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5 points: The ripple effect of the Cowboys trades on their future

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Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said he would make a few trades before the NFL deadline to improve the team’s defense. He did so by trading for linebacker Logan Wilson using a seventh-round pick and defensive tackle Quinnen Williams for a first- and a second-round pick.

Wilson has a long history of being a leader and defensive playmaker during his time in Cincinnati, something Dallas has lacked at linebacker all season. Williams is one of the top five players at his position and gives the Cowboys defense a fortified look at defensive tackle for the first time in over a decade.

As both players get ready for their debuts on Monday night against the Las Vegas Raiders, their arrival might not be enough to save the 2025 season, but their presence creates massive hope for what’s to come next season and beyond.


First point: A mentor at linebacker​


Before Dallas made any trades, we noted five ways they could improve their defense, either by adding or subtracting at certain positions. One of the areas of focus was at linebacker, where getting a proven veteran to help stabilize the position should have been a priority. Initially, that player was supposed to be Kenneth Murray, whom the Cowboys traded for in the offseason and has been in the league for six seasons.

That plan has not worked out, as Murray’s flashes on the field have not outweighed his low moments. Enter Logan Wilson. Over the course of their careers, Wilson has proven to be the more productive player and has shown better instincts, especially in defending the run.

Above the improved play at linebacker fans should expect from Wilson, his most significant impact on the team might be what he does for the locker room and the position group. On his way out of Cincinnati, rookie linebacker Barrett Carter posted on social media that Wilson took him under his wing and showed him “what it looks like to be a pro in all areas of life.” That same leadership is what Dallas hopes Wilson can bring to the team.

Barrett Carter on Logan Wilson 🤝 pic.twitter.com/gF1gKzaLDt

— Zack🐯 (@CincyZack) November 4, 2025

Last year, when Eric Kendricks was with Dallas, his mentorship greatly benefited younger players, including Marist Liufau. The former third-round pick seemed ready for a breakout sophomore season based on his performance in the second half of last season. However, this year, Liufau has regressed and no longer appears to be the same player. It’s probably not a coincidence that it’s happened with Kendricks out of the picture.

Although there are just eight games remaining in the season, Wilson’s contract extends through 2027, providing ample time for him to mentor both Liufau and Shemar James, both on and off the field. With a healthy DeMarvion Overshown joining forces with Wilson, Liufau, and James, the future looks bright for all four players as they remain together for the next few seasons.


Second point: Figuring out the future at DT​


If the Cowboys can’t figure out a way to stop the run with all three men clogging up the middle, then things have to be stripped down to a fundamental level next offseason, starting with letting go of Matt Eberflus.

For right now, the Cowboys’ defensive coordinator gets to scheme up a game plan with the best defensive tackle unit Dallas has had in a long time. All three men are expected to have significant roles despite Clark and Williams playing the same one-technique position. Even Solomon Thomas can’t be forgotten as a rotational piece with Osa Odighizuwa.

However, looking ahead to 2026, it’s difficult to see a world in which all four defensive tackles remain with Dallas. There is too much invested in Williams for him to be the odd man out. Thomas is under contract for another year with a favorable salary, so his dollar-for-dollar value is too good to pass up on.

That leaves just Odighizuwa and Clark. The Cowboys signed Odighizuwa to a four-year deal before free agency and named him a defensive captain this year. His dead cap hit would be over $30 million if he were released in 2026. The upside of his age and production history remains, allowing him to continue as a key part of the defense.

Following the money, Clark looks like the odd man out if everything remains the same. Despite being under contract through the 2027 season, the former Green Bay Packer is no longer owed any guaranteed money after this year. If Dallas released him before March 13, they would save over $21 million against the salary cap. The Cowboys could approach Clark about restructuring his contract, but would a veteran player like him be open to that when he’s trying to capitalize on his career earnings? And would Jerry Jones really release the player who was the linchpin in ensuring the Micah Parsons trade went through after one season?


Third point: Zeroing in on key positions in the draft​


Heading into 2026, the Cowboys will have almost all 11 of their starters on offense under contract. George Pickens is the only glaring free agent they would need to re-sign. Terence Steele, who is battling for his job in practice this week, could also be replaced in 2026.

When the Parsons trade was made, Dallas had four first-round picks over the next four years, and with the way the defense has played this year, the hope was that all four would be used on replenishing the talent on that side of the ball. So far, one of the first-round picks has been used on defense and put toward the Williams trade.

Defensive tackle was a massive need for Dallas heading into 2026, but now with Williams, Odighizuwa, and Thomas almost all sure to return next season, that room looks a lot different than it did a few weeks ago. Even Logan Wilson being in the building allows some flexibility at linebacker, so that Dallas doesn’t need to force a first-round pick at that position if the right player is not there. They still have plenty of young talent to develop there, as mentioned above.

That leaves two key positions on defense Dallas could zero in on with their two first-round picks in the upcoming draft—edge rusher and safety. Strictly on a football level, the passing of Marshawn Kneeland creates a long-term need at the position, considering Sam Williams, Jadeveon Clowney, Dante Fowler Jr, James Houston, and Peyton Turner are all free agents in the offseason. That leaves Donovan Ezeiruaku as the only player guaranteed to return next year.

Dallas could take a page out of the Atlanta Falcons’ playbook and draft two edge rushers in the first round if they felt the need to. It took a few games, but things are starting to click for Jalon Walker and James Pearce Jr., and people are starting to have hope for Atlanta’s defense in the future.

It’s time the Cowboys invest real capital into the safety position. Dallas has not drafted a true safety in the first round since Roy Williams in 2002. Byron Jones eventually played safety, but his original position was at cornerback. Malik Hooker and Markquese Bell are the only two players with deals that go into 2026.

Donovan Wilson and Juanyeh Thomas are free agents, and Dallas could decide to move on from both. Depending on the talent at the position, Dallas might have to use the higher of their two first-round picks to get a blue-chip player at safety.


Fourth point: Frees up space for George Pickens​


Right after the fallout from the NFL trade deadline, Albert Breer of Sports Illustrated noted that Dallas trading for Quinnen Williams would give them greater salary-cap flexibility than what they would have had to pay Micah Parsons, clearing the runway for more contract extensions with other players.

