News Cowboys Team Notes

Tyler Smith is trying to raise awareness for cancer screenings

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The Dallas Cowboys have perhaps the best interior offensive linemen in the game on their team in Tyler Smith, someone who is going to be around for the long-term future after receiving a contract extension from the club a few months ago. Smith has been a dream for the Cowboys from just about Day 1 as he has gone about everything in the perfectly right way.

Part of what makes him so great is his personality and what he gives his time to. We here at Blogging The Boys are particularly grateful that he offered some of his time on Friday after the Cowboys visited the Detroit Lions. You can watch our entire conversation below.

Smith discussed the loss to Detroit, the team’s mentality coming out of it, his fumble recovery in the game, and so much more. It was one of the more fun interviews that I have had the fortune to be a part of and he really let his personality shine. He is quite the fan of anime as it turns out.

Most importantly though, he joined us to talk about his partnership with Novartis, the Official Pharmaceutical Partner of the NFL and Dallas Cowboys as well as the Susan G. Komen Foundation. The effort here is to raise awareness around the importance of annual breast cancer screenings. Tyler devoted his cleats during the league’s My Cause My Cleats initiative to this cause and spoke about how it has impacted him personally.

This season marks the launch of a new partnership between the Cowboys and Novartis, the Official Pharmaceutical Partner of the NFL, dedicated to expanding proactive health education for fans in Dallas and surrounding communities. Together, Novartis and the Dallas Cowboys are encouraging consistent annual exams, screenings, and, ultimately, empowering action around critical health conversations that affect our fans every day.

Novartis partnered with Cowboys offensive lineman, Tyler Smith, during the NFL’s My Cause My Cleats campaign as he supported the Susan G. Komen Foundation. Smith amplified awareness for people living with breast cancer, particularly driving support for the Dallas Cowboys’ Star Survivors campaign. The partnership includes digital signage throughout AT&T Stadium this season, encouraging fans to make their health a priority.

Our thanks to Tyler Smith for the time and our best wishes to him moving forward.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dallas-cowboys-roster/191062/tyler-smith-breast-cancer-awareness
 
Cowboys vs. Lions: The good, the bad, and the ugly from Week 14

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The Dallas Cowboys win streak ended at three Thursday night with the 44-30 loss to the Detroit Lions. The Cowboys made it interesting by attempting yet another comeback late in the game, but Lions were just too much for them to handle in the end.

Looking back at the Week 14 loss, there is a good mixture of positives and negatives throughout the ballgame for the Cowboys. Today, we’re going to identify one good, one bad, and one ugly thing from the unfortunate Thursday night loss to the Detroit Lions.

THE GOOD – WR Ryan Flournoy​


With six catches for 121 yards, CeeDee Lamb was having himself quite a game until he had to exit early due to a concussion. With No. 88 sidelined, second-year WR Ryan Flournoy stepped up to pick up the slack. He caught nine passes for 115 yards and scored one touchdown. Flournoy’s offensive role has continued to expand as the season progressed and he proved why against the Lions Thursday night. He’s become a reliable/trusted target for Dak Prescott and looks to have a bright future with the Cowboys moving forward.

THE BAD – Points off of turnovers​


The Lions ended up winning by 14 points Thursday night, and it’s no coincidence that’s exactly how many points the Dallas Cowboys gave up due to turnovers. First it was the Jake Ferguson fumble in the first quarter that allowed the Lions to extend their lead 17-6 off of a off of a 35-yard TD run by David Montgomery and once again in the second quarter Detroit capitalized off an interception to extend their lead even further, 27-9. It’s nearly impossible to win games in the NFL when you’re giving away points to your opponent.

THE UGLY – Pass protection​


It doesn’t matter how talented the receiving corps is if the QB doesn’t have time to throw the ball. That was the case for the Cowboys Thursday night against the Lions. Dak Prescott was pretty much under duress all night from Detroit’s pass rush. As expected, Aidan Hutchinson got the better of Terence Steele on a number of occasions and gave Nate Thomas, who was filling in for for an injured Tyler Guyton at LT, problems as well when he rushed from that side. Prescott ended up throwing for 376 yards and one TD, but a lot of that came under duress.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...urnovers-dak-prescott-jake-ferguson-pass-rush
 
Cowboys news: Latest on CeeDee Lamb after concussion in Detroit

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Dallas Cowboys provide update on CeeDee Lamb after scary concussion vs. Lions – Nick Harris, Fort Worth Star-Telegram


CeeDee Lamb had a good day after suffering a concussion in Detroit.

It was far from the dream road trip for the Dallas Cowboys to the Motor City on Thursday night, as head coach Brian Schottenheimer’s squad fell 44-30 to the Detroit Lions in a pivotal matchup toward dictating the playoff bubble in the NFC.
Aside from the result, a health concern for wide receiver CeeDee Lamb also came out of the game after he suffered a concussion in the third quarter. With 12:47 left in the frame, quarterback Dak Prescott gave Lamb a chance at a one-on-one ball in the end zone that he couldn’t come up with. As he was landing on the ground, his head slammed against the Ford Field turf. His left arm went numb as he laid on the turf without much movement for a few moments.

He was checkout by medical staff on the field and in the injury tent before being quickly ruled out and walked to the locker room. Coming out of the locker room after the loss, Lamb nodded when asked if he was OK.

“It scared me,” Cowboys owner and general manager Jerry Jones said on 105.3 The Fan on Friday morning. “It really did.”

Back in the team facility on Friday, Schottenheimer was able to see Lamb whose body responded well less than 24 hours after the injury.

“He had a good day,” Schottenheimer said on Friday afternoon on a conference call with local reporters. “But he has to go through all the checks and balances of all that stuff. I do think the extra couple of days should hopefully help him.”

After enduring tough stretch of schedule, playoff hopeful Cowboys face harsh reality – Calvin Watkins, Dallas Morning News


The Cowboys loss to the Lions puts their postseason dreams in serious jeopardy.

FRISCO — It’s over now, but the ramifications of the Cowboys playing four games in 18 days have determined where their season sits.
A playoff appearance, as difficult as it would have been to accomplish, is almost extinguished following a 44-30 loss to the Lions on Thursday night.

The Athletic playoff predictor gives the Cowboys a 9% chance of making the postseason and a 4% chance of winning the NFC East.

NFL’s Next Gen Stats playoff probabilities also have the Cowboys reaching the postseason at 9%. If Dallas had upended Detroit on Thursday, their chances would have moved to 39% with four games to play.

With three days off following their Thursday night loss, the Cowboys are faced with the reality that reaching the postseason might be through a complete collapse by the Eagles to win the NFC East.

In the Eagles’ next five games, the Los Angeles Chargers (8-4) and Buffalo Bills (8-4) have winning records. The defending Super Bowl champs face the 3-9 Washington Commanders twice in the last month of the season and despite the troubles on offense, it’s assumed the Eagles are in good shape.

