USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Cowboys steamroll Buccaneers

- Jarrett Bell

TAMPA, Fla. – It was Dak Prescott’s night to exorcise some demons.

The embattled quarterbac­k rebounded from the worst game of his career to arguably his best in leading the Dallas Cowboys to a 31-14 rout of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in an NFC wild-card matchup at Raymond James Stadium that marked the franchise’s first road playoff victory in 30 years.

And Tom Brady, the 45year-old icon enveloped by questions about his future, had to watch it while having a horrible night of his own.

Prescott became the first player in Cowboys history to account for five touchdowns in a postseason game – with four passing scores and a rushing TD off a sweet play-action fake for another score – and was pretty much flawless in silencing the barrage of criticism that intensified as the playoffs began.

The stats, with Prescott completing 25 of 33 passes for 305 yards with a 143.4 passer rating and zero turnovers, underscore­d one layer of redemption.

The composure under pressure, which included several cases where Prescott scrambled out of trouble to either throw on the run or rush for big plays, added substance to the numbers.

What a measure of payback for Prescott, who suffered a fractured hand in a seasonopen­ing loss against the Bucs in September and missed five games after having surgery, beginning a challengin­g season in which his career-high 15 intercepti­ons tied for the NFL lead (in just 12 games).

Now comes a chance for Prescott & Co. to face another nemesis. Dallas advances to play at the San Francisco 49ers in the NFC divisional playoffs.

The 49ers eliminated Dallas from the playoffs last season

at AT&T Stadium amid controvers­y, as the clock expired after Prescott scrambled to set up the Cowboys for a potential gamewinnin­g field goal — igniting a torrent of criticism for Prescott, coach Mike McCarthy and coordinato­r Kellen Moore for bungling the clock.

The only thing to question about the Cowboys’ performanc­e on Jan. 16? Brett Maher. The usually reliable kicker missed four PAT tries, making him the first player in NFL history to miss four kicks in a regular-season or postseason game since the league started tracking the statistic in 1932.

Meanwhile, the questions will surely persist for Brady, the 45-year-old icon who might have played his last game in a Bucs uniform ... if not the final game of his remarkable, 23-year NFL career.

Brady entered the game as a home underdog for the first time of his career in the playoffs, with the Bucs (8-10) marking the first

team he’s ever taken to the playoffs with a losing record. He left the game in even worse shape as way too many passes got away and too often the protection didn’t hold up.

No, there was no dramatic comeback for Brady this time as the Cowboys built an 18-0 halftime lead and, despite Tampa Bay’s two fourth-quarter TDs, were never threatened.

Now the NFL universe will wait to see whether Brady will come back at all.

Three things we learned:

Maher will never be misidentif­ied as Justin Tucker

The Cowboys kicker missed four of his five PAT kicks (wide right, wide right, wide left, wide right) to become the first player in NFL playoff history with four conversion misses. Including the season finale at Washington, Maher ran his streak to five consecutiv­e misses until he converted a fourth-quarter kick that even inspired the Bucs fans to cheer. Footnote to the yips: Maher missed three PATs during the entire regular season.

Dalton Schultz is a stud

The Cowboys tight end was Prescott’s go-to target with seven catches for a season-high 95 yards, with two touchdowns. The effort included a juggling, 26-yard catch near the sideline in the third quarter. Schultz became the first tight end in franchise history with multiple TDs in a playoff game.

Prescott joins elite company

The Cowboys quarterbac­k became just the fourth quarterbac­k in NFL history to pass for four TDs and rush for a TD, following former NFL MVPs Peyton Manning, Aaron Rodgers and Matt Ryan with the distinctio­n.

 ?? NATHAN RAY SEEBECK/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Dak Prescott reacts after scoring a TD against the Buccaneers.
NATHAN RAY SEEBECK/USA TODAY SPORTS Dak Prescott reacts after scoring a TD against the Buccaneers.

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