“Dallas has [Quinnen] Williams under contract for $7.825 million this year, $21.75 million next year and $25.5 million in ’27. Comparatively, the Packers are paying Parsons $45.17 million, $40.837 million and $38 million over those three years. That’s a savings of $68.932 million, or about $23 million per year. Now, Dallas has got to do something smart with that money, but that’s a comparative player who costs a lot less.”

Smart front offices around the NFL find ways to keep multiple star players on long-term deals without crippling their salary caps (e.g., the Detroit Lions and Philadelphia Eagles). The Cowboys’ front office painted themselves into a corner by waiting until the last minute to sign Dak Prescott, CeeDee Lamb, and Micah Parsons, forcing them to decide which of the three to let walk because the price tag would be “too rich” to pay all three.

While comparing Parsons to Williams as players does not make it an even swap, the difference in savings opens the door for Dallas to spend money to keep players like Brandon Aubrey and George Pickens in the building for the long term.

Pickens has been playing like a Pro Bowl player in his first season with Dallas and is hoping to be paid like a No. 1 wide receiver in the offseason. Even if Dallas decides to franchise tag Pickens at first, they have the salary space to work out a long-term deal.

How they construct the roster over the next few years will truly determine if the trade of Micah Parsons was good or not.


Fifth point: Keeping Dak Prescott’s window open​


When Dak Prescott has been at his best, the defense has usually played really well on the other side of the ball. In 2021 and 2022, the Cowboys had the most takeaways on defense in the NFL. That meant more opportunities for Prescott and the offense to score points.

While the offense has been among the best in the league for most of the season, they’ve had to do so playing from behind. Outside of the wins against the New York Jets and Washington Commanders, Dallas’ offense has never had a chance to play freely without worrying that the defense will give up a touchdown on the following drive.

The defense was in line for an overhaul next year. Still, the addition of Williams and Wilson as key contributors for the next few seasons helps keep Prescott’s window for success open without having to guide what could have been one of the league’s youngest defenses in 2026.

If the front office is serious about making sure Prescott wins a Super Bowl before his career is over, adding Williams and Wilson are building blocks for what next season could look like. If they do things right in the offseason through the draft and free agency, then Prescott should have a defense opposite him that looks a lot like 2021-2023 rather than what it’s looked like this year.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...quinnen-williams-george-pickens-ripple-effect
 
Cowboys vs Raiders: Very little confidence from the Las Vegas side of things

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We are almost past the full bye for the Dallas Cowboys in terms of playing a game. Monday night, the Cowboys take on the Las Vegas Raiders. In preparation for the game, we asked five questions about the Raiders, and our sister site, Silver and Black Pride, answered.

Blogging The Boys: Obviously Geno Smith has struggled so far this season. What is the problem and will they just continue to stick with him?

Silver and Black Pride: In my opinion, Geno is playing like a rookie quarterback. He’s been staring down receivers and struggles to adjust when defenses roll their coverages post-snap, leading to the 12 interceptions that are the second-most in the NFL. He’s also been holding onto the ball too long and taking too many sacks. Granted, offensive coordinator Chip Kelly isn’t helping Smith out, as Kelly is running a college-style offense that is predictable.

As far as whether the Raiders will make a quarterback change, that’s a big question right now and I lean toward no. Geno is Pete Carroll’s guy, and Carroll has shown that he’s pretty loyal to Geno. I think if the coaching staff were going to make a change under center, they would have done it by now.

BTB: How would you have felt if the Raiders had traded Maxx Crosby? Would you have wanted the high picks, or to keep your best defender?

SABP: I’ve gotten to a point where if Crosby wanted and asked for a trade, I’d understand it and be willing to get some draft picks for him. He’s put up with a lot of losing and has played for five head coaches in seven seasons, if you count Rich Bisaccia’s interim stint in 2021. Then again, Crosby brings a lot to the team both on the field and as a leader. So, I never was and I’m not going to pound the table that he should be traded. But if he asks for a trade in the offseason, I think it’d be time for the Raiders to say their goodbyes and get draft picks for the upcoming rebuild.

BTB: Tell us everything we need to know about Ashton Jeanty and his rookie season.

SABP: Jeanty hasn’t put up the eye-popping numbers a lot of people were hoping for, but he’s been playing behind a bad offensive line, and he’s been better than what the box scores show. Through the first four games of this season, 101 percent of Jeanty’s rushing yards came after contact. I will say that he needed to be more patient to begin the year, and now, he’s kind of overcorrected and can afford to be more decisive/aggressive. But for the most part, the No. 6 overall pick has been good this year and is far from the biggest problem in Las Vegas. He just needs better or more consistent blocking to improve his stat line.

BTB: What’s the mood around Pete Carroll? Does his reputation buy him time, or are people already grumbling?

SABP: There’s a good portion of the fan base that wants to see Carroll be a one-and-done head coach. That’s understandable because he talked all offseason and training camp about how he expects to win and has won 10 games several times throughout his career, only for this season to be an absolute dud. As bad as the Raiders were last year under Antonio Pierce, they’ve regressed and are now facing a total rebuild while the head coach is 74 years old.

I think Carroll’s reputation will buy him another year in Las Vegas, though, partly because I’m sure Mark Davis doesn’t want to fire another head coach. The franchise has been in Las Vegas since 2020 and has already had five head coaches: Jon Gruden, Bisaccia, Josh McDaniels, Pierce and Carroll. That being said, it also wouldn’t surprise me if Pete steps down at the end of the season. His comments during recent press conferences suggest this has been a bigger project than he thought when taking the job, and he’ll be halfway to 80 in September.

BTB: How do you see Monday night’s game going and what’s your final score prediction?

SABP: I’ll go 35-24 Cowboys. The Cowboys’ defense is bad, but the Raiders’ offense might be worse, seeing as they haven’t scored 30 points in a single game this season. The closest they’ve gotten to that figure was a 29-point performance in a loss to the Jaguars, and that game went into overtime. On the other side of the ball, I don’t trust Las Vegas’ secondary and pass rush to keep Dak Prescott, CeeDee Lamb and George Pickens in check. Outside of Crosby, the Silver and Black lack a lot of talent defensively.