The Cowboys?

Well, a win over the Lions would have been the Cowboys’ fourth consecutive heading into a weekend with momentum and bringing it closer to the Eagles (8-4).

At 6-6-1, the Cowboys already have losses to Detroit, Chicago and Carolina, so making the postseason as a wild card will be difficult. They’d also lose an unlikely tiebreaker against those teams.

Controversial penalty called on Ferguson changed Cowboys game: ‘That was bad’ – Todd Brock, Cowboys Wire


This play shifted the momentum greatly on Thursday night.

Despite a mistake-filled performance in all three phases of the game, the Cowboys nevertheless kept it close enough to give themselves a chance at the end of Week 14’s meeting with the Lions.
It was also close enough for one penalty flag to dramatically- and quite maddeningly, if you ask Dak Prescott- alter everything.

“That’s a game-changing call that I don’t understand,” the Cowboys quarterback would say later, knowing full well the comments could get him in trouble with the league.

Dallas was on the move late in the fourth quarter and looked to be headed toward the end zone. Down by 10 points, Prescott had led the offense from their own 33 and were sitting on the Lions’ 11 in a third-and-3 situation.

On the ensuing pass play to tight end Jake Ferguson, he and Lions linebacker Alex Anzalone got tangled up, and the ball sailed just past Ferguson’s outstretched arms. A flag was thrown, but the expected call against the defense never came.

Instead, after a quick meeting, the officials announced offensive pass interference against Ferguson.

Cowboys head coach Brian Schottenheimer was enraged. The broadcast booth was dumbfounded. But instead of the Cowboys’ ball on the doorstep, with a fresh set of downs they could use to cut the lead to three points with just under four minutes to play, Dallas had to settle for a field goal… and hope to get the ball back for another crack at the end zone with enough time for it to matter.

That didn’t happen.

10 thoughts on the Cowboys 44-30 Thursday night loss to the Lions – Dan Rodgers, Blogging The Boys


Several things prevented the Cowboys from beating the Lions.

The winning streak is over. It seemed like a tough ask for the Dallas Cowboys to win three straight games against the three teams with the best records last season, and sure enough, it was. The Cowboys fell to the Detroit Lions on Thursday night, 44-30, putting their playoff hopes on life support. It was a frustrating game to watch with a little goodness sprinkled in. Here are my 10 thoughts on this unfortunate loss in the Motor City.

1. Falling behind again

It wouldn’t be a Cowboys game if the team didn’t dig itself a hole early. They went down 21-0 against the Eagles two weeks ago, fell down 7-0 to the Chiefs on Thanksgiving, and then trailed 27-9 early in the second half. While the team does a good job fighting back into games, this repeated habit of falling behind is not a recipe for success. If you play with fire long enough, eventually you’ll get burned, and that’s what happened to them against the Lions.

2. They’re only hurting themselves

Another element that reared its ugly head was turning the ball. The Cowboys had a couple of costly mistakes against the Eagles and turned the ball over on their opening drive against the Chiefs. They were fortunate enough to overcome those miscues, but their luck ran out in Detroit. The Cowboys’ offense turned the ball over three times, once on a Jake Ferguson fumble, and twice on a deflected pass that was intercepted. On the other side of the ball, the defense didn’t force a single turnover. It’s tough to win football games when you lose the turnover battle, 3 to 0.

3. Defense didn’t have it

It was great while it lasted, but the Cowboys’ defense didn’t bring the ‘A’ game to this one. At times, they made some plays, but far too often, they gave up big yardage plays to the Lions’ playmakers. Amon-Ra St. Brown, Jameson Williams, and Jahmyr Gibbs all had receiving plays over 25 yards. David Montgomery had a 35-yard rushing touchdown. Jared Goff had over 300 yards passing. At the end of the day, the Lions’ offense beat them in a multitude of ways as the Cowboys gave up over 400 yards and surrendered 44 points.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...ncussion-injury-playoff-chances-jake-ferguson
 
The curious case of Trevon Diggs and Dallas in 2025

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The curious case of Trevon Diggs is an underrated storyline of the Dallas Cowboys 2025 season. At one time Diggs was a top-rated cornerback who was going to be a cornerstone of the Cowboys defense for the next decade. Now, he and the franchise seem to be headed for a divorce.

The acrimony between the team and Diggs really started to simmer when the team docked Diggs $5000,000 for rehabbing away from the team this offseason. Then one of Diggs’ closest friends, Micah Parsons, was traded. Diggs struggled with injury to start the year, then finally returned only to struggle on the field in Matt Eberflus’ defense. Now he is trying to return from a strange concussion injury at home that led to a stint on injured reserve.

He practiced last week, and the team could have certainly used him versus the Detroit Lions as the secondary crumbled. At least, they could have used the old Trevon Diggs. We haven’t really seen that version since before the ACL injury of years ago.

Will Diggs play next week? Will he look like he’s truly ready again, or will he be limited like he has seemed to be since the 2023 injury?

ESPN is betting on a divorce.

It has been an up-and-down year for Diggs in Dallas, complete with an injury suffered at home. The Cowboys drafted cornerback Shavon Revel Jr. in April, and while Diggs has three years and $57 million left on his contract, none of that money is guaranteed. The Cowboys would incur just $5.88 million in dead money if they released him.

Diggs has been working his way back from injury and still has a chance to show enough over the rest of the season to convince Dallas to keep him. But at this point, it’s no sure thing that they do. Diggs had 11 interceptions back in 2021, but he has only six over the past four seasons combined and last played 17 games in 2022.

The Cowboys have already signed DaRon Bland for the long term, and we know that Shavon Revel holds potential as an outside corner. Is Diggs in the Cowboys’ future past 2025? Hit the comments and let us know.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...iggs-injury-return-offseason-release-contract
 
BTB Tuesday Discussion: Can the Cowboys win out?

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There are four more games promised on this Dallas Cowboys season. While the team has frustrated us at a lot of points this year, certainly last Thursday night, we should hold these close to our heart as the offseason can be long.

Maybe that doesn’t sound appealing to you. It makes sense that you want to see this team reach the playoffs and that them potentially not doing so in consecutive seasons (for what would be the first time since 2019-2020) is the overpowering sentiment. There is no wrong way to feel here.

As we look to the rest of this season though, it is quite possible that the Cowboys win all four of their remaining games.

  • Minnesota Vikings
  • Los Angeles Chargers
  • at Washington Commanders (Christmas Day)
  • at New York Giants

It stands to reason that Dallas will be favored by oddsmakers in all four of these games. They may not be if they had to visit the Chargers, but given that the game is at home that will help. Should Dallas win out that would put them at 10-6-1 and mean that they won 6 out 7 to close the season following the bye. That would be objectively impressive. And if they do this and pick up the proper help they would win the NFC East.

Do you think it’s possible, though?

