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Vikings sink Cowboys playoff hopes to virtually zero on same day they’re eliminated from contention

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It was Week 16 of last season on Sunday Night Football when the Dallas Cowboys, hosting the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, were eliminated from postseason contention from the earlier action that Sunday, but still played one of their most inspired games of the season and beat the Bucs 26-24. Here in Week 15 of the 2025 season, the Cowboys were again hosting SNF, this time with playoff hopes slim but in tact, but fell victim to a team in the same circumstance they were last season. Losing 34-26 to a Minnesota Vikings team that was eliminated from playoff contention by the Chicago Bears win in the early window, the Cowboys have followed up their first winning streak of the season with back-to-back losses that likely leaves just three games left to close out this constantly up-and-down season.

The Cowboys’ playoff odds are down to less than 1% now, losing in the same week the Philadelphia Eagles got back in the win column with a 31-0 win over the Raiders. That 30 point output for the Eagles at home against the Raiders defense made Las Vegas’ defense one of just two this season to allow 30 points in seven games, but by the time Sunday night was over Matt Eberflus’ Cowboys defense joined these ranks with the Raiders and Bengals by allowing 34 to J.J. McCarthy and the Vikings. This loss closes out a chapter that will define a 2025 Cowboys season destined to go nowhere in Brian Schottenheimer’s debut now, as the Cowboys went 0-3-1 against the NFC North.

Three times a defense led by a former head coach from this division lined up looking to make a statement, and three times they were shredded in a loss – the Bears scored 31, the Lions scored 44, and now the Vikings scored 34. It remains miraculous that Dallas managed a tie out of allowing 40 points to the Packers as well. McCarthy’s 250 yards and 10.4 yards per attempt against the Cowboys on Sunday night were both career highs for the 2024 first-round pick.

The Vikings overcame an early 7-0 hole to sink the Cowboys into the same boat they are in, which is playing just to evaluate their roster and prospects for the future. While Minnesota ended up with plenty to be pleased with in this area as they competed all night and got a second straight win, the Cowboys will be left with a ton of questions and concerns about this performance. Special teams mistakes continued, the protection plan struggled to keep a clean pocket for Dak Prescott, the defense was not on the same page in coverage, George Pickens was nearly invisible again, and Brandon Aubrey missed two field goals.

The Cowboys are now below .500 at 6-7-1, and will need to win at least two of their remaining three games versus the Chargers or at the Commanders and Giants to finish above this mark this season. With two of these opponents being teams Dallas has already beat within their division, their next four quarters against the Chargers stands to tell a lot about the makeup of this team at the moment. When it comes to a late push for the playoffs though, too much damage has seemingly already been done in home losses to the Cardinals and Vikings now, as well as road losses at the Panthers and the Eagles by four.

Let’s get to our notes on another majorly disappointing primetime loss for the Cowboys at home, which snapped a three-game winning streak against the Vikings.

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Losing the battle of field position was a major reason the Cowboys lost to the Lions, and they improved on this from the jump versus the Vikings. A Donovan Wilson blitz off the corner led to a deflected pass that was intercepted by Quinnen Williams, setting the Cowboys up at the Vikings’ 35-yard line. Not looking to just get a field goal off of the short field, the Cowboys ran a beautiful fake field goal on 4th-and-4 to move the chains with Brandon Aubrey rushing for six yards. When faced with another fourth down, the Cowboys moved the chains to the one-yard line with Javonte Williams – who scored one play later to put the home team ahead.

On the ensuing kickoff, Aubrey hit a well-placed bouncing ball that was difficult to field for the Vikings’ return team, and allowed first-year UDFA Alijah Clark to get downfield and make a tackle inside the 15. Another aggressive defensive call on third-and-short led to a quick stop for the Dallas defense with a long field to defend. Dante Fowler forced an inside handoff into secondary players Malik Hooker and Shavon Revel, who were both lined up close to the line of scrimmage and made the stop to force a punt.