Thanks for the knowledge, Silver and Black Pride.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...fidence-geno-smith-pete-carroll-ashton-jeanty
 
Dallas Cowboys: Reading between the lines (defense)

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In this his episode of Between the Lines we flip the attention to the defensive line, where chaos meets strategy. This is where the Cowboys’ games are won and lost so let’s dive in.

Interior Defensive Line

Osa Odighizuwa


(2025 Stats: 376 Total snaps, 25 Total Tackles, 3 TFL, 25 Pressures, 1 Sack)

Grade: 60.4

Solomon Thomas


(2025 Stats: 273 Total snaps, 19 Total Tackles, 2 TFL, 9 Pressures, 0 Sacks, 1 PD)

Grade: 62.8

Kenny Clark


(2025 Stats: 416 Total snaps, 21 Total Tackles, 4 TFL, 27 Pressures, 2.5 Sacks)

Grade: 62.2

Jay Toia


(2025 Stats: 76 Total snaps, 3 Total Tackle, 0 TFL, 1 Pressures, 0 Sacks)

Grade: 29.5

Quinnen Williams


(2025 Stats: 355 Total snaps, 32 Total Tackle, 7 TFL, 19 Pressures, 1 Sack)

Grade: 79.7

The Cowboys currently rank seventh in Run Stop Win Rate (32%) and 16th in Pass Rush Win Rate (37%). Individually, Solomon Thomas sits first among defensive tackles in Run Stop Win Rate (48%), while Osa Odighizuwa ranks 16th in defensive tackle Pass Rush Win Rate (10%), a nice power/quickness blend around Kenny Clark at the nose. What is even better for Dallas heading into this week is Quinnen Williams. He sits right behind Thomas is the rankings with 47% Run Stop Win Rate, meaning Dallas now holds the first- and second-best run stopper on the inside.

On the opposite side, Las Vegas comes in with some injury issues that hinders its efficiency. At tackle, Kolton Miller is on injured reserve, and Jackson Powers-Johnson also went to IR this season. Dylan Parham is also injured meaning this offensive line is in serious trouble at the moment. Center Jordan Meredith shows up with a 96% Pass Block Win Rate, that puts him in the top-15 among inside offensive linemen. As a unit, the Raiders are 20th in Pass Block Win Rate (60%) and 18th in Run Block Win Rate (71%), showing there are some pieces on the line, but there are areas to be exploited here.

Geno Smith is the trigger man. He’s registered 1,844 passing yards, 11 TD, 12 INT, and 27 sacks taken through nine games, that’s the fourth-most sacks among quarterbacks this year. Rookie first-rounder Ashton Jeanty is carrying the run game with 547 rushing yards, 3.8 yards per carry, while the team sits 29th in rushing yards per game (87.4), so they need efficiency, not volume, to stay on schedule. The Raiders also have just 15.4 points per game (31st) with a 39.3% third-down rate (15th), which shows this team has a weird combination that screams boom-or-bust possessions that must be exploited.

Defensive End

Sam Williams


(2025 Stats: 285 Total snaps, 16 Total Tackles, 3 TFL, 15 Pressures, 1 Sack, 1 FR, 1 PD)

Grade: 40.1

Dante Fowler Jr.


(2025 Stats: 214 Total snaps, 9 Total Tackles, 3 TFL, 21 Pressures, 2 Sacks, 2 PD)

Grade: 81.5

Donovan Ezeiruaku


(2025 Stats: 318 Total snaps, 20 Total tackle, 6 TFL, 22 Pressures, 2 Sacks, 1 FF)

Grade: 79.6

James Houston


(2025 Stats: 152 Total snaps, 20 Total tackles, 4 TFL, 11 Pressures, 4 Sacks, 1 FF, 1 FR)

Grade: 65.6

Jadeveon Clowney


(2025 Stats: 159 Total snaps, 18 Total tackles, 3 TFL, 15 Pressures, 2 Sacks, 1 FR, 3 PD)

Grade: 72.6

Dante Fowler Jr. is the pace car for Dallas off the edge. He’s currently seventh in Edge Pass Rush Win Rate (21%), with a strong PFF profile of 81.5 overall, that’s the highest on the team and 15th-best among edge rushers. The stat line is modest with just two sacks, but the down-to-down wins are there. He’ll see plenty of right tackle snaps versus DJ Glaze, who leads the team in most pressures allowed (22). Here Fowler’s speed-to-power is an asset, and he must finish when Geno Smith hitches.

Donovan Ezeiruaku will look to have his role increased going forward as he’s really come along as of late. The rookie’s box score of two sacks undersells his impact. He has the highest number of pressures on the team among the edge rushers and second-highest defensive grade on the team.

Sam Williams is the wild card and hasn’t set the season on fire. The tools are obvious with him, the blocked punt proving he has the get-off and speed, but the production and consistency on defense hasn’t caught up yet. Although the Raiders’ two interior starters grade well in Pass Block Win Rate, their communication has still sprung leaks on stunts which suits Williams on third-and-long plays.

If Dallas’ edges keep Las Vegas off-schedule and turn this into a long-down game, the numbers say the matchups tilt toward Dallas. Fowler’s win rate travels, Ezeiruaku and Jadeveon Clowney can kill the opposite side, and the Raiders’ protection cohesion begins to fall apart with each snap.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...rt-defense-line-quinnen-williams-raiders-game
 
Cowboys Point/Counterpoint: How realistic is a playoff run?

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So you’re telling me there’s a chance?

Two consecutive blowout losses dropped the Cowboys to 3-5-1 before they went into their bye week. They now have a 7% chance of reaching the postseason, per the projection model from The Athletic’s Austin Mock.

That didn’t stop Jerry and Stephen Jones from making multiple deals at the trade deadline, though. Bengals linebacker Logan Wilson was had for nearly free, while Jets stud Quinnen Williams came at a rather hefty price. Between those two and impending returns of DeMarvion Overshown and rookie Shavon Revel, the Cowboys are feeling confident that a defensive turnaround can also turn around their season.