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...as-cowboys-discussion-win-out-2025-likelihood
 
Cowboys playoff chances could come down to an old friend in Dan Quinn

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After what seemed to be a season-crushing loss to the Detroit Lions on Thursday Night Football, the Los Angeles Chargers cracked the door back open for the Dallas Cowboys to make a run at the NFC East.

The Cowboys still have plenty of work to do, needing to sweep the rest of their schedule that includes the Los Angeles Chargers, Minnesota Vikings, Washington Commanders, and New York Giants, but trailing the Philadelphia Eagles by a game-and-a-half, the Cowboys playoff hopes could very well lay in the hands of old friend Dan Quinn. Over the next four weeks, the Eagles will see the Las Vegas Raiders, Washington Commanders twice, and the Buffalo Bills.

It’s quite simple, the Cowboys finish the season 4-0 and the Philadelphia Eagles lose two more games and the Cowboys are NFC East Champions. The Cowboys could afford to drop one more game, but then the Eagles would need to lose three of their remaining four. With four games left, the Philadelphia Eagles will play the Washington Commanders twice. Despite the Commanders 3-9 record, Washington has played the Eagles tough in recent years.

The Commanders could be without their starting quarterback in one or both of the matchups depending on what head coach Dan Quinn decides to do with Jayden Daniels and his non-throwing arm injury. But even if Daniels does not play, Marcus Mariota has played well for the Commanders in starts so far this season. Needing two more losses from the Eagles, one Washington Commanders win would be a huge help with a road trip to Buffalo still on the Eagles schedule.

With the Raiders coming up next week, most are banking on a bounce-back game for the Eagles. While that is more likely than not, we must bring up the Eagles 2023 collapse that feels awfully familiar to this 2025 season so far for Philadelphia. In Week 17 of 2023, the 11-4 Eagles dropped a game to the 3-12 Cardinals that helped the Cowboys clinch the NFC East. That Week 17 game in 2023 feels eerily similar to the Eagles matchup with the Raiders coming up this week.

The reality here is the Eagles are currently spiraling, dropping their last three games in rather embarrassing fashion. With Jalen Carter likely sidelined for a few more weeks, the Eagles offensive line dealing with injuries, and Jalen Hurts struggling to generate any sort of offense, the Cowboys window is cracked open. They will need to handle their business and get a little help along the way, so let’s hope that our old friend Dan Quinn can help us out with two more games on the schedule against Philadelphia.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...t-eagles-chances-dan-quinn-remaining-schedule
 
3 young players who failed to live up to expectations this season with the Cowboys

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When expectations meet reality the results can sometimes be disappointing. Such is the case with the Dallas Cowboys 2025 season and expectations many fans had for some of the young players projected to have a big impact with the organization this year. For whatever reason though, things didn’t play out the way fans hoped.

Today, we look at three of the young players many fans expected to play a significant role with the Cowboys this year only to fall well below expectations. With only four games remaining on the regular-season schedule and the playoffs looking unlikely, the future expectations of these young players is clouded in mystery moving forward.

RB Jaydon Blue​


Jaydon Blue was a fifth-round draft pick for the Cowboys this year and arrived in Dallas with some pretty high expectations. He was expected to provide an explosive element to the offense as both a runner and receiver, but that has sadly never materialized. Instead, he’s been a healthy scratch the majority of the season, suiting up only four times so far this year. To date he’s rushed for only 65 yards on 22 carries and has added only one catch for five yards through the air. That’s nowhere near the production many expected from him.

The rookie out of Texas was expected to be heavily involved in the Cowboys offense this year. Many expected him to challenge for the lead back, but instead he’s continued to tumble down the depth chart as the season progressed. We’ve seen Malik Davis get re-signed and lock down the RB2 position behind Javonte Williams and the recent addition of Israel Abanikanda is further proof Blue is in the doghouse. A once bright future now seems murky at best unless something changes dramatically.

LB Marist Liufau​


Marist Liufau was the 87th overall pick in the third-round by the Cowboys in 2024. As a rookie last year he had a pretty solid season playing in all 17 games, starting nine of those contest. He finished his rookie year with 50 combined tackles, 1.5 QB sacks, and four tackles for a loss. He showed enough promise last year many believed he had the talent to develop into a starter in his second year, especially with Matt Eberflus’ background coaching linebackers. Sadly, not only did that not happen, but he seemed to regress in his sophomore season.

So far in 2025, Liufau has only four starts on the season and has seen his role on defense steadily declined since the Cowboys bye week. Not only has his playing time taken a hit, but he also seems to have fallen further and further down the LB depth chart. Some of that is due to the trade for Logan Wilson and the return of DeMarvion Overshown, but his tumble from a potential starter to mostly a special teamer this year makes one wonder about his future. Is he a third-round bust or is there still hope for him at what seems to be a position of need next year?

WR Jonathan Mingo​


The Cowboys acquired Jonathan Mingo from the Carolina Panthers last season for a fourth-round pick. While they overpaid for the former second-round WR, there was still hope he could be a contributor. In eight games and one start last season Mingo only managed five catches for 46 yards with the Cowboys after arriving via trade. He never really seem to settle in or find a offensive role for himself last year, but there was hope he would do more with a full offseason in his second year in Dallas.

Mingo has only managed to play a total of 20 offensive snaps in two games with the Cowboys so far this season after spending the majority of the year on injured reserve with a PCL sprain in his right knee. Had he been healthy the entire year he may have been more productive, but to date he’s only been targeted once in the passing game with zero catches. As things stand right now he’s at best WR5 on the depth chart and has a lot to prove if he wants to climb many higher next season. Expectations for him moving forward continue to diminish.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...layers-poor-seasons-jaydon-blue-marist-liufau
 
Which former Cowboys coach would you like to see back in Dallas next year?

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There may be some vacancies in the Cowboys coaching staff after the season. Defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus has been on a hot seat practically the whole season and even special teams coordinator Nick Sorensen is coming under increased scrutiny.

The Cowboys have not been averse to bringing back coaches that have coached in Dallas before. Matt Eberflus (DAL 2011-17) is just the most recent example, but before him Mike Zimmer (DAL 1994-2006) was brought back for a one-year stint in 2024, Aden Durde was a coaching intern from 2014-2015 before coming back as a defensive line coach from 2021-2023, Dave Campo worked his way up from defensive assistant all the way to head coach (DAL 1989-2002) before coming back for a stint as defensive backs coach (DAL 2008-2011), George Edwards was the linebackers coach from 1998-2001 before coming back for a three-year stretch as senior defensive assistant two decades later (DAL 2020-22). And you’d better believe the Cowboys would have brought back Sean Payton (DAL 2003-05) if that had been at all possible at any point.

Could the Cowboys go down a similar route, opting for the familiar over the unknown, as they look at their potential opening at defensive coordinator?

