USA TODAY US Edition

Dak: ‘We definitely underachie­ved’

- Jori Epstein

ARLINGTON, Texas – The reverberat­ions continued to echo.

Talent. Brotherhoo­d. Culture. Ability. “In all my years I don’t know if I’ve had a better chance or a better full team than this,” quarterbac­k Dak Prescott said Sunday night after the Cowboys’ 23-17 NFC wild-card loss to the 49ers.

“This is the best team I’ve been on,” fellow sixth-year player Ezekiel Elliott offered. “We hurt. It hurts all of us.”

Receiver Amari Cooper went further. The Cowboys were dissatisfi­ed because “you have to wait so long to redeem yourself,” the 2015 first-round draft selection said. “It’s not like basketball where you get seven tries at it to win a series. Because we do feel like we’re the better team.”

So why do the Cowboys perenniall­y seem to fall short?

The Cowboys never led as they hosted the playoff game Sunday. Their offense scored seven points through three quarters, their defense routinely gashed for yards after the catch. Dallas’ special teams at times made plays – a successful fake punt, anybody? – only to cede those edges thanks to management issues and undiscipli­ned play. The delayof-game penalty that immediatel­y followed the fake punt was one of 14 penalties the Cowboys drew for a total of 89 lost yards.

A chance at erasing a 26-year conference championsh­ip drought disappeare­d abruptly when Dallas failed to spike the ball in time for one last play. This was hardly the first complaint of Cowboys clock mismanagem­ent during the 2021 season.

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said he couldn’t remember a time when he was more disappoint­ed. The performanc­e was a “letdown,” “surprising” and “extremely disappoint­ing.”

Two leaders will shoulder the majority of the blame.

‘Self-inflicting errors’ hurt Cowboys

NFL football demands dozens of bodies on the field, and dozens more minds patrolling the sideline. Operations stretch into the hundreds, the Cowboys’ North Texas headquarte­rs called the Star a bona fide city.

But inevitably, an NFL coach and quarterbac­k earn the most credit when the team succeeds. They draw the most blame when teams fall short.

So what does the Cowboys’ swift playoff exit say about head coach Mike McCarthy and Prescott?

“We definitely underachie­ved,” Prescott said. “When you play for the Dallas Cowboys, you play here, you understand it’s Super Bowl or nothing. … You feel like you let your teammates down and it’s a terrible feeling. It sucks. Point blank.”

On paper, Prescott’s season was productive. His 37 touchdown passes set a franchise record, his completion percentage and passer rating top 5, his passing yards per game close at seventh. In training camp, the Cowboys aimed to be the league’s top scoring and yardage offense. With 31.2 points per game and 407.1 offensive yards, they achieved both.

But their ability to perform against top-tier teams fell short. Their seeming lack of playoff readiness was evident. Prescott’s productive fourth quarter improved him to a 23 of 43 day for 254 yards, a passing TD and an intercepti­on versus the 49ers. He rushed four times for 27 yards and a score by ground.

But too often early, his offense couldn’t sustain drives. His offensive line wasn’t in sync with him sufficient­ly to avoid penalties, Prescott and his receivers not timed precisely enough to convert key drives. The 49ers ran up and down the field in the first half, sucking the chances from Dallas to rebound. Most production was too little, too late.

“Self-inflicting errors,” Prescott said. “Not good enough. Simple as that. I take a lot of pride in my job and take accountabi­lity in this loss. I’ve got to be better well before that last play; in certain situations in the game, certain plays in the game I’ve got to be better to help this team win and overcome some of the things we put ourselves into it.”

Prescott’s bosses didn’t publicly demean him, even after he failed to spike the ball in time for a chance at a gamewinnin­g play. Yet the fan base knows well: Prescott signed an extension last

March that netted him $40 million this season, $160 million over the life of the contract. The expectatio­n when his salary ballooned from the sub-$1 million salary during his last postseason trip in 2018 was that production would similarly increase, even if not at the unrealisti­c fortyfold rate.

The Cowboys and Prescott spent roughly two years negotiatin­g a deal, the Cowboys arguing to Prescott: There is not enough pie to go around. Paying you market value will detract from the caliber of offensive linemen around you, the value of the weapons you’re targeting. Prescott wanted to cash in. He believed in his potential even after a gruesome compound fracture and dislocatio­n of his ankle in October 2020. He signed his contract.

But he didn’t seal a playoff win. Did he fail to get over the hump? “The hump is advancing in the playoffs,” Jones said. “There have been some good quarterbac­ks not advancing in the playoffs. I’m just sick that we’re one of them. I’m sick.

“I’m surprised and sick.” McCarthy said Sunday night that he is “damn proud” of Prescott and “super happy” Prescott is the Cowboys’ quarterbac­k.

But Jones said repeatedly how much he believed the talent was capable of more.

As the Cowboys scattered from the stadium Sunday night, exit interviews and locker cleaning looming, the question remained: If they had the talent, they had the Super Bowl-winning coach, they had the top-tier quarterbac­k – what is stopping Dallas from reaching the peak it believes it is destined to summit?

 ?? TIM HEITMAN/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Cowboys quarterbac­k Dak Prescott is sacked by 49ers defensive end Charles Omenihu.
TIM HEITMAN/USA TODAY SPORTS Cowboys quarterbac­k Dak Prescott is sacked by 49ers defensive end Charles Omenihu.

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