Should they feel confident, though? Our own David Howman and Tom Ryle have their own thoughts.

David: The bye week acted as a convenient reset for the Cowboys. Their defensive deficiencies have finally taken their toll, with consecutive losses for the first time all year threatening to torpedo the locker room. Getting Williams and Wilson, both team captains at their previous stops, is huge.

The rubber meets the road this week, though. The Cowboys go on the road to face a really bad Raiders team, and this is a must win game. Using the projection tool from The Athletic, the Cowboys’ odds to make the playoffs increase to 10% with a win. However, a loss drops them to 3%.

The Raiders have lost three straight and don’t have much offensive firepower outside of Brock Bowers right now. It’s a big reason why the Cowboys are 3.5-point favorites despite being on the road.

A win here not only improves their odds but creates a bit of hope in the locker room that, yes, they can do this. And, to quote a brilliant man, hope can be a dangerous thing.

Tom: Dangerous, indeed. Nothing is impossible at this point. But there is little to make us think it is anything but nearly so.

I can certainly see the value of the new additions, especially Williams. It unfortunately has a feeling of too little, too late. Had they made that kind of addition before the season started, it could have changed the entire trajectory. Of course, Williams wasn’t available until the Jets started their fire sale after things went so badly south. Still, this would have made much more sense if they were 5-3-1 instead of their current record.

Yet, even a key addition or two might not have done much to change things. There is the real concern I have. There is no real sign that Matt Eberflus could have done much more due to his relentlessly stubborn approach. I fear that the new talent will be more helpful next season – with an expected new defensive coordinator.

David: Have we been watching the same team lately? Matt Eberflus was absolutely stubborn in his scheme early on, but he’s objectively changed things in the past month.

For September, Dallas used press coverage on 6.5% of all dropbacks and blitzed on 20.7% of dropbacks, both ranking very close to the bottom. Since Week 5, though, Eberflus has used press coverage at a 13.2% rate and is blitzing 33.7% of the time. Those are both dramatic increases and meaningful deviations from what Eberflus has always run as a coordinator.

The problem is Eberflus has largely lacked talent. The linebacker corps has been exposed numerous times, and the secondary has been so banged up that undrafted rookie Alijah Clark has been getting meaningful reps in addition to starts from Reddy Steward and Trikweze Bridges, neither of whom were even on the roster for a single preseason game.

With Wilson now in tow, plus DeMarvion Overshown, the linebacker rotation has practically been rebuilt. Shavon Revel is only a rookie, and hasn’t even played a down yet, but his raw talent is (respectfully) more than Steward and Bridges combined. And, of course, Williams is a game-wrecker on the defensive line. I think it’s perfectly reasonable to expect this defense to improve to “average,” which is all Dallas really needs given the way this offense is playing.

Tom: I still have to see things come together. I do agree the talent level is improving. And maybe Eberflus is getting better, but letting it take this long isn’t great.

I don’t see this team having any real chance of success even if they can claw their way into the playoffs. If they do manage to make the postseason, that would likely say as much about the struggles of the rest of the NFC.

Maybe a better draft position is more valuable in the long run. Maybe the Cowboys will shock me. I’m just not expecting that last thing to happen.

David: The Grinch has come early this year, I see.

Draft position is something I’m only concerned about in November if the quarterback is out, but as long as Dak Prescott is on that field, the Cowboys have a chance of winning any game they play. Again, the defense representing something approaching competent would be a big help, but Prescott – and the offense as a whole, really – is what keeps this season viable.

Having said that, a loss to the lowly Raiders would change my thinking. If they can’t do it against that team, they surely won’t be able to get it in gear for the gauntlet of teams they’re about to face. But I feel confident going into Monday night.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...me-playoff-run-quinnen-willaims-matt-eberflus
 
Cowboys at Raiders third quarter recap: Dallas up 31-9 entering fourth

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Third Quarter​


The Raiders went three and out to start the second half so the positive momentum kept right on rolling.

That roll extended to the offense. The second quarter ended with them hot and the group picked up right where they left off.

George Pickens was arguably the star of the drive as he continued to make incredible play after incredible play. Things ended with another Dak Prescott passing touchdown and this one went to yet another different wideout in Ryan Flournoy.

DAK. FLOURNOY. TD. pic.twitter.com/QKj62XUvou

— Blogging The Boys (@BloggingTheBoys) November 18, 2025

SCORE: COWBOYS 31, RAIDERS 9 (Dak Prescott to Ryan Flournoy 2- yard touchdown)

The third quarter ended with the Raiders on the verge of scoring.

Second Quarter​


The Cowboys were indeed threatening as the first quarter ended and made good on it shortly into the second.

After hitting George Pickens just out of bounds in the endzone, Dak Prescott found CeeDee Lamb in the heart of it.

DAK. CEEDEE. TOUCHDOWN. pic.twitter.com/5nmhfXCt5L

— Blogging The Boys (@BloggingTheBoys) November 18, 2025

SCORE: COWBOYS 10, RAIDERS 6 (Dak Prescott to CeeDee Lamb 18-yard touchdown)

The positive momentum continued for the Cowboys which is a strange thing to say given that they were on defense.

But this is a defense that now features Quinnen Williams and he got his first sack with a star on his helmet. It was epic.

QUINNEN WILLIAMS SACK!!! pic.twitter.com/d4dLc5JwnL

— Blogging The Boys (@BloggingTheBoys) November 18, 2025

The Raiders punted the ball and Dallas went to work. Serious work.

It was one of the best offensive drives we have seen from the Cowboys in some time. Dak Prescott looked fully and totally in control and CeeDee Lamb and George Pickens were in sync, maybe coach’s decisions are a good thing after all.

Jake Ferguson was the one who capped it off with a score to make everything feel great.

TD JAKE FERGUSON!!!! pic.twitter.com/7yjfu3bmFU

— Blogging The Boys (@BloggingTheBoys) November 18, 2025

SCORE: COWBOYS 17, RAIDERS 6 (Dak Prescott to Jake Ferguson 5-yard touchdown)

It looked like things were going to break a little bit after this. The Raiders were marching and marching and hey, you can’t stop them every time.

But can you?