Unfortunately for the Cowboys, all of these good vibes were very short lived, as this punt pinned them at their own three-yard line. The Vikings got the stop they needed to swing field position back in their favor, scored in two plays with Josh Nailor beating DaRon Bland for the tying touchdown, and truly never looked back in this game.

For the rest of the evening, the Cowboys looked to remain patient on offense and keep the Vikings aggression at bay by testing them with interior runs, which were effective, but this style of ball control did not mix with the way the Cowboys secondary was giving up chunk plays. Both teams only converted twice on third down, but the Vikings forced the Cowboys into 12 attempts compared to just nine for themselves. Minnesota scored touchdowns on three of four red zone trips, while the Cowboys were just two for five.

The Cowboys passing game did not create more answers for Prescott than Kevin O’Connell and the Vikings did for their first-year starter J.J. McCarthy, who was not sacked once compared to Prescott being sacked twice. The first sack for the Vikings came on third down, and led to Aubrey’s first miss from 51 yards. Already having scored back-to-back touchdowns, the Vikings added their own field goal off this short field.

Trailing 17-14 before halftime, the Cowboys drove to tie the game at 17, but would have loved to come away with a touchdown on a drive that saw George Pickens make just one of three catches on the night for a first down into the fringe of the red zone. Starting the third quarter with the ball, the Cowboys would get deep into the red zone this time, but still come up with only three points. These six points within the crucial “middle eight” of the game were not nearly enough with the way the Vikings offense continued to get better as the game progressed. Prescott made a great scramble drill toss to Luke Schoonmaker for a 29 yard gain on this drive, but on a later third down was not on the same page with Turpin against the rush, allowing the Vikings to keep the Cowboys well short of the end zone.

The other Vikings sack in this game also created a turning point, as the visiting team had rallied to lead 24-23 at this point. A screen pass that served as the equivalent of a “get me over fastball” from a major league starting pitcher to Pickens just to keep him involved set up a third down where Prescott was sacked, pushing another Aubrey field goal try back to 59 yards. Aubrey missed again, the Vikings moved the pocket for McCarthy and created easy throws attacking the Cowboys safeties, and in back to back plays saw T.J. Hockenson set up first-and-goal with a catch against Markquese Bell and Nailor score his second touchdown working against Wilson in man coverage on the goal line.

The Cowboys defense showed a few wrinkles that were effective in this game when putting their starting safeties Wilson and Hooker down in the box, but the Vikings made their adjustments to force the Cowboys to use their secondary in coverage, where the safeties proved a big liability again. Dallas would have less of a need to find value in their safeties being strong box players if they were better at linebacker, but once again Kenneth Murray struggled in the middle and Logan Wilson in increased playing time was not a major upgrade either.

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The Cowboys were on the very limit of only being down one score now, but the juice for the offense was not there to get this score. C.J. Goodwin, solely on the Cowboys roster for special teams, was called for holding on the kickoff following Nailor’s touchdown – wiping out a big return from Turpin. On a must-have fourth down attempt, Prescott bought time in the pocket but had no receivers coming back to the ball for him, and checked it down to Malik Davis who was tackled just short. The Vikings took the ball back, and although the Cowboys defense forced them into a fourth down, defending a short field again proved too difficult as even giving up a field goal put this game on ice. The Cowboys answered with a field goal in a last ditch effort to preserve time for the touchdown they still needed, but Aubrey’s onside attempt was handled by Josh Oliver before Marist Liufau could displace him from the ball.

The Vikings left Arlington playing as the better team, now with back-to-back wins against NFC East opponents. A defensive shutout that saw McCarthy throw three touchdowns for the first time in his career in a home win against the Commanders was a sight for sore eyes in Minnesota last week, and this win at the Cowboys is a whole new layer for that team to feel good about culturally despite not going to the playoffs. The Vikings outcoached and outplayed the Cowboys in a huge spot, coming back from trailing on three separate occasions.