A lot of that will depend on how things ended in Dallas the first time. Was the first split amicable or contentious? With that in mind and knowing that we’re not always privy to the inner workings of the hiring/firing process, here are some candidates the Cowboys might consider bringing back.

Aden Durde. Durde is making waves as the defensive coordinator in Seattle, and he’s already being mentioned as a potential head coach candidate. That move might be a bit early for him, but would a lateral move back to Dallas be of any interest for Durde? Probably not, but he would be an excellent get for the Cowboys.

Al Harris. Harris is the defensive backs coach & defensive pass game coordinator in Chicago, and his team is leading the league in interceptions. He was already turned down as the DC in Dallas last year, that doesn’t improve the Cowboys chances of getting him back.

Joe Whitt. Whitt came in with Dan Quinn from 2021-23 as the passing game coordinator, but chose to follow Quinn to Washington in 2024 as defensive coordinator. Whitt was recently stripped of his play-calling duties and will likely be available after the season, but his résumé in Washington does not make a lateral move to another DC position likely.

Mike Zimmer. Third time’s a charm? Probably not for Zimmer. Word on the Dallas streets is that the split last year was not amicable, Zimmer was eyeing the vacant head coach position, the Cowboys didn’t even see him as a DC candidate.

Dan Quinn. I’m putting Quinn in as an honorable mention, even if there’s zero chance he comes back to Dallas next year. He’ll remain the head coach in Washington for at least one more year.

Let us know in the comments if you’d like one of these former Cowboys coaches back, whether you’d give Eberflus one more year, or whether you want the Cowboys to look outside as they potentially look for their fourth defensive coordinator in four years.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...m-coordinators-al-harris-aden-durde-joe-whitt
 
Cowboys vs Vikings: 3 bold predictions for Sunday’s matchup

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A loss by the Philadelphia Eagles on Monday night has kept the Dallas Cowboys in the playoff hunt, at least for one more week. This week, Dallas will look to bounce back from a loss in Detroit against another NFC North opponent, the Minnesota Vikings.

Before the two teams square off on Sunday night, here are three bold predictions for the matchup.

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1) Cowboys’ defense bounces back in a big way, forcing J.J. McCarthy into his fifth multi-interception game of the year

J.J. McCarthy’s NFL career has gotten off to a rough start. After being selected with the 10th pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, the former Michigan Wolverine suffered a knee injury in Minnesota’s preseason opener that forced him to miss the entirety of his rookie year.

Coming into this season, hopes were high for the 22-year-old quarterback. The Vikings took a big gamble, letting Sam Darnold walk in free agency after a career year in favor of their young quarterback. Unfortunately for both McCarthy and the Vikings, the move has not panned out well to this point.

After winning 14 games last season, the Vikings are just 5-8 this year, and a big reason for their lack of success has been the struggles of their offense. Minnesota ranks bottom seven in the NFL in points per game (19.6) and total yards (3,584), and inconsistent quarterback play from their young signal-caller has been a leading factor in the offense’s shortcomings.

On the season, McCarthy has completed an extremely uninspiring 56% of his passes to go with a 67.4 Passer Rating. The biggest flaw in McCarthy’s game at the NFL level has been his inability to protect the football. In just eight games, the 22-year-old has thrown 10 interceptions, including four multi-interception games. McCarthy also ranks in the top 15 in the league in danger plays (16) despite playing in just eight games.

While he did bounce back nicely last week against Washington, McCarthy has shown this season that he will give opposing defenses the football if they are able to put some pressure on him. After a putrid performance last Thursday against the Lions, if the Cowboys’ pass rush can show a pulse and get some consistent pressure on the young quarterback, there is a good chance he’ll turn the football over.

Dallas’ pass rush makes up for their poor outing last week, getting plenty of pressure on McCarthy. The 22-year-old struggles under pressure once again, throwing two interceptions in a game for the fifth time this season.

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2) Dallas’ run game gets back on track as Javonte Williams records his third 100-yard day of the season

It’s been a struggle for the Cowboys to run the football over their last three games. After some early-season success on the ground, Dallas has not been able to replicate that formula in their last three games against much stiffer competition.

Since Week 12, the Cowboys rank 20th in the NFL in Rush EPA (-0.109) and 29th in the NFL in Rush Success Rate (32.4%). Not surprisingly, during this three-game span, starting running back Javonte Williams has averaged just 3.9 Y/A, almost a full yard lower than his season-average of 4.8.

This week, Dallas’ run game has a chance to get back on track against a Vikings defense that has struggled to stop the run in recent weeks. Since Week 10, Minnesota is 17th in Defensive Rush EPA (-0.067) and 24th in Defensive Rush Success Rate (43.2%). Over this five-game span, the Vikings have surrendered an average of 134 rushing yards per game. Unsurprisingly, they are 1-4 during this stretch.

If the Cowboys want to win out, they’ll need their run game to get back on track. In a favorable matchup against the struggling Vikings, Dallas does just that on Sunday night as Javonte Williams records his third 100-yard game of the year.

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3) Ryan Flournoy builds off his big performance, recording 70+ receiving yards and scoring his fourth-career touchdown

One positive to come out of last week’s loss was the breakout performance by Ryan Flournoy. The 26-year-old receiver stepped up in a big way after CeeDee Lamb left with a concussion, putting together a career day.

In the contest, Flournoy caught nine passes for a game-high 115 receiving yards to go with the third touchdown of his NFL career. Flournoy’s development has been an under-the-radar storyline to come out of this season, and it looks like the former sixth-round pick is starting to find his footing in the NFL.

This week, after his big day in Detroit, the Cowboys will continue to find ways to get Flournoy involved on offense. The wideout continues his upward trajectory, recording 70+ receiving yards and scoring touchdowns in back-to-back weeks for the first time in his career.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...s-ryan-flournoy-javonte-williams-playoffs-nfc
 
Dallas Cowboys: Reading between the lines (offense)

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Every week, we’re digging into the trenches, offense and defense, because that’s where the real action happens. In this installment, we’re shining a spotlight on the offensive line, who’s holding it down, who’s opening holes for the running backs, and who’s keeping Dak Prescott clean. Let’s get to it.

Left Tackle

Nathan Thomas


(2025 Stats: 281 Total Snaps, 189 Pass Blocks, 13 Pressures, 4 QB Hits, 2 Sacks, 3 Penalties)

Thomas had a long, tough night in Detroit that really frustrated fans. Dallas chased the game while Thomas was the most targeted mismatch on the offensive line. He logged 82 snaps and was charged with a team-high eight pressures, including a sack and two hits, plus a penalty as Aidan Hutchinson and the stunt game kept coming.

There were still a few wins for Thomas, but they were few. When Dallas stayed on schedule, Thomas’ angles on down blocks and right-side combos helped create functional rushing lanes, helping the Cowboys finish with 30 points and 376 passing yards despite the self-inflicted wounds. But the negatives outweighed the positives in protection for Thomas. PFF captured the struggle with 29.7 offensive grade and an even worse pass-block grade of just 16.3.

