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Tag: Cowboys Commanders

  • How a failed play last week led to the Cowboys’ longest touchdown of the season

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    In the Dallas Cowboys’ Christmas Day win over the Washington Commanders, the offense was put in a familiar situation in the second quarter.

    Up 14-3 and pinned deep in their own territory after a strong punt from the Commanders’ Tress Way, the Cowboys were looking to put together a long scoring drive to take the air out of Northwest Stadium. However, an incomplete pass from quarterback Dak Prescott and a 1-yard loss set the offense back even farther for a third-and-11 from its own 14-yard line.

    The Cowboys deployed top two receivers CeeDee Lamb and George Pickens on the outside, while speedster KaVontae Turpin was put in the slot. Expecting a disguised form of Cover 2 (technically called Tricky 2) where the opposing defense shows like they have one safety deep just to roll the second safety back after the snap, the Cowboys’ plan was to take advantage of that by having Turpin run right by the rolling safety.

    “I think everybody knows my speed,” Turpin said. “When they see me flying down the middle and nobody is touching me, they know it’s over with by the time Dak throws the ball. They know it’s over with.”

    Turpin streaked across the middle of the field right by the rolling safety, and Prescott put it on his chest around the 50-yard line. From there, Turpin, with his world-class speed, ran untouched to the end zone for the Cowboys’ longest play all season.

    “They went to what we call Tricky 2, where they’re trying to ask guys that probably aren’t used to running with guys that run 4.2 [40-yard dash time like Turpin] down the middle of field,” head coach Brian Schottenheimer said. “And we’ve repped that quite a bit. We’ve talked about that quite a bit.”

    In fact, they’ve repped it so much that you only have to go back to last week’s loss to the Los Angeles Chargers to see where the Cowboys tried to run the same concept. Facing another third-and-long situation with roughly seven minutes left in the game, the Chargers’ defense ran a form of Tricky 2 to try and disguise the rolling safety, Derwin James. Turpin got a bad start and couldn’t find the hole and instead pulled up early. Prescott threw the ball, and it fell incomplete 10 yards away from Turpin.

    “Similar type of deal, cover two, the difference was Derwin [James] kind of genuinely stays on top of the safety,” Schottenheimer said. “And [Turpin] just felt like he couldn’t get there. We give those guys a chance to kind of read it. And when they can certainly go, sometimes they go. When they can’t, they have other responses that they can do, but it’s exactly the same type of thing. Another third-and-long call, expecting Tricky 2. I mean, that’s really cool, exactly a similar situation.”

    That play ended the drive and, for all intents and purposes, ended a comeback attempt for the Cowboys in Week 16. One week later, it helped give Dallas a three-possession lead that the team would not relinquish.

    “Great play-calling knowing that they’re going to a Cover 2 or some kind of Tricky 2,” Prescott said. “The key to that one was they actually jumped offsides, and we pulled the ball faster. It ended up turning into the same play: Three guys just going vertical. I think with the jump offsides, and those guys trying to panic and get back, Turpin did a good job of getting over the top and I saw it. With a guy like that, you just want to put it down the middle and give him a chance, and he went and did the rest.”

    “That’s what you love about him in the slot,” Schottenheimer said. “Because if they do want to try to double the outside studs, [Turpin] could hurt you in so many ways. I knew he wasn’t getting caught, by the way. The way he caught it, it was like bye, bye. It was like Forrest Gump, and it was like, yeah, they aren’t catching him.”


    Game schedule dates, times, locations

    • Dec. 22 at New Orleans, 7 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Dec. 23 vs. Denver, 7 p.m., NBC
    • Dec. 25 at Golden State, 4 p.m., ABC, ESPN
    • Dec. 27 at Sacramento, 4 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Dec. 29 at Portland, 9:30 p.m., NBC
    • Dec. 29 vs. Jackson State, 7 p.m., ESPN+
    • Jan. 3 vs. Baylor, 1 p.m., TNT
    • Jan. 6 at Kansas, 8 p.m., ESPN or ESPN2
    • Jan. 10 vs. Arizona, 3 p.m., ESPN or ESPN2
    • Jan. 14 at BYU, 10 p.m., ESPN2
    • Dec. 31 at BYU, 8 p.m., ESPN+
    • Jan. 3 at Utah, 8 p.m., ESPN+
    • Jan. 7 vs. Oklahoma State, 6:30 p.m., ESPN+
    • Jan. 11 vs. Arizona State, 4 p.m., ESPN+
    • Jan. 14 at West Virginia, 6 p.m., ESPN+
    • Dec. 23 at Detroit, 5:30 p.m., TNT, truTV, Victory+
    • Dec. 27 vs. Chicago, 7 p.m., Victory+
    • Dec. 31 vs. Buffalo, 7 p.m., Victory+
    • Jan. 1 at Chicago, 7:30 p.m., Victory+
    • Jan. 4 vs. Montreal, 1 p.m., Victory+
    • Alamo Bowl
    • Dec. 30 vs. USC (at San Antonio), 8 p.m., ESPN
    • New Mexico Bowl
    • Dec. 27 vs. San Diego State (at Albuquerque, N.M.), 4:45 p.m., ESPN
    • Jan. 3 or 4 at N.Y. Giants, TBD
    • End of season
    • May 1 NASCAR Truck Series: SpeedyCash.com 250
    • May 2 NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series: Andy’s Frozen Custard 340
    • May 3 NASCAR Cup Series: Wurth 400

    This story was originally published December 26, 2025 at 12:35 PM.