In the loss, the Cowboys will have to face the same reality as the Vikings of not going to the playoffs possibly before they even line up again, as the Eagles next chance to win and clinch the division comes next Saturday against the Commanders. The reality of this being a “when” and not “if” scenario for the Cowboys getting eliminated is going to shine an even brighter light on some of the chemistry, scheme, and coaching miscues that have cost them consecutive games, and Dallas didn’t find much in the way of leadership that can carry them out of this hole on Sunday night.

The Cowboys going 1-4-1 in primetime games this season is also something that is not going to sit well within the organization, only clinging to relevancy here in December thanks to an Eagles slide they can no longer rely on.

Their last opportunity to get a win in front of AT&T Stadium home fans is a rare early window game for the Cowboys against the Chargers in Week 16. Coming in with some similarities to the Vikings when it comes to being well-coached with a QB that can pump confidence into the entire team and a multiple defense, the Cowboys will have their chance to earn just a bit of redemption after a week that will be full of soul-searching.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...es-dak-prescott-george-pickens-brandon-aubrey
 
Cowboys roundtable discussion: Playoff chances, Matt Eberflus, and the Chargers game

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Every week, we gather to discuss the latest news about the Dallas Cowboys and seek our writer’s perspective on each headline. Welcome back to the roundtable. This week we have Sean Martin, Jess Haynie and Tom Ryle.

The Cowboys have to win out, the Eagles have to lose out for Dallas to make the playoffs. Do we see that happening?


Mike: Short answer here is it’s alive, but it’s a parlay I’d never bet. Winning out is hard enough, asking the Eagles to simultaneously lose out multiplies the improbability across every remaining week. Could it happen? Sure, football is noisy, injuries pop, and weird December games swing on a bounce. Let’s also not forget that the Eagles have failed at this stage of the season before. But the realistic stance is to treat this as a one-week season. If Philly stumbles once, great. If not, Dallas’ focus switches to the draft, my favorite time of year, including Christmas.

Sean: Sadly, not at all. Enjoying the Eagles slide was fun while it lasted, but we can’t lose sight that the best thing that happened during it was that the Cowboys were also playing well. Without that element, there is no enjoyment in rooting for a team to limp into the playoffs, and that’s exactly what Dallas would be doing if a miracle happens in these last games. I do think the Cowboys will beat the Commanders and Giants to end the regular season on a win streak, but whether its two games or three with how they’ve played at home is hard to say going into the final home game versus a hot Chargers side.

Jess: Their Buffalo game feels like a loss, but Washington sweeping Philly with a division title on the line just isn’t in the cards. And even if that miracle happens, this Cowboys team may not even win their next game. It feels like segments of the team have checked out this season. I think many of us are ready to do the same.

Tom: TBH, I wish they were eliminated already. I’m tired of finding a way to hope when my more rational side has known for weeks if not months that this Dallas team is just too flawed to be a contender. I’m not going to let myself get sacked back in again.

After the collapse against Minnesota, do you see Matt Eberflus as defensive coordinator next season, or does he get fired?


Mike: I’d lean toward a narrow second chance, with guardrails, and I know the readers will be going mad over that sentiment. The collapse last week was about repeatable fixes with rush-lane integrity, tackling technique, and explosive-play prevention. Midseason changes with Logan Wilson and Quinnen Williams gives Eberflus tools he didn’t have in September. If Eberflus returns, it should be with clear benchmarks and cleaner communication toward his plan. Miss those standards early next year and Brian Schottenheimer should pivot, but meet them and you’ve stabilized a unit that has potential.

The Cowboys have been churning through defensive coordinators the past seven years, and getting another next season would make that six different coordinators in eight years, and that is only going to disrupt cohesion further. I now hide under my desk while the readers take shots.

Sean: The larger sample size points towards Eberflus not returning, in my opinion. This was a near consensus opinion through the fanbase through the early-to-mid portion of the season, and now that feeling has returned after getting shredded by J.J. McCarthy and the Vikings. Without a single win against his former division, I just don’t think there’s enough Eberflus can point to in defending his job status for next season.