The issue here is Thomas has been a next-man-up starter with uneven results, but the broader Dallas trench metrics remain solid enough to support a bounce-back. The Cowboys are at 65% Pass Block Win Rate (12th) and 71% Run Block Win Rate (17th), so a top-third protection group when the ball is on time. Thomas’s personal PFF page, though, shows the learning curve in bright lights with a 36.2 overall grade, 29.1 pass-block grade, and 49.2 run-block grade, all an alarming score.

Left Guard

Tyler Smith


(2025 Stats: 842 Total snaps, 550 Pass Blocks, 18 Pressures, 0 QB Hits, 2 Sacks, 9 Penalties)

Smith’s night in Detroit read like a guard trying to keep the boat steady while the tide turned. Dallas threw it 47 times, gave up five sacks, and ran it 24 times for 91 yards, with game flow that forced Smith to live on long-developing protections against a front that heated up late. On the plus side, Smith’s anchor showed up good on inside loops that the Lions love.

The Vikings’ defense looks like a wave machine, so Smith and his veteran presence is going to be needed to help the unit as a whole, and more importantly, Nate Thomas. The Vikings defense boasts a 44% Pass Rush Win Rate (2nd) and 31% Run Stop Win Rate (12th) as a team, with 47 team sacks already on record (eighth-most), and multiple games where Brian Flores’ pressure plan became an avalanche. Next Gen charting even had them at 47.6% pressure in Week 9, and they just shutout Washington 31–0 to break a four-game skid. Individually, the threats show up all across the defense. Dallas Turner and Eric Wilson lead the team with 5.5 sacks each, Jalen Redmond sits on five sacks, Andrew Van Ginkel and Jason Hargrave combine for seven sacks, with Jonathan Allen and Jonathan Greenard combining for four sacks.

Center

Cooper Beebe


(2025 Stats: 496 Total Snaps, 351 Pass Blocks, 10 Pressures, 2 QB Hits, 0 Sacks, 0 Penalties)

Beebe’s trip to Detroit was one of those hold the fort type nights while things around him went crazy. Dallas threw it a ton, lived in long counts, and Beebe handled the administrative stuff the way coaches want. He made clean identifications on the line and enough pop on play-side doubles to let both guards climb when Dallas asked him to. Beebe’s stats this season have been extremely encouraging. He’s on zero sacks allowed, 10 total pressures, two quarterback hits and zero penalties, that’s an impressive line for a second-year center.

Beebe’s job against Minnesota is be the sledgehammer. Flores will pressure the A-gaps with different looks to confuse the issue. Beebe will have to be aware and get the line into the correct blocking assignments.

Right Guard

Tyler Booker


(2025 Stats: 727 Total snaps, 476 Pass Blocks, 18 Pressures, 5 QB Hits, 1 Sacks, 6 Penalties)

For the in-depth analysis on Booker, go to BTB’s Rookie Battleground article.

Right Tackle

Terence Steele


(2025 Stats: 888 Total snaps, 567 Pass Blocks, 41 Pressures, 8 QB Hits, 5 Sacks, 6 Penalties)

Steele’s season has been a seesaw, with the underlying win-rate math saying it’s solid, but the tape says up-and-down, and the penalties keep nudging drives off script. Steele sits at 93% Pass Block Win Rate, that’s 17th among tackles which will surprise most. So what does PFF grading have to say? It paints the same split you all see on Sundays. His run-block grade sits at 77.6, that’s 13th among tackles. But his pass-block grade sits at 55.4 putting him in the bottom third. In short, he’s still a people-mover in the run game, but his pass sets have oscillated with clean stretches followed by a bunch of high-leverage losses that kill drives.

Steele’s job against Minnesota starts before the ball is snapped, getting a plan in place and getting the read right, and to be in lockstep with Tyler Booker. What Steele needs to do is make the Vikings pressure plan expensive. If he can get rid of the freebies that have stung drives this season, there’s a good chance that Dak stays clean and can deliver. If he keeps up the same issues in pass protection, Dak will scramble, have to reset his launch point, and that’s when we see the miscues or deep field sacks.

Injury update


Tyler Guyton has been working the past week to return, but has yet to practice, so the hope for his return is fading.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...line-scouting-report-vikings-game-nate-thomas
 
Buy/Sell for Cowboys vs Vikings in Week 15

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Sunday night’s matchup between Dallas and Minnesota features two teams on the brink of being eliminated from the playoffs. The Cowboys have a better foothold at this point, but the Vikings aren’t sailing away quietly. In this battle of two desperate teams, which individual Cowboys have the best and worst chances of shining?

BUY​

DT Quinnen Williams​


After his dynamic Cowboys debut against the Raiders, Williams hasn’t been as splashy in the last three games. He’s still made a tremendous impact overall, helping Dallas beat the Eagles and Chiefs, but it’s clear opponents are focusing on stopping Williams from being a big-play terror. Unfortunately for Minnesota, they may not have the tools to neutralize him.

The Vikings have given up 13 sacks in their last three games. Even in last week’s 31-0 shutout win over the Commanders, J.J. McCarthy was sacked four times. Minnesota’s pass protection has been just as leaky inside as on the edges, so it could be Williams’ best opportunity to wreak havoc since the Vegas game. And if Minnesota does focus on stopping him, that should mean good things for Dallas’ other pass rushers.

Additionally, the Vikings rank just 24th in the league for total rushing offense. They tend to fall behind and abandon the run, which is good since they average a solid 4.6 yards per carry. As long as Dallas’ offense doesn’t take too long to get going, it can help Williams and the defense by forcing Minnesota away from the ground game.

RB Javonte Williams​


Running backs have generally had productive days against the Vikings. Last week, Washington’s backs combined for 84 yards on just 17 carries. Seattle’s had 108 yards on 27 carries. The Packers’ Emanuel Wilson had 107 yards and two touchdowns in Week 12. As long as Dallas feeds Javonte Williams, it sets up to be another strong performance.

A high-volume day for Williams and the other running backs also helps the Cowboys mitigate their own pass protection issues. The Vikings aren’t as equipped to take advantage of them as the Lions were, but Nathan Thomas and Terence Steele are hardly bulwarks at offensive tackle. Leaning on the run allows both of them, especially Steele, to have a much better shot at making positive contributions.

CB DaRon Bland​


From Weeks 10-12, J.J. McCarthy threw at least two picks in each game. He’s a classic gunslinger, and that’s just the kind of quarterback that DaRon Bland loves to see. While Bland has had some coverage struggles in Matt Eberflus’ scheme, he’s still flashed his trademark ballhawk ability. There have been several near misses on picks this year, and McCarthy seems highly likely to give Bland at least one opportunity. Hopefully, Dallas’ top CB capitalizes.

