones loves to talk about while deciding how to dole out contract extensions to Lamb, Prescott and running back Ezekiel Elliott, who rushed eight times for 10 yards.

The Commanders defensive line bullied the Cowboys up front all game. As a team, Dallas had 27 rushing attempts for 64 yards (2.4 yards per carry). A holding call killed a drive. Simple screens could not be completed.

Special teams was another factor the Cowboys must course-correct ahead of Tampa Bay. Punter Bryan Anger poorly set the tone by mishandlin­g a snap after Dallas’ first possession, giving the Commanders the ball at the Cowboys 20-yard line. Returner KaVontae Turpin muffed a punt later in the first quarter to once again give Washington the ball in the red zone.

This is not all to completely absolve the defense. Commanders quarterbac­k Sam Howell, in his first NFL start, threw a touchdown on his first dropback to Terry McLaurin. Later in the game, he and McLaurin connected for a 52-yard play that set up a field goal.

The Cowboys can look back on the regular season as a 12-5 club that was in contention for the most competitiv­e division in football down to the final day.

But that’s only one prism through which to view their Week 18 result. The correction­s must come quickly. “There’s no other choice,” Martin said. “We do this again, we’ll be sitting at home next week.”

 ?? BRAD MILLS/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Cowboys quarterbac­k Dak Prescott looks to pass as Commanders defensive end Casey Toohill closes in on him during the first half at FedExField.
BRAD MILLS/USA TODAY SPORTS Cowboys quarterbac­k Dak Prescott looks to pass as Commanders defensive end Casey Toohill closes in on him during the first half at FedExField.
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