Jess: This team needs a defensive coordinator who will adapt to his players, and who has actually shown a consistent acumen for the job in the last five years. Eberflus seems to have been figured out in most league circles. He isn’t adaptable enough, either to the talent at his disposal or to what opponents are showing. Wrong guy for the job, probably for any team at this point.

Tom: While the offense has some issues, the defense has just outright failed on multiple occasions. So many games we had to watch the opponents just march down the field in the fourth to get a win, while the defense radiated confusion. If Schottenheimer gets to make the call he can’t hesitate. Frankly, I don’t think it matters who decides because Jerry has to be disgusted, too.

What’s the biggest improvement you want to see this week against the L.A. Chargers?


Mike: The biggest improvement needs to be in consistency. That means winning early downs, finishing drives in the red zone with touchdowns instead of field goals, and playing defense with disciplined rush lanes so Justin Herbert doesn’t get free extensions that become explosives. If Dallas can keep their penalties down, get the ball out on time, and stop the chunk plays on the back end, the Chargers game is winnable.

Sean: Getting George Pickens involved somehow, and not with an arbitrary bubble screen. For as long as I can remember covering the Cowboys in this capacity, this team can field a number one offense without getting the chemistry at WR correct enough to make it mean anything. There have been few common denominators, but no shortage of talent. The duo of Lamb and Pickens was too good in too many games this season to not continue trying, but they have to show more starting in this Chargers matchup.

Jess: Forget improvements; it’s time to prepare for 2026. Give Klayton Adams a crack at calling plays. Give more reps to the likes of Brevyn Spann-Ford and Ryan Flournoy. Even if you’re not going to fire Eberflus, give Aaron Whitecotton some opportunities to handle more responsibility. And of course, more playing time for Joe Milton.

Tom: Exactly, Jess. It’s hard to throw in the towel this early, but as you also said, that may be happening already. As bad as things are, it would be far worse for one of the stars to be seriously injured in an eventually meaningless game. Time to use every minor ding possible to sit the vets and work the young ‘uns.

Rapid fire section


Who scores first for Dallas?

Sean: Malik Davis

Jess: Brandon Aubrey

Tom: Aubrey

If the Chargers sit in two-high, pound light boxes with Javonte, or stick with Dak and the quick-game?

Sean: Too many empty yards in the passing game right now. Lean on the defense more with the run.

Jess: Pound the rock and let your offensive line do what it’s actually good at.

Tom: Count me in for some ground and pound.

If Derwin James lurks as a robber, attack the perimeter or still hunt seams?

Sean: Winning on the perimeter is a must to winning games.

Jess: One of their best weapons is the RAC ability of all of their WRs. They need to do more with short passes: slants, crossers, etc. Whether it’s Lamb, Pickens, Flournoy, Turpin, give these guys space to work with and get the ball out of Dak’s hands quick.

Tom: Quick passes all day. Don’t have Dak holding the ball at all.

CeeDee Lamb receiving yards, over/under 89.5

Sean: Over

Jess: Over

Tom: Under

Javonte Williams rushing yards, O/U 80.5

Sean: Over

Jess: Over

Tom: Under

Cowboys third-down conversion rate, O/U 44%

Tom: Under

Sean: Over

Justin Herbert passing yards, O/U 280.5

Sean: Under

Jess: Under

Tom: Under

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...off-chances-matt-eberflus-chargers-game-draft
 
Hot Schotts: A staffing decision looms for Cowboys head coach

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The tide is turning, though not in a good way. The Cowboys’ latest loss has all but eliminated them from the postseason. The Vikings had been eliminated hours before kickoff, but it didn’t stop them from winning in Dallas. The worst part is that J.J. McCarthy, the de facto rookie quarterback who has struggled mightily this year, had his best game yet.