SELL​

QB Dak Prescott​


Because the Vikings’ offense has been so bad most weeks, it’s made it hard to tell where the cracks are on defense. Opponents have been able to stay conservative, hence those high-volume rushing totals we mentioned earlier. But in any case, that may mean a low-production game for Prescott. That’s not to say he can’t be highly efficient and contribute to a victory, but it would be surprising to see him go off for high yardage.

WR George Pickens​


Many are hoping for a bounce-back game from the star receiver, but it’s not in the cards this week. Again, passing games tend to be pretty quiet against Minnesota. And if any receiver does put up strong numbers, it tends to be a TE over a WR. The worst thing Dallas can do is try to force the ball to Pickens in response to last week’s bad publicity. Hopefully, CeeDee Lamb is able to play to help relieve that pressure.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...-quinnen-williams-dak-prescott-george-pickens
 
3 players who will lead Cowboys to victory over Vikings in Week 15

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The Dallas Cowboys may have dropped the ball last week losing to the Detroit Lions, but don’t expect that to happen in Week 15 against the Minnesota Vikings. They are motivated to get back to their winning ways and are playing with their backs against the wall moving forward to keep their playoff hopes alive.

This Week 15 matchup with Minnesota is a must-win and with home-field advantage as well as the better roster, Dallas is the favorite to be victorious this week. And although this is a team game, there are certain players who will play a more important role in this week. Below are the ones we believe will shine.

Dak Prescott​


Dak Prescott currently leads the league in passing yards (3,637) as well as 300 passing yard games (5). He is also currently riding a three-game streak of 300 passing yard games and has a really good chance to extend that streak to four this week against the Vikings, despite them ranking fourth in the league in passing yards a game (172.3).

Vikings DC Brian Flores loves to blitz and Minnesota currently leads the league in blitz percentage (49.2%). Prescott has excelled against the blitz this year throwing for 1,123 passing yards, the third-highest mark in the NFL this year, and has a 106.2 passer rating against the blitz. Because of that we should expect a big game from No. 4.

Javonte Williams​


Javonte Williams hit the 1, 000-yard rushing mark (1,022) last week, the fourth Cowboys RB to do that in five seasons. He’s also scored double-digit touchdowns (nine rushing, two receiving) so far this season and has a really good chance of improving all of those numbers this week against Minnesota’s defense, who is currently allowing 126.8 rushing yards per game (22nd in the league).

Not only should Williams to have a good game toting the rock, quite possibly rushing for his third 100+ yard game of the season, but he will also be an important part of Dallas’ aerial attack as a pass protector. No. 33 has been amazing this year in pass protection, allowing Dak Prescott extra time to do his thing. That will be important in this week against the blitz happy Vikings defense.

Quinnen Williams​


Vikings RB Aaron Jones has been a thorn in the Cowboys side dating back to his days in Green Bay. In three regular-season games and one postseason one, Jones is averaged 122 yards per game and two touchdowns and scored a total of nine touchdowns. Even though he’s not having his best season, he has enough juice left in the tank to be dangerous.

Fortunately, Dallas has just the player to contain Aaron Jones, Quinnen Williams. Since arriving, Williams has much improved the Cowboys run defense. He’s also been surprisingly effective as a pass rusher as well. In four games in Dallas he’s averaged five QB pressures and has a total of 24 since Week 11. Only Micah Parsons (30), Aiden Hutchinson (27), and Josh Hines-Allen (26) have more.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...ak-prescott-javonte-williams-quinnen-williams
 
Cowboys CB Trevon Diggs won’t be activated, won’t play vs. Vikings

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The saga between cornerback Trevon Diggs and the Dallas Cowboys continues to be a weird one. Head coach Brian Schottenheimer said earlier in the week that Diggs needed to do everything the right way before returning.

Cowboys HC Brian Schottenheimer on Trevon Diggs’ potential to play vs. Minnesota:

“He’s still in the ramp-up period. He does feel healthy, I know he wants to play. But at the end of the day, we have to do what we think is in the best interest of not just him, but also the… pic.twitter.com/DgFOoE3Mzc

— Nick Harris (@NickHarrisFWST) December 10, 2025

Despite his readiness to play, Diggs will remain on injured reserve/designated for return list, and he won’t play against the Minnesota Vikings this Sunday.

The #Cowboys announce CB Trevon Diggs will remain on the IR/DFR list today. He’s officially out for tomorrow vs. the #Vikings.

— Mike Garafolo (@MikeGarafolo) December 13, 2025

Diggs hasn’t played since Week 6 when the Cowboys loss to the Carolina Panthers. His 21-day practice window is currently ongoing, but if he isn’t activated to the 53-man roster by next week, he’ll remain on injured reserve for the rest of the season.

The former second-round pick signed a five-year, $97 million extension in June of 2023, but he’s struggled to see the field since then. Diggs tore his ACL after two games that season. In late 2024, Diggs was placed on injured reserve due to an issue in the same knee which led to mircofracture surgery back in January. The last full season for Diggs was in 2022, and he’s only appeared in 19 games since then.

With this latest development, it calls into question not only if Diggs will play again in 2025, but if he’ll ever suit up for the Cowboys again. There already reports that the relationship may be over.

Sources: #Cowboys All-Pro CB Trevon Diggs will not play Sunday vs the Vikings.

This comes after what was described to me as a “great week of practice,” while multiple sources tell me the relationship between Diggs and the organization has “soured” and “been severed.”

Diggs,… pic.twitter.com/ncFINVrMbn

— Jordan Schultz (@Schultz_Report) December 13, 2025

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...1/cornerback-trevon-diggs-out-ir-vikings-game
 
Cowboys vs Vikings: Social media reaction to Cowboys costly loss

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The Dallas Cowboys returned to AT&T Stadium, with the home crowd behind them. Playoff hopes were hanging on by a thread, the stakes were high. The Minnesota Vikings came into town looking to make a statement by punishing the Cowboys defense and offensive line. Here’s what social media had to say during Dallas’ highly frustrating loss.

Cowboys start with an interception on defense

Good things happen when you call a more aggressive defense tbh

— John Owning (@JohnOwning) December 15, 2025
Cowboys send Donovan Wilson on a blitz and he gets his hands on the ball at the line. It deflects up and into the hands of Quinnen Williams for his second career interception.

Huge play on the second play from scrimmage for the Dallas defense.

— Nick Harris (@NickHarrisFWST) December 15, 2025

Brandon Aubrey for the field goal. Nope! He keeps it and runs for the first down.

How about that. A fake field goal. pass to Aubrey who slides for first down.
Schotty culture
nice toss by Anger

— Clarence Hill Jr (@clarencehilljr) December 15, 2025
BRANDON AUBREY WITH THE WHEELS pic.twitter.com/GGGBuE5B1i

— Blogging The Boys (@BloggingTheBoys) December 15, 2025

Dak down in the redzone runs the ball. Williams gets the first down.