    Nick Harris

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Nick Harris is the Dallas Cowboys beat reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He has experience working on the beat for DallasCowboys.com and previous work experience at Yahoo Sports/Rivals and 247Sports.

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    Nick Harris

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  • 5 takeaways from Cowboys’ win over Commanders: Defense doesn’t steal Christmas

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    In just the sixth Christmas game in franchise history, the Dallas Cowboys made a festive trip to the nation’s capital and took down the Washington Commanders 30-23 on Thursday.

    Both teams were eliminated from playoff contention before the day began, but division pride and the opportunity to play in front of a national Netflix audience saw both teams keep most of its starters in the mix.

    For the Cowboys, the running back duo of Javonte Williams and Malik Davis helped power things offensively, while a big day from defensive end Jadeveon Clowney (1.5 sacks) kept the defensive effort at least palatable.

    Just one game remains in the 2025 season for the Cowboys, as they will get the shot to finish at .500 next week against the New York Giants. But for now, let’s take a look at the takeaways from the back end of a clean sweep of the Commanders for Dallas this season:

    Defense can’t steal Christmas this time

    There are no other ways to write how bad the Cowboys’ defense has been in 2025. But in a game where it had just about every natural advantage to succeed, it held up.

    Was the unit perfect? Absolutely not. Starting in just his 10th career game across 11 seasons, Commanders quarterback Josh Johnson’s life wasn’t made particularly difficult. In addition, running back Jacory Croskey-Merritt ran for 105 yards and two scores.

    The offense controlled the time of possession battle to help out the other side, and the defense still gave up over 300 yards, but the group led by defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus did what it needed to do.

    Call it a Christmas miracle.

    Javonte, the hard-nosed reindeer

    If running back Javonte Williams hadn’t already cemented his value for the future, his first-half performance Thursday should have sealed the deal.

    It was a prove-it year for Williams, and he delivered with his 13th total touchdown Thursday. He carried the ball 13 times for 54 yards, including a fourth-down conversion that saw him get hit twice behind the line before driving forward to move the chains. That came after a carry on the first drive that saw him drive Commanders cornerback Mike Sainristil into the ground on a truck hit that drew some attention from the stadium.

    A physical, tough runner may have a shorter career than most running backs — Williams did leave Thursday’s game in the first half with a shoulder injury he’s been battling for three weeks. And yes, he’s 25 years old. But considering the consistent production he’s given the offense throughout the season, re-signing him in the offseason to a multiyear deal is a no-brainer.

    Take the naughty with the nice with Turpin

    If you did a full-season evaluation of wide receiver/kick returner KaVontae Turpin, you’d see a mixed bag of good, bad and ugly. On Thursday, that was all bottled up into one sequence.

    After letting yet another punt go over his head that was downed inside the 5-yard line, Turpin made up for the bad field position by getting loose out of the slot on third-and-11, hauling in a perfect Dak Prescott deep ball and dashing through the grass for an 86-yard score.

    Is his three-year, $18 million contract worth the bad moments like the many misjudged punts and untimely drops/fumbles? Probably not, but I bet you won’t be complaining when the moments flip to the positive side.

    Better underdog: Rudolph or Malik Davis?

    Like running back Malik Davis throughout most of his career, no one thought Rudolph had the ability to take over when the moment mattered — but both saved Christmas when called upon.

    After Williams went down in the first half with his shoulder injury, Davis came in and picked up the load, carrying the ball 20 times for 103 yards — both career-highs. In a game where protecting Prescott was straight-up ugly (more on that later), handing the ball off to Davis became the best medicine for a struggling offense in the second half.

    When the Cowboys needed Davis, he followed through. When a starting running back goes down and opportunities are left to a player who didn’t even start the season on the roster, it’s tough to expect much. But behind Davis’ shiny bright running down the hole, Dallas was able to escape with this one.

    Leave milk and cookies out for Joe Milton III

    It’s been an incredible season for Prescott. He will finish the season with his fourth-highest single-season passing total and will be top-three in the league in yards. He will have fought through a disappointing season for the overall team by powering a top-three offense in the NFL.

    However, it’s time to shut him down.

    The Cowboys are already working without starting left tackle Tyler Guyton, and the protection has been shaky over the past four games. Entering Thursday, his previous three games saw him get pressured 52 times and sacked eight times. Against the Commanders, he was brought down six times and took a couple of ugly hits.

    It’s understandable to want to play on Christmas in front of a national crowd. But entering a game in Week 18 that actually means nothing, it’s time to let Prescott ride the pine and send backup quarterback Joe Milton III onto the field against the Giants.

    This story was originally published December 25, 2025 at 3:09 PM.

    Nick Harris

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Nick Harris is the Dallas Cowboys beat reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He has experience working on the beat for DallasCowboys.com and previous work experience at Yahoo Sports/Rivals and 247Sports.

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