It’s once again put all the pressure back on defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus and, in some ways, added some pressure to Brian Schottenheimer. A month ago, Schottenheimer doubled down on his coordinator, and he briefly looked like a genius for it. The defense appeared to be genuinely turning a corner after the trade deadline, and Eberflus had made some necessary changes to assist in that regard.

Last week’s loss to the Lions was forgivable, albeit still frustrating. Detroit has been an offensive powerhouse and the Cowboys looked tired after playing three games in 12 days. But a bounce back was expected, especially against Minnesota. Instead, they rolled over, and Eberflus reverted back to his worst, timid tendencies when push came to shove.

Schottenheimer still isn’t firing any coaches, or hinting that he might, but his tune has changed. After Jerry Jones came dangerously close to saying he wanted to make a change, Schottenheimer more or less echoed his sentiment of needing to prove it over the final few weeks of the season.

Eberflus has completely run out of excuses at this point.

He was lacking talent early on, but not anymore. Quinnen Williams has been as advertised, DeMarvion Overshown looks better each week, and Shavon Revel flashes potential the more he plays. The edge rushers have all gotten better in recent weeks, and Donovan Wilson has made strides as well. Even DaRon Bland recovered from his rough night in Detroit to hold Justin Jefferson to just one catch.

Eberflus was also running into the issue of his scheme not fitting his players well. Even after the influx of talent, it wasn’t much of a fit. He tweaked some things – blitzing more, using more press man coverage, and adopting five-man fronts to get the most out of his stacked defensive tackle room – and they started to work.

Then, for some reason, he went away from it all against the Lions. And, for reasons that make even less sense, he continued to go away from it against the Vikings, a game where the season was on the line. The stubbornness of Eberflus to do what it takes to win with what he has amounts to a fireable offense.

Perhaps the most concerning part about this defense is how it’s performed against the NFC North.

Of course, Eberflus spent the past three seasons in that division as the Bears head coach. For most of the last two seasons, he called plays on defense, too. There’s no group of teams Eberflus knows better than the Bears, Lions, Packers, and Vikings. Yet the Cowboys went 0-3-1 against them; every single one of them topped 31 points, with two of them dropping 40-burgers.

To put it in further perspective, the Cowboys defense is averaging 0.145 EPA/play allowed for the season. That’s 30th in the NFL, just slightly ahead of the Commanders and Bengals. But against teams in the NFC North, Dallas is allowing 0.277 EPA/play. They’re nearly twice as bad against the teams Eberflus knows best.

There’s simply no excuse for that, and Schottenheimer knows it. He was caught delivering a fiery (and, perhaps, not safe for work) criticism in the direction of Eberflus after burning a timeout against the Vikings when the defense was visibly confused on the play call. Schottenheimer isn’t the kind of person to publicly degrade one of his assistants, but there seems to be hints that his patience is nearly out.

The Cowboys have been in this spot before. Mike McCarthy’s first year on the job brought with it the Mike Nolan Experience, and that ended after just one year. That was a bit of a stunner, because McCarthy and Nolan went way back in their relationship; it was certainly not easy for McCarthy to fire Nolan, but he did.

Schottenheimer has no such ties to Eberflus, as the two had never been part of the same staff before this year. That may suggest whose idea it was to bring Eberflus back to Dallas, but whether or not that’s true, it doesn’t change what must be done from here.

Another point that feels worth mentioning: the Mike Nolan Experience was also the last time Micah Parsons didn’t play for the Cowboys. While Eberflus deserves plenty of blame, and Schottenheimer must absolutely do what needs to be done, the current state of this Dallas defense goes way beyond X’s and O’s.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...tenheimer-defensvie-coordinator-fire-decision
 
Cowboys news: Starters will play until season’s end

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Dak Prescott and starters will remain in for Cowboys even if playoff hopes die – Nick Harris, Fort Worth Star-Telegram


The Cowboys won’t pull their main players no matter the outcome for the remainder of the season.