I love when Dak runs the QB draw

— Zach Wolchuk (@ZachWolchuk) December 15, 2025

Javonte Williams punches it in for the first score

TUDDY.

I BELIEVE IN JAVONTE 👏🏾👏🏾 pic.twitter.com/uoNe5WWgA6

— Patrik [No C] Walker (@VoiceOfTheStar) December 15, 2025
Schotty is calling this game the way a must-win game should be called.

— Jess Haynie (@CowboysAddicts) December 15, 2025
Javonte punches it in 🥊

🔄 Repost to #ProBowlVote for @javontewill33

📺: #MINvsDAL on NBC
📲: Stream on NFL+ https://t.co/RmDxAeCG4M pic.twitter.com/lyZHwpY3pb

— Dallas Cowboys (@dallascowboys) December 15, 2025

Kenny Clark timing the play perfect on the tackle for loss.

That might be one of the best plays i've seen from a DT

Holy smokes Kenny Clark!!!

— Zach Wolchuk (@ZachWolchuk) December 15, 2025

Defense makes a stop. Shavon Revel with the third down stop.

Shavon Revel with a third down tackle for a short gain to force a punt. Dante Fowler had the initial pressure in the backfield.

— Joseph Hoyt (@JoeJHoyt) December 15, 2025

Vikings come back with a touchdown to square it up.

Vikings answer with a two-play TD drive. J.J. McCarthy with perfect throw to Jalen Nailor, who beat DaRon Bland.

— Todd Archer (@toddarcher) December 15, 2025

Malik Davis gets the touchdown inside the five-yard line.

Malik Davis is running well!

— Marcus Mosher (@Marcus_Mosher) December 15, 2025

Cowboys score on the ground again.

Malik Davis making the most of this chance w/ Williams out

Breezy Cowboys drive 6 plays, 73 yards, in 2:43

— Zach Wolchuk (@ZachWolchuk) December 15, 2025
Vikings run defense! That’s two rushing touchdowns now#dallascowboys

— Mike Poland (@kenfigkowboy) December 15, 2025

Broken play on the Cowboys defense leaves Jordan Addison wide open for a huge play. Terrible defensive play.

a huge play downfield from McCarthy to Addison.

bruh…

— Patrik [No C] Walker (@VoiceOfTheStar) December 15, 2025

Vikings score again.

Touchdown, Vikings.

J.J. McCarthy fools everybody on the option and keeps it, griddying his way into the end zone on fourth-and-goal from the one. Tie game. #Cowboys – 14#Vikings – 14
2nd Quarter | 9:28

— Tommy Yarrish (@tommy_yarrish) December 15, 2025

Cowboys go for it on fourth down at midfield.

Nice job by Schotty to be aggressive on 4th and 3.

Big gainer by CeeDee Lamb

— Matt Owen (@ProfessorO_NFL) December 15, 2025

Aubrey misses the 51-yard attempt.

A frozen kind of hell

— Bobby Belt (@BobbyBeltTX) December 15, 2025

Caelen Carson draws the flag after allowing the big play earlier in the gave.

Caelen Carson killing Dallas tonight.

Need to take him off the field for a bit.

— Marcus Mosher (@Marcus_Mosher) December 15, 2025
Caelen Carson is penalized for unnecessary roughness after throwing a punch to Vikings WR Justin Jefferson, which sets up first and 10 from the #Cowboys 11-yard line.

— Tommy Yarrish (@tommy_yarrish) December 15, 2025

Hunter Luepke rushing and receiving for first downs.

Hunter x Hunter.

move the chains. pic.twitter.com/mZNdR6Z3Z6

— Patrik [No C] Walker (@VoiceOfTheStar) December 15, 2025

Injury update.

Tyler Smith down with 1:18 left in the half. May have been poked in the eye on that run.

— Todd Archer (@toddarcher) December 15, 2025

Cowboys settle for a field goal but will receive the ball after the half.

Brian Flores has definitely thrown some curveballs to the Cowboys in this first half.

— Joseph Hoyt (@JoeJHoyt) December 15, 2025
17-17 at halftime. Cowboys in a shootout with JJ McCarthy.
Pickens has one catch in the first half

— Clarence Hill Jr (@clarencehilljr) December 15, 2025

Injury update.

Javonte Williams back in, Hunter Luepke is out with a concussion.

— Nick Harris (@NickHarrisFWST) December 15, 2025

Luke Schoonmaker makes the one handed grab and runs upfield.

SCHOONY

— David Howman (@_DH44_) December 15, 2025
SCH👀N

📺: #MINvsDAL on NBC
📲: Stream on NFL+ https://t.co/RmDxAeCG4M pic.twitter.com/UAsOQqCjBZ

— Dallas Cowboys (@dallascowboys) December 15, 2025

Huge throw by Dak to CeeDee.

Dak to CeeDee Lamb for 30!!!!

Keep being aggressive on first down.

— Matt Owen (@ProfessorO_NFL) December 15, 2025

Aubrey hits another field goal.

Cowboys are 1-9 on third down tonight. Aubrey converts a 41-yard field goal to push the lead to 23-17.

— Calvin Watkins (@calvinwatkins) December 15, 2025

Vikings take the lead on a rushing touchdown.

C.J. Ham could've griddied into the end zone on that one.

— Joseph Hoyt (@JoeJHoyt) December 15, 2025
And Kenneth Murray surrenders the gap to run outside tackle 🤷

— Mike Poland (@kenfigkowboy) December 15, 2025
The Cowboys have constantly been late on defense with Kenneth Murray is out there

Literally runs away from the ball. Again.pic.twitter.com/k4zcZddzU9

— Tom Downey (@WhatGoingDowney) December 15, 2025

Williams gets running to start the next drive.

Javonte Williams now has the most rushing yards of any Cowboys running back over the last six seasons. pic.twitter.com/b7t2KXEUwZ

— Dan Rogers (@DannyPhantom24) December 15, 2025

Aubrey misses his second field goal.

Brandon Aubrey has missed another, this one from 59 yards out. If the Cowboys defense ever needed a stop, it has to come now. Minnesota takes over from their own 49 with a chance to extend its lead in the fourth quarter.

— Nick Harris (@NickHarrisFWST) December 15, 2025

Vikings torch the defense and score.

The sad thing is ownership doesn't care about "SKOL" chants happening at AT&T stadium

— Zach Wolchuk (@ZachWolchuk) December 15, 2025
#Cowboys Defense got JJ McCarthy looking like John Elway….

— Law Nation Sports (@LawsNation) December 15, 2025
Vikings up the lead to 31-23 with 9:12 to go. Cowboys season is on the line. J.J. McCarthy lit them up on that drive. Back to back weeks the Vikings have put up 31 points vs. and NFC East team

— Todd Archer (@toddarcher) December 15, 2025

Injury update.