Geno Smith had a pass tipped and it found the hands of Markquese Bell for a Cowboys interception. Boom.

MARKQUESE BELL INT!!! pic.twitter.com/Q7mLDThKy6

— Blogging The Boys (@BloggingTheBoys) November 18, 2025

At this moment the previous two Cowboys possessions each ended in touchdowns and to different players in CeeDee Lamb and Jake Ferguson.

This one followed that trend. Dak Prescott continued his form and so did George Pickens. That harmony made for the perfect scoring song.

GP3!!!!!! pic.twitter.com/91TNmDBx7l

— Blogging The Boys (@BloggingTheBoys) November 18, 2025

SCORE: COWBOYS 24, RAIDERS 6 (Dak Prescott to George Pickens 37-yard touchdown)

Pickens was flagged for unsportsmanlike conduct on the celebration (maybe a coach’s decision looms next week?!), but Brandon Aubrey nailed the extra point anyway.

The Raiders were able to grind out a field goal to end the half.

SCORE: COWBOYS 24, RAIDERS 9 (Daniel Carlson 38-yard field goal)

First Quarter​


The Raiders won the toss and deferred which put the Cowboys offense on the field first.

Vegas had to be feeling great about that decision early on as the Cowboys went three and out to start the game. Matters seemed easy for them given that CeeDee Lamb and George Pickens were not on the field for Dallas which was strange. The ESPN broadcast noted as Dallas was taking the field for defense that Lamb and Pickens were absent due to a “coach’s decision” with an implication that it was some sort of disciplinary decision. We will see.

The Raiders were unable to do anything with the possession that they were effectively given. They punted it to the Cowboys who actually then gave them the ball. Well, Maxx Crosby took it away.

Maxx Crosby wrecks the play for a turnover ‼️

DALvsLV on ESPN/ABC
Stream on @NFLPlus and ESPN App pic.twitter.com/QDnAT3NUtL

— NFL (@NFL) November 18, 2025

Thankfully the Cowboys defense buckled and held the Raiders to only a field goal. Still though, early on things felt a bit treacherous for the silver and blue side of things.

SCORE: COWBOYS 0, RAIDERS 3 (Daniel Carlson 35-yard field goal)

Early on in their next possession the Cowboys moved the chains by way of George Pickens which was great to see. Javonte Williams was running hard early on which was also a positive sign. Ultimately things stalled a bit, but not before it came time for Brandon Aubrey.

SCORE: COWBOYS 3, RAIDERS 3 (Brandon Aubrey 50-yard field goal)

It was more of the same in a lot of ways on the next possession for the Raiders.

They were moving the ball in a relatively un-challenged way… until they got near the redzone. The Cowboys defense managed to stand tall and force another field goal attempt.

SCORE: COWBOYS 3, RAIDERS 6 (Daniel Carlson 45-yard field goal)

The first quarter ended with Dallas driving and threatening in Las Vegas territory.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...-cowboys-las-vegas-raiders-recap-2025-week-11
 
Cowboys open as underdogs at home to the Eagles in Week 12

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The Dallas Cowboys are fresh off a 33-16 complete victory over the Las Vegas Raiders on Monday Night Football. Dak Prescott and the offense came back to life as the QB threw four touchdown passes to four different receivers. But it was the defense that showed out compared to past performances, and new defensive tackle Quinnen Williams led the way.

Williams finished with 1.5 sacks, five QB hits and a lot of general disruption in the Raiders backfield. It certainly felt like his presence opened things up for other members of the Cowboys defense.

Now the Cowboys head back to the cozy confines of home at AT&T Stadium to play their arch-rivals, the NFC East-leading Philadelphia Eagles. The Eagles are coming off a win over the Detroit Lions and sport an 8-2 record. But it hasn’t been all smooth sailing for the Eagles. Their offense is a bust lately, scoring only 10 and 16 points in their latest wins. Defense has carried the day.

The Cowboys offense generally plays better at home, and the defensive additions/changes may be paying off. FanDuel has made the Cowboys 3.5-point underdogs at home. The Cowboys fell to the Eagles 24-20 in the opening game of the 2025 season.

What say you BTB? Are those points worth taking and betting on Dallas?

Eagles_Odds.png

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...as-underdogs-at-home-to-the-eagles-in-week-12
 
Cowboys playoff chances: Dallas has uphill battle, but hope nonetheless

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The Dallas Cowboys were victorious on Monday night against the Las Vegas Raiders. It was “only” one win and was “just the Raiders”, but winning feels good and makes the sun shine a little bit brighter.

Something that is often more visible as a result of that sunlight is the box where we keep discussions about the playoffs. In times like these it feels less ridiculous to open it and poke around, but we can obviously do so with the context that the situation for Dallas is dire right now.

Here is the state of the NFC Playoff Picture at the moment.

  1. Philadelphia Eagles (8-2)
  2. Los Angeles Rams (8-2)
  3. Chicago Bears (7-3)
  4. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (6-4)
  5. Seattle Seahawks (7-3)
  6. Green Bay Packers (6-3-1)
  7. San Francisco 49ers (7-4)
  8. Detroit Lions (6-4)
  9. Carolina Panthers (6-5)
  10. Dallas Cowboys (4-5-1)
  11. Minnesota Vikings (4-6)

We’ll cut it off there as the next team in question (the Arizona Cardinals who have lost seven of their last eight… you know the one they won) is below four wins. That feels fair and logical.

In order for the Cowboys to reach the postseason they would either have to (just laying things out) win the NFC East or fill one of the three Wild Card spots that the NFC has to offer. Given that the Eagles have twice as many wins as the Cowboys right now, the division feels like an extreme long shot and in that sense is not really worth exploring.

The most likely path to the playoffs for the Cowboys (based on the huge hypothetical of them reaching the postseason) is as a Wild Card. Understanding this we can see that right now the 49ers hold the final one and have a 7-4 record to Dallas’ 4-5-1 mark.