As the Dallas Cowboys cling to the smallest of playoff hopes (less than one-percent odds after Sunday’s loss to the Minnesota Vikings), head coach Brian Schottenheimer is not planning on making any major changes to the lineup with three games left in the season.
While some teams tend to lean into personnel changes to evaluate the full roster when already eliminated from playoff contention, Schottenheimer said doing so would deviate from the team mantra all season: compete every day. Even though losing games would benefit draft positioning, Schottenheimer wants to do everything possible to win the team’s final three games.

“It doesn’t change,” Schottenheimer said on Wednesday. “We get judged on winning and losing, and we haven’t won enough games. Doesn’t mean there aren’t going to be things when we look back that we’re like, ‘Hey, we’ve built this and this is great. We really upgraded this position.’”

“I’m going to stay in the moment. I’m going to be all about the Chargers. After we go and play the Chargers, and hopefully win, I’m going to be all about the Commanders and then the Giants and see what happens. We’ll take a broader, bigger picture at that point.”

Cowboys WR George Pickens on recent criticism: ‘It’s starting to get kinda old’ – Jon Machota, The Athletic


George Pickens fires back at recent comments concerning his effort.

FRISCO, Texas — George Pickens didn’t talk with reporters last week leading into the Dallas Cowboys’ Sunday night game against the Minnesota Vikings. The star wide receiver didn’t talk after the game, either.
Pickens did speak outside of the locker room after Wednesday’s practice at The Star.
The criticism he received for his lack of effort in Dallas’ Week 14 loss at Detroit is something he is trying to move past.

“I’m kind of more focused on the Chargers, honestly,” he said of the team’s Sunday opponent. “Everybody has a job to do. Some people’s job is to do that, tear down character, see how many clicks they can get. I’m just here to play football and help the team.”

But while responding to a follow-up question, Pickens added: “It’s starting to get kinda old, honestly.”

Pickens averaged 95 receiving yards per game and scored eight touchdowns over the first 12 games of the season. During the last two, he has no touchdowns and averaged 35 yards per game. Pickens said that drop-off in production can be attributed to him seeing more double coverage.

“Just keeping a guy inside and keeping a guy outside,” he explained, “or keeping a guy over the top and having a guy underneath, just on one side of the field, which is a huge product of CeeDee (Lamb) is going crazy, (Ryan Flournoy) is going crazy. I’m super proud of them guys.”

Pickens is playing in the final year of his rookie contract, but the Cowboys have no plans of letting him leave. They will either work out a long-term deal or use the franchise tag.

Dallas Cowboys post lengthy Wednesday injury report ahead of Chargers matchup – Joseph Hoyt, Dallas Morning News


The Cowboys are pretty banged up heading into Week 16.

FRISCO — The Cowboys had a lengthy injury report for Wednesday’s practice that included two significant new additions.
Cowboys wide receiver CeeDee Lamb missed practice due to illness, while cornerback DaRon Bland missed practice with a foot injury, according to the team report.

There were two expected absences, as well. Defensive tackle Quinnen Williams and fullback Hunter Luepke are still in concussion protocol.

Cowboys left tackle Tyler Guyton also missed practice as he continues to work back from an ankle injury he suffered on Nov. 23 in the win over the Philadelphia Eagles. He’s missed each of the last three games.

Second-year tackle Nate Thomas has started in place of Guyton, though he didn’t play the full game in Sunday’s loss to the Minnesota Vikings. Thomas suffered a shoulder injury, forcing veteran Hakeem Adeniji into action. Thomas was a full participant in Wednesday’s padded practice.

Cowboys corner Trevon Diggs was a limited participant due to a knee injury designation which was one of the reasons he was originally placed on injured reserve. There’s a lot of attention on Diggs, a former All-Pro corner for the Cowboys, as the deadline for him to be activated this season nears. If Diggs isn’t activated by Saturday he’ll revert back to injured reserve for the rest of the season.