Hakeem Adeniji is in the game at left tackle for Nate Thomas who is tending to a left shoulder issue on the sideline.

— Nick Harris (@NickHarrisFWST) December 15, 2025
Trenches killing you again. Can't protect and can't get to the QB.

— Bobby Belt (@BobbyBeltTX) December 15, 2025

Cowboys offense falls short on fourth down.

Because you were unwilling to go for it multiple times on 4th and 3 earlier in the game, you're forced to go for it on 4th and 7 with it all on the line. I just don't understand how they could play that conservative, knowing what this defense is.

— Kevin Turner (@ktfuntweets) December 15, 2025

Injury update.

#Cowboys DT Quinnen Williams is being evaluated for a concussion.

— Tommy Yarrish (@tommy_yarrish) December 15, 2025

Vikings now wind the clock down late in the fourth quarter.

Fire Matt Eberflus pic.twitter.com/A3Pvuz12Ma

— Tom Downey (@WhatGoingDowney) December 15, 2025
When Eberflus scans his badge tomorrow: pic.twitter.com/ALbVzB4HH1

— Jess Haynie (@CowboysAddicts) December 15, 2025
Cowboys defense where dreams come true

— Voch Lombardi (@VochLombardi) December 15, 2025
JJ McCarthy with his first 250 yard passing day since college

— Jeff Cavanaugh (@timeforjeffrey) December 15, 2025
This has probably been one of the more frustrating seasons for the #Cowboys I can remember.

The last time I felt this way was all of the 8-8 seasons under Jason Garrett.

So much talent. Minimal results.#DallasCowboys

— Brandon Loree (@Brandoniswrite) December 15, 2025
Vikings take a two-possession lead with 1:08 remaining, 34-23. That will just about do it.

— Nick Harris (@NickHarrisFWST) December 15, 2025
Will Reichard makes a 53-yard field goal to seal this one. It's 34-23 Vikings and the Cowboys postseason hopes are basically done.

— Calvin Watkins (@calvinwatkins) December 15, 2025

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...me-social-media-reaction-costly-loss-playoffs
 
4 reasons why the Cowboys were embarrassed by the Vikings

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Playoffs? Playoffs?! After the Dallas Cowboys lost at home to the Minnesota Vikings, they aren’t eliminated from the postseason. However, their chances are very bleak. The Cowboys squandered opportunities to build a lead and control the game, and the same problems that have plagued them all season once again resurfaced in a game they had to win. It’s a somber feeling around Dallas today. Here’s why the Cowboys fell short on Sunday night.

Not equipped to handle the pressure


This could have a double meaning. The Cowboys had their backs against the wall, and losing would be detrimental to their playoff chances. Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores is known for his exotic blitzes and confusing the protection for opposing quarterbacks. He did just that on Sunday as the Cowboys couldn’t muster any big plays to counter Minnesota’s aggressive looks. They didn’t handle the pressure of the playoff chase, or the Vikings defense.

It also doesn’t help that, at one point, Dallas was playing with their third left tackle, and the Vikings’ edge rushers were collapsing the pocket. Historically, Dak Prescott is pretty good versus the blitz and has made teams pay for committing so many players to rush the passer. That didn’t happen. Prescott was pressured on 48% of his dropbacks against the Vikings. When blitzed, Prescott completed 8/15 passes. The offensive line didn’t do a good enough job at protecting Prescott.

Brandon Aubrey’s off night


It says a lot about Brandon Aubrey that you expect him to make his kicks every time he takes the field, no matter the distance. So to say that him missing two field goals beyond 50 yards is uncharacteristic of him, that speaks volumes about his caliber as a kicker. That said, on a night where the defense wasn’t going to stop the Vikings, and the offense could put the ball in the end zone, every kick by Aubrey was magnified. It was the first time that Aubrey had missed multiple kicks in a game.

The Cowboys ended up losing by eight points, and they would have loved to have those points on the board late in the game. At one point, the Cowboys elected to bypass going for it on 4th-and-3 from the Minnesota 18-yard line and settled to take a 23-17 lead, likely signifying that the Cowboys were okay only needing a field goal to regain the lead if the Vikings scored a touchdown on the ensuing drive. That’s exactly what happened, and it backfired. Aubrey missed from 59 yards, and the Cowboys never got ahead of the Vikings afterward as Minnesota scored again to take a 31-23 lead, which they would not look back from.

George Pickens’ disappointing night​


After the disappointing game George Pickens had against the Detroit Lions, Dallas needed Pickens to have a big bounce back. Minnesota made sure that didn’t happen. The Vikings showed heavy pressure on passing downs, putting players in both sides of the A gaps, speeding up Prescott’s time to throw and negating some of Pickens vertical game. They also rolled safety help outside the numbers to take away the possibility of Pickens beating them down the field. Although they often showed a blitz look, many times the Vikings would drop an edge player in zone coverage to Pickens’ side to take away the slant. Simply put, the Vikings were not going to allow themselves to get beat by Pickens, and the results were underwhelming at best. He posted three receptions on six targets for a ho-hum 33 yards.

J.J. McCarthy dismantles the Dallas defense


If you were to poll the 32 general managers and defensive coordinators in the NFL, respectfully, J.J. McCarthy wouldn’t be in the top tier of quarterbacks in the league. For the second week in a row, the defense did nothing to disrupt a quarterback who doesn’t handle pressure well. Last week it was Jared Goff, and this week McCarthy picked them apart standing behind yet another offensive line that was dealing with injuries. Christian Darrisaw missed last night’s game, and yet Dallas failed to sack McCarthy once. For further reference, here’s how ineffective Dallas was to slow McCarthy.

The #Cowboys defense pressured JJ McCarthy on just 22.2% of his dropbacks, the 2nd-lowest pressure rate he’s faced in a game this season, per NFL Pro.

Dallas could draft two defensive ends with their first round picks and I wouldn’t be mad.#DallasCowboys

— Brandon Loree (@Brandoniswrite) December 15, 2025

To make matters worse, the secondary was just as bad. Countless times the Vikings had open receivers but passes were either off-target or dropped. McCarthy and Justin Jefferson failed to connect on a few occasions but for everyone else, not a problem. McCarthy was 13/16 for 228 yards and two scores when not targeting Jefferson.

Whether it was Caelen Carson getting beat for 58 yards on 3rd-and-long by Jordan Addison, or safeties being isolated in coverage against receivers, nothing Dallas did was going to challenge McCarthy. Again, the defense failed to show up when they needed to and allowed over 30 points once more. Weekly, it gets harder and harder to justify why the defense is so bad. Furthermore, it gets harder to justify why Matt Eberflus is in charge of that side of the ball. Something has to change, and unfortunately, it will only come in the wake of further disappointment.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...y-the-cowboys-were-embarrassed-by-the-vikings
 
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