Here are the remaining games for the Cowboys:

  • Philadelphia Eagles (8-2)
  • Kansas City Chiefs (5-5)
  • at Detroit Lions (6-4)
  • Minnesota Vikings (4-6)
  • Los Angeles Chargers (7-4)
  • at Washington Commanders (3-8)
  • at New York Giants (2-9)

Let’s say the Cowboys can get to nine wins on the season. This is admittedly very optimistic, but it is going to in all likelihood take at least nine wins for the playoffs to be a possibility.

This scenario would involve the 49ers and/or Seahawks only winning two more times across the rest of the season. The same can be said for the Packers as their record is most comparable to the Cowboys given that the teams tied with one another.

Is this possible? If so, it seems most likely by way of the Packers. Consider their remaining schedule.

  • Minnesota Vikings (4-6)
  • at Detroit Lions (6-4)
  • Chicago Bears (7-3)
  • at Denver Broncos (9-2)
  • at Chicago Bears (7-3)
  • Baltimore Ravens (5-5)
  • at Minnesota Vikings (4-6)

There are a handful of games within the division left, and the ones that are not are against the top seed in the AFC in the moment and a Ravens team that has really found life since stabilizing things a couple of weeks ago. In this hypothetical, the Cowboys would also still have to jump the Lions (who they play for what it’s worth) and Panthers. The hole that they dug is quite deep.

At the moment the playoffs still seem like a stretch, but they are certainly possible. We will see how the cards fall this week and if the team is able to make this conversation more interesting.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...-nfl-playoffs-wildcard-packers-seahawks-49ers
 
Quinnen Williams’ Next Gen stats from his Dallas Cowboys debut

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Monday night was significant for the Dallas Cowboys. It was their first game out of the bye and their first opportunity to play with their two newest toys in Logan Wilson and Quinnen Williams. Both players were acquired at the trade deadline which came during the team’s bye week.

With all due respect to Logan Wilson, the name that everybody was curious about seeing was Quinnen Williams. Dallas gave up significantly more to acquire Williams, and in the process of doing so gave themselves one of the best interior defensive linemen in the NFL. This is not something the Cowboys have been able to claim in some time.

Williams produced a sack and a half during his debut which leads the way for a lot of conversations about the game. That type of thing is natural.

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It was noted by NFL Next Gen Stats that Williams had five pressures on the night off of 28 total pass rushes. This is impressive territory.

What is particularly notable about what Williams did is that all of his pressures came in the first half. The game was well in hand at intermission, and Williams’ performance (along with others obviously) in the second quarter was a big reason why.

This stands out because according to NGS the five pressures that Williams had in the first half was tied for the most pressures that any Cowboys defensive tackle has had in the first half of a game dating back to 2018. What’s more is that Williams was double-teamed 14 times (50% of the pass rushes) which was the second-most double teams he has faced in a game so far this season. We all know that all games prior to Monday night for him were with the New York Jets.

Expecting a handful of pressures every half would be ridiculous, but the overall takeaway here is that the Cowboys got exactly what they paid for early on. They sent a ton of draft capital to the Jets to acquire one of the best interior linemen in the game, someone who could serve as a rising tide to lift all boats, and that is exactly what happened. It is very exciting in terms of what is possible in the future.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...lliams-debut-impressive-stats-sacks-pressures
 
Cowboys at Raiders Historical Notes: George Pickens is doing something special

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The Dallas Cowboys had their way with the Las Vegas Raiders on Monday night and as a result the spirits around America’s Team are high for the first time in a while. Winning is a wonderful feeling.

It remains to be seen as to whether or not the Cowboys can truly go on a magical run, make the playoffs, and all of that jazz. For now we are just taking things week by week. If things work out in the end we will celebrate accordingly.

As it relates to the Cowboys and where they are at following the Raiders win, we have to put the performance in its proper place historically. Thankfully things like Pro Football Reference and Stathead make this easy to do.

Let’s dive into this week’s historical notes.


It had been a while since Dallas won on MNF​


The Cowboys entered this game with a three-game losing streak on Monday Night Football. Thankfully that is over.

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It had been a long time since Dallas had been shut out from a win for three straight games on MNF specifically. The last streak of such kind was 2012-2014. Back then it was unheard of for a team to play on MNF twice in the same season, but the Cowboys have done so in two straight years.

You could actually say they have done this in three straight years as the team’s late December win over the Lions in 2023 was technically the MNF broadcast, although the game occurred on a Saturday.

George Pickens continues to be great​


Monday night saw George Pickens eclipse 900 receiving yards on the season. He is just the 15th player to do this in the first 10 games of a stint with a franchise, and he is the only member in Cowboys franchise history (since 1970) to do this.

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There are some pretty incredible names here and some players who did it as rookies on their teams. George is doing some very special things and it has been so fun to watch.

Pickens is one game behind Miles Austin in one respect​


Monday night marked Pickens’ third game of the season with 130 receiving yards and a receiving touchdown. The record for most gams of such kind in a season for the Cowboys is four, something Miles Austin did in 2009.

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As you can see CeeDee Lamb is on this list for having done it a hat trick’s worth of times as well back during the 2023 season. These are admittedly some arbitrary numbers in 130 receiving yards and a receiving touchdown, but you get the impressiveness nonetheless.

Dak Prescott had another remarkable and very clean passing game​


Monday night was impressive for quarterback Dak Prescott as he threw four touchdowns and not a single pass into the arms of the opposition. Any time you can do that it is certainly impressive. It should be noted that Dak did fumble, just for context’s sake.

The game was the ninth of Prescott’s career where he tossed four touchdowns and not a single interception. He has almost double the player with the next-most in franchise history in terms of games of such kind in Tony Romo.

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If Prescott has just two more games of such kind across the rest of his career then he will have as many games of such kind by himself as everybody else in franchise history combined.

Javonte Williams is rushing for a ton of yards​


While we are on the subject of thresholds reached and what not, Javonte Williams reached 800 rushing yards on the season on Monday night.

He is the first Cowboys running back to hit 800 yards through the first 10 games of a season since Ezekiel Elliott in 2019.

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It isn’t hyperbolic to say that Williams is giving the Cowboys something that they have not had in quite some time. It is refreshing to see and clearly helping everything work around it from an offensive standpoint.

Jake Ferguson is flirting with history​


Monday night was big for a lot of players as you can see, and Jake Ferguson was among them. He caught his seventh touchdown of the season and had a great mime celebration after.

