This is the problem in a year with no truly great teams:
Even the teams with great records will gag up a game or two. On a day when the
Seattle Seahawks looked incompetent ant the Pittsburgh Steelers were one Leveon
Bell gem away from an ugly cry of a loss the NFL-leading Dallas Cowboys simply
could not get going against a far inferior Giants team. New York beat Dallas
10-7, and suddenly the NFC East isn’t quite so sewn up.
There are always subplots aplenty in every Dallas-New York
tilt, and this Sunday’s game
was no exception. A sampling:Dak Prescott finally
settled back to earth, having his worst game of the season. The vaunted Cowboys
offensive line collapsed around him all night, and Prescott had difficulty
throwing on the run. He ended the night 17 of 37, with two interceptions and
three sacks. Only a pretty deke-and-throw touchdown to Terrance Williams kept
Prescott’s night from being a total washout:
Ø
The Giants have now beaten Dallas twice. No
other team has even beaten the Cowboys once.
Ø
Odell Beckham Jr., as is his style, went from
infuriating to transcendent in the course of the game. He dropped two key
passes early, then put the Giants ahead in the third quarter with one of the
finest plays of the season, a 61-yard bolt in which he flat-out outran — not
juked, not faked, outran — three NFL cornerbacks.
Ø
Dez Bryant had exactly zero catches on seven
targets before finally catching one with less than three minutes left in the
game … and he promptly fumbled it away, effectively allowing New York to salt
away the win. On the final, last-gasp play of the game, Bryant couldn’t secure
a low pass from Prescott, and Dallas lost its remaining chance at victory.
Ø
Eli Manning has a way of coming up big in big
games, but perhaps this one was too early in the season for him to show any
theatrics. Aside from the one pass to Beckham, which was a short slant that
Beckham turned into art, Manning was fairly dreadful, coughing up two fumbles
and throwing an interception. He suffered three sacks and could only manage 17
completions on 28 attempts.
Ø
New York spent big on its defense this past offseason
and the results showed on Sunday night. Even without Jason Pierre-Paul in the
lineup, the Giants effectively shut down Prescott and kept Ezekiel Elliott to a
quiet 107 yards.
Ø
Neither team was any good on third down. The
Giants were two of 13, and the Cowboys somehow even worse at 1 of 13. Both
teams punted nine times. In other words, this wasn’t an offensive fiesta. And
when you’ve built your identity and your team around two offensive would-be
MVPs, as Dallas has, that’s a bad sign for the night and, potentially, going
forward.
Ø
In the coming weeks, New York draws Detroit and
Philadelphia before wrapping with a crucial New Year’s Day game against
Washington, one which could determine a wild-card berth. The Giants defense
will keep the team in all three of those games; it’s up to the offense to get
its act together and try to win a couple of them.
It’s far too early to worry much about the
Cowboys, but a loss to New York following an unspectacular performance against
Minnesota has to be raising the tiniest concerns. Dallas will close with two
potentially difficult matchups: a Tampa Bay team hunting a playoff berth,
followed by that surprisingly strong Detroit squad, before closing with
now-battered Philadelphia. The Cowboys are headed to the postseason, likely
with a bye week to start, so now’s the time for the Cowboys to make sure “very
good” is good enough to play into February.
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