Cowboys bounce back after two straight losses vs. Bills, Dolphins Ahead of The Matchup
The Dallas Cowboys fell short on the road once again, this time, to the Miami Dolphins, 22-20. Jason Sanders kicked the game-winning field goal to hand America’s Team their second-straight loss. Colin Cowherd reacts to the loss
Dak Prescott’s sporadic offense is as good a reason as any why Dallas has lost consecutive games for the first time in two years.
Finding consistency for one of the NFL’s most productive units will be a priority in the final two regular-season games for the playoff-bound Cowboys (10-5), starting Saturday night at home against NFC North champion Detroit (11-4).
The offense was really good on the first two drives in a 22-20 loss at Miami, but didn’t come out of a midgame funk until the Dolphins had a two-score lead (16-7) midway through the third quarter.
The stretch of three possessions with three punts and just one first down looked a lot like a week earlier in Buffalo, when the Cowboys barely had 100 yards of total offense before a meaningless fourth-quarter touchdown drive in a 31-10 loss.
“We know who we are, and we know when we get going,” Prescott said. “You saw it in the first two drives and you saw it late in the game there. It’s just about being consistent all the way through for the offense.”
Doing that against the Lions won’t be the final answer.
The Cowboys have been one of the league’s best offenses all season at home, where they have a 15-game winning streak and are outscoring opponents by almost 25 points per game.
The key will be at Washington in what figures to be the week before a playoff opener on the road, unless NFC East-leading Philadelphia (11-4) loses at least once in the final two weeks.
Not only are the Cowboys guaranteed to have a losing regular-season record away from AT&T Stadium (3-5 with a game to go), their offensive production isn’t even close to the same.
The road losses to the Bills and the Dolphins were the first back-to-back defeats since the first of these three consecutive playoff seasons in November 2021. Two years ago, Dallas responded with a 5-1 finish to win the division.
“Still all the confidence in the world in this football team and going on the road,” right guard Zack Martin said. “We just have to make more plays.”
When the Dallas offense gets moving, it’s hard to stop. The Cowboys lead the league with 44 drives of at least 10 plays. Their 17-play drive to take the lead in the fourth quarter was their longest TD march of the season. A 15-play drive on the first possession ended in a fumble at the Miami 2-yard line.
While Prescott credited the defense for keeping Dallas in the game by holding the NFL’s No. 1 scoring offense almost 10 points below its average, that unit couldn’t get the crucial stop after his go-ahead scoring toss to Brandin Cooks. The Dolphins ran off the final 3:27, capped by Jason Sanders’ game-ending field goal.