Consider that the record for most receiving touchdowns in a season by a Cowboys tight end is nine. Jake is three away from holding the record all to himself with seven games to go.

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Again, there are seven games to go. This is well within striking distance.

1978 Billy Joe DuPree and 2010 Jason Witten better watch out.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...me-stats-records-george-pickens-jake-ferguson
 
Cowboys rookie report: Rookies cash in against Las Vegas

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The Dallas Cowboys put in a statement performance on Monday night and came away with a huge win, scoring four touchdowns and keeping things stingy on defense. How did the Cowboys rookie class perform during the lopsided win? Let’s break it down and find out.

OG Tyler Booker


(Game stats- Snaps: 67, Pass Blocks: 32, Pressures: 2, Sacks: 0, Penalties: 1)

Booker’s night was mostly rock-solid, with one big lapse in discipline late in the game. Going into this game, Booker was at 432 total snaps with 288 pass-block reps, allowing just 12 total pressures, four QB hits and only one sack, plus three penalties on the year, which is very efficient volume for a rookie right guard. On top of that, PFF’s now charts him with a run-block grade of 77.2, which ranks 12th among guards in the NFL. He now has only seven pressures allowed on true pass sets, putting him in the top-20 among guards, meaning he’s among the top blocking guards this season which is impressive for a first-year interior lineman.

Against Las Vegas, the box score and flow of the game backed up the idea that he did his job. Dak Prescott went 25 of 33 for 268 yards and four touchdowns and was sacked only once all night, while the Cowboys rushed for 114 yards, including 93 from Javonte Williams. Nothing in the postgame breakdowns tags Booker with a blown protection on the lone sack, which came on a Maxx Crosby strip early on, and the interior seemed largely steady while Dallas strung together five straight scoring drives. The way the Cowboys leaned on inside runs and long, methodical drives suggests Booker held up well in both the run and pass game, in line with his season-long PFF efficiency numbers rather than standing out for any major mistakes in protection.

DE Donovan Ezeiruaku


(Game stats- Snaps: 32, Total Tackles: 5, Pressures: 0, Sacks: 0, TFL: 2)

Ezeiruaku’s game against the Raiders was impactful without gaudy pass-rush stats. Las Vegas held him to a season-low pressure rate of 4.3%, so as a pure pass rusher this was one of his quieter outings of the year even though his season-long rate has him at 15.7% this year, making him among the better rookie edge defenders in the league.

The box score shows how he made up for that in the run game. He finished with five total tackles, two tackles for loss, and he wasn’t credited with any penalties on the night. The headline moment was the fourth-quarter safety with the Raiders backed up at their own one-yard line. The Raiders handed the ball to Ashton Jeanty and Ezeiruaku knifed straight through the right side to stone him in the end zone, with Sam Williams helping finish the play. Multiple recaps single that play as the dagger that killed any late Raiders momentum.

Overall, you’d call Ezeiruaku’s performance quiet as a rusher but big in moments. He had limited impact on Geno Smith’s dropbacks, no damage in terms of penalties, yet strong, physical run defense and a game-sealing safety that will sit as one of the top highlights of the day.

CB Shavon Revel Jr.


(Game stats- Snaps: 19, Total Tackles: 1, PBU: 0, INT: 0, RTG Allowed: 39.6)

Boy does it feel good to finally start writing about Shavon Revel. His debut against the Raiders was quietly excellent, exactly what you want from a rookie corner being eased in. He was targeted one time, allowing just zero catches and added one big tackle. That’s basically nothing in terms of damage, especially in a game where Geno Smith threw 27 completions.

On a late-second-quarter drive, the Raiders had the ball at the Dallas 28 and took a shot to Michael Mayer deep right, the pass fell incomplete, and the drive stalled into a field goal from the 20. Mayer finished the game with just three catches for 13 yards on four targets overall, so even when the Raiders tried to feature their tight ends, they were being funneled into short, contested throws rather than chunk plays. Revel’s coverage on that drive helped keep the ball away from Mayer in scoring territory and kept the points to three instead of seven.

This was a very encouraging first outing for Revel showing tight coverage, no explosive plays allowed, no touchdowns on his watch, and no completions given up. For a corner coming off an ACL tear and seeing limited snaps, Revel looked composed, physical at the catch point and good enough that you’d expect his role to grow from here.

LB Shemar James


(Game stats- Snaps: 26, Total Tackles: 7, Pressures: 1, Sacks: 0, TFL: 0)

James’ night against the Raiders was probably his most encouraging all-round performance so far, especially given how rough his PFF season has been overall. Coming into Week 11 he carried a 35.5 PFF grade, ranking near the bottom of qualifying linebackers.

On the stat sheet he finished with seven total tackles, playing 26 defensive snaps in the game. There were no penalties against him, which matters for a young linebacker who’s been fighting inconsistency. For most of the night he did the boring-but-important work, fitting inside runs, rallying to checkdowns and cleaning up after the front four squeezed the pocket on Geno Smith.

Earlier in the game he’d already shown up against Jeanty on the edge, forcing him out of bounds on perimeter runs, so the when Jeanty finished with a total of just seven total rush yards, this felt like the exclamation point on a quietly physical night for James.

Given how much criticism the linebacker room has taken this year, this isn’t suddenly an elite performance, but it was a clean, impactful one showing the arrow is pointing up for the linebacker unit. James had solid tackling volume, no obvious coverage disasters, and no flags. In context, you’d call it a clearly positive step, the kind of game that helps James hang onto a real role even as the Cowboys work newer pieces into the linebacker rotation.

DT Jay Toia


(Game stats- Snaps: 13, Total Tackles: 0 Pressures: 0, Sacks: 0, TFL: 0)

Toia was basically the fourth man in a really hot interior rotation against the Raiders. The game recap and snap table have him down for just 13 defensive snaps in the 33–16 win, the fewest of the Cowboys’ defensive tackles, and he didn’t register any tackles on the night.