6 players Cowboys must evaluate in final 3 games including playmaking QB, RB – K.D. Drummond, Cowboys Wire


Dallas should take the last several weeks to get some good film on some of their younger players.

QB Joe Milton
The Cowboys have one of the game’s best quarterbacks in Dak Prescott. The issue is that Prescott hasn’t been able to stay healthy for two seasons in a row since the 2018 and 2019 seasons. When he plays, he’s one of the best in the league, flirting with MVP consideration. When he doesn’t, the team tanks. This past offseason, Dallas traded a late-round pick in hopes of finding a young, athletic backup when they acquired second-year man Joe Milton from the New England Patriots.

He didn’t look good initially in the preseason, but Joe Milton’s stock went up based on the final 2025 preseason performance.

It’s time to let Milton play and find out what they have in him. Chances are, the backup is going to be called upon for several games next season, and the staff needs to know what they have in the former Tennessee Volunteer. Milton has appeared in two blowout losses, first to Chicago in Week 3 and then to Denver in Week 8, and has completed 6 of 9 passes for 99 yards, one touchdown and one interception.

Give him some extended action over the next three games so that offseason plans can be made accordingly.

RB Jaydon Blue

The Cowboys’ fifth-round selection had run afoul of the coaching staff since the summer. Rumors ran rampant about whether he was taking his opportunity seriously and his work ethic was questioned. He’s appeared in just four games this season, rushing only 22 times, while being a healthy scratch more often than not.

It’s clear that the coaching staff is not enamored with him, and at a position like running back where a player is the last line of protection for the $60 million quarterback, incompetence and unprofessionalism cannot stand. So while Dak Prescott is under center, the team cannot trot Blue out there.

However, when the team plays the more mobile Milton, they need to have Blue out there the majority of the snaps so that they can see whether he’s one of those guys who practices horribly, but plays at a high level. Perhaps the second chance inspires him to hit the offseason hard and work on the things that were issues this season.

WR Ryan Flournoy

The Cowboys are about to enter what is probably going to be contentious negotiations with WR1A George Pickens and his representative, David Mulugheta. The thinking is that there won’t be bad blood between the organization and the very professional agent of Micah Parsons, who Jerry Jones publicly insulted during those failed negotiations. Good luck with that.

The Cowboys need to know that if Pickens balks, and they have to either tag-and-trade him come March, or let him hit free agency all together, whether or not Flournoy is what he appears to be, a true WR2 solely in need of more opportunity.

Twice this season Flournoy has stepped up in a big way, with 100-yard receiving games during CeeDee Lamb’s absences. The former sixth-round pick hasn’t been asked to do much outside of those two games, only seeing more than three targets four times all season. Feed him the rock. At worst, the Cowboys will know whether or not they have a three-headed monster for 2026.

Butler, Mafah among three return to practice for Cowboys – Patrik Walker, DallasCowboys.com


There was some good injury news as some 21-day practice windows opened up.

FRISCO, Texas — With just three games remaining in the 2025 regular season, the Dallas Cowboys are giving three players a chance to potentially be activated from injured reserve ahead of the looming matchup against the Los Angeles Chargers.
The 21-day practice window has officially been opened on running back Phil Mafah, defensive end Payton Turner and cornerback Josh Butler — neither of whom have practiced at any point this season.
“It’s just a chance to get them on the grass and see the guys compete,” said head coach Brian Schottenheimer. ” … I know they’re excited to get out there and play the game that they love.”
Butler’s journey has been the most arduous of the three. The young defensive back suffered a season-ending knee injury in late November 2024, and he’s been working to recover from that for roughly a year. And though Butler professed his readiness to return to action a few weeks back, the Cowboys erred on the side of caution.

The injury cut short one of the better Cinderella stories of 2024, Butler having a breakout game against the Washington Commanders before suffering the aforementioned knee injury only four days later against the New York Giants.

Source: https://www.bloggingtheboys.com/dal...y-playoff-status-george-pickens-ryan-flournoy
 
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