Just a couple of quick observations about the Dallas Cowboys after their season ended Sunday with a 34-17 loss to the New York Giants.
First, they lost 34-17 to the New York Giants. The Giants were still in the running for the number one draft pick when the game began. They were 3-13, had already fired their coach, and were starting Jaxson Dart at quarterback, Tyrone Tracy at running back, and Gunner Olszewski at wide receiver. The Cowboys talked all week about getting the win, finishing above .500, playing all their healthy starters, and ending the season with some momentum that would carry over into next year.
Instead, Tracy ran for 103 yards. Tracy has played in the NFL for six years and never had a 100-yard season. But he had 103 in an afternoon against the Cowboys.
Olszewski had eight catches. He’s played in the NFL for six years and never had an eight catch season. But he had eight in one game against the Cowboys.
The Giants scored 37 and 34 points in their two games this year against Dallas, 71 of the 511 total points the Cowboys surrendered. For the first time in their 66 year history, Dallas gave up a season average of more than 30 points per game. That makes this Cowboys defense the worst in franchise history. Matt Eberflus will take the fall for the disaster–he may have already been fired before you’re reading this. But that means Dallas will have its fourth different defensive coordinator in four years. In other words, nothing is going to change. Who’s in charge of this?
Second, they finished the season at 7-9-1. After beating the Chiefs and the Eagles in a five day Thanksgiving week stretch, Dallas lost four of their last five games to teams with records of 9-8, 8-9, 11-6, and 4-13. They had Dak Prescott for all 17 games this season after he started only eight for Dallas last year. And they improved by half a game, from 7-10 to 7-9-1. Who’s in charge of this?
Third, this is the 15th year out of the past 30 in which the Cowboys have finished at or below .500. Jerry’s team has not won a divisional playoff game in 30 seasons, and half of those seasons they have failed to produce a winning record. It’s staggering to study their win-loss tallies during this 30-year tragedy and see in black-and-white how the Cowboys’ consistently trend toward mediocrity. Or worse.
In 1996, the first season after their last conference championship game appearance, Dallas went 10-6. But then they went 6-10 the next season. In 2003, they went 10-6, but then finished 6-10 the next season. In 2014, Dallas went 12-4, but reversed it to 4-12 the next year. In 2018, the Cowboys went 10-6, but hit 8-8 before getting back to 6-10. It’s remarkable. The Cowboys have only had eleven seasons of double-digit wins during this 30-year drought, and only once did they manage to string two of those seasons back-to-back. That was Mike McCarthy’s stretch of three straight 12-5 years, which resulted in a playoff record of 1-3. One Wild Card win in Tom Brady’s last game at Tampa Bay. And you know what has happened since. Nothing changes. Who’s in charge of this?
Lastly, I noticed that the Atlanta Falcons fired their head coach and GM yesterday after winning their last four games of the season. The Falcons have played in four NFC Championship Games and two Super Bowls since the Cowboys last did either. The Falcons! The Falcons’ standards are higher than the Cowboys’. The Falcons demand more. The Falcons don’t want to be the Cowboys; the Cowboys should aspire to be like the Falcons. For crying out loud! We’re talking about the Falcons!!
Seattle has made three championship game appearances and three Super Bowls during these 30-years, and might be headed to another. Carolina has been to four conference championships and two Super Bowls during the Dallas drought–the Panthers, for pity’s sake!! The Bears have played in two conference title games and the Saints in three, with two Super Bowls between them! The Eagles, Green Bay, and the 49ers have each played in eight NFC Conference Championship Games and a total of ten Super Bowls in these 30-years. Every team manages to get into an NFC Championship Game; just dumb luck and averages almost guarantees it. Shoot, the Arizona Cardinals have played in two title games and one Super Bowl during this disaster. The Commanders have been there. The Lions! The Giants have made three Super Bowls since ’95!
Meanwhile, Dallas hasn’t won a single divisional playoff game. And doesn’t look close.
Who’s in charge of this?
Allan









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