Part of why he stayed so quiet is that the rest of the interior was cooking. Quinnen Williams, in his Cowboys debut, blew the game open with 1.5 sacks, three quarterback hits and seven total pressures, looking every bit like a true number one defensive tackle. Osa Odighizuwa closed the night with a fourth-down sack plus two more hurries and earned a 90.6 PFF grade, while Kenny Clark added his own sack on a bulldozing interior rush. As a group they strangled the run, holding the Raiders to just 27 rushing yards on 12 carries, with most of the credit going to Williams, Clark and Osa rather than Toia.

So for this game specifically, his performance was very quiet. He did his rotational nose-tackle job for 13 snaps without any obvious busts or penalties, but he also didn’t add to the avalanche of splash plays the other defensive tackles were creating.

DB Alijah Clark


(Game stats- Snaps: 20, Total Tackles: 2, Pressures: 0, Sacks: 0, TFL: 0)

*Snap count include special team snaps*


Clark barely saw the field on defense against the Raiders, logging just one snap at free safety, so there’s basically nothing to judge in terms of coverage. That single rep was more about giving him a look in the deep middle than any real role in the game plan.

Where he actually earned his keep was on special teams. Clark played the bulk of his snaps there and was credited with two tackles in the kicking game, continuing the pattern that’s had him pegged as a core special-teamer early in his career. Both tackles were exactly what coaches want from a young defensive back. He remained under control, squared up, and finishing in space rather than being out of control and risking a miss or a flag.

RB Jaydon Blue


Inactive

OT Ajani Cornelius


Inactive

RB Phil Mafah


Injured reserve

WR Traeshon Holden


Practice squad

TE Rivaldo Fairweather


Practice squad

LB Justin Barron


Practice squad

CB Trikweze Bridges


Inactive

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...report-raiders-tyler-booker-donovan-ezeiruaku
 
Cowboys Point/Counterpoint: Figuring out how much of Raiders win was real

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A week ago, we debated whether or not the season was already lost. Now, it seems hope springs eternal. Winning will do that to you.

Yes, yes, it was just the Raiders. But the Cowboys crushed a team they were supposed to crush, and most importantly, the defense looked darn good doing it. And yet, it was still just the Raiders. Up next is a gauntlet that features the Eagles, Chiefs, Lions, Vikings, and Chargers.

For those keeping track at home, the Cowboys’ odds to make the playoffs went up to 10% with the win, underscoring how bleak the outlook is. They played well against the Raiders, but can they do the same against much better teams? That is the question that our own Tom Ryle and David Howman attempt to answer.

Tom: This may have been just a tease before reality rears its ugly head against the Eagles. But there are certainly some things that hint that the Cowboys may have a decent chance against the division leader.

The obvious one is the immediate positive impact Quinnen Williams had on the defense. Not only did he get 1.5 sacks and five QB hits, he opened things up for the rest of the defensive line. Three of the team’s four sacks came from the interior D line. While Donovan Ezeiruaku didn’t get one of those, he did contribute two tackles for a loss. That increased pressure up front, including a total of 11 QB hits, seemed to directly benefit the secondary as well. The return of Donovan Wilson and Malik Hooker had to help, as did the good play of Caelen Carson and Shavon Revel. The linebackers played their part, with Logan Wilson solid and DeMarvion Overshown finally getting back on the field.

Yes, it was the Raiders. But after so many dismal performances by the defense, this has to be encouraging.

David: The defense was exactly what we’ve been waiting to see. Williams opens up a lot of things for others, Wilson was a bright spot, and who realized just how much this defense missed Malik Hooker?

As good as that side looked, though, defense is largely dictated by the quality of offense they’re facing. In that regard, the Eagles will do much better against this unit than the Raiders did, though they should still be able to get some stops here and there.

What I’m more focused on is the offense. Dak Prescott was cooking against the Eagles in the season opener but the offense went quiet in the second half. A lot of that had to do with CeeDee Lamb’s drops, but that wasn’t the only issue. In the end, the Cowboys lost that game because their offense disappeared when they needed it most.

That cannot happen again. The Raiders game was a sort of rediscovery of their offensive identity, and just in time. They’ll need to dominate against the Eagles – at home, mind you – to have a shot at winning. And, by the way, their playoff odds increase to 17% with a win.

Tom: The only real knock on the offensive performance was a bit of a slow start, which just maybe had something to do with CeeDee Lamb and George Pickens sitting out the first series for undisclosed disciplinary reasons. But once they got into the fray, Dak Prescott and company really got to cooking. Pickens in particular was a force to be reckoned with. After the second possession was cut short by a lost fumble, they scored on the next five, a field goal and four consecutive touchdowns. With a considerable lead built up, they were able to take the foot off the gas in the fourth quarter while reducing the risk of injuries.

While the Philadelphia defense is formidable, Las Vegas is not all that bad with Maxx Crosby at work. It will be hard to replicate Monday’s performance. But they may be able to do enough. The running game is good enough with Javontae Williams leading the way that the Eagles can’t just pin their ears back and come after Prescott. If the offensive line can hold up for much of the time, the Cowboys should be able to score.

That leaves the Dallas D against the Philadelphia O. The Eagles are best when they go run heavy because Jalen Hurts is just not passing all that well. He only completed 50% of his passes against the Lions for 135 yards, and they mustered just 16 points in a defensive struggle on Sunday.

One surprising thing that may work to the Cowboys’ advantage is that Nick Sirianni seems to be making some really questionable decisions. He kept the door open for Detroit to come back and tie things up. Let’s hope he continues to come up with some bad choices.

David: As if living in Philadelphia wasn’t already a bad enough choice.

The opportunity is absolutely there in this game. Ever since the final whistle blew the first time these teams met, I’ve been convinced the Cowboys were going to win the next one. Now that we’re here, I’m only more confident. Dallas seems to have some momentum and the Eagles have won all but one of their eight games by one score, coming dangerously close to losing each time.

Given what lies ahead on the Cowboys’ road, a win here would be huge. The rivalry, the prestige of the Eagles, and the fact that it would be their first time this season winning back-to-back games; all of that together could provide a surge in confidence. That’s exactly what they’ll need the rest of the way, and it all starts this Sunday.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...agles-dak-prescott-george-pickens-jalen-hurts
 
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