As Cowboys rally from 21-point deficit to upset Eagles, Jerry Jones and Co. hope they just saw microcosm of 2025 season
- - As Cowboys rally from 21-point deficit to upset Eagles, Jerry Jones and Co. hope they just saw microcosm of 2025 season
Jori Epstein November 24, 2025 at 12:25 AM
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ARLINGTON, Texas â In the Dallas Cowboys locker room, there was reason to feel disheartened at halftime. Had the club created a bingo card of things that could have gone wrong, multiple players would already have cashed out.
A turnover on downs? Check. Penalties that sent the Philadelphia Eagles offense back on the field when theyâd otherwise been stopped? Check. A lost fumble? Yep. And donât forget to check off the red-zone interception.
The Cowboys had fallen into a 21-point hole early, even if a touchdown with 24 seconds to play before halftime reduced the gap to two scores. This Dallas team hadn't won consecutive games all season, much less beat anyone with a winning record. So would they now upset the eight-win defending Super Bowl champions?
Oh, and the Eagles were set to receive the ball first in the second half.
Quarterback Dak Prescott entered that halftime locker room and thought about the resilience he embodies and addressed his teammates accordingly. He contributed his own share of challenges to the hole. But he told them nonetheless that he loved this.
Yes, he loved this 21-point hole.
âI love being down,â Prescott said. âI donât know why and couldnât tell you. Trust me, itâs fun when youâre up. You can laugh and joke. But when youâre down, it requires such a unique place that you have to get to in resilience, focus and taking it one play at a time.
âI love that.â
Dak Prescott got his head in the game on this game-tying, 8-yard touchdown run. (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images) (Stacy Revere via Getty Images)
So the Cowboys tapped into the world of complementary football, and they began to answer. Theyâd still miss a field goal in the third quarter and turn over the ball on downs again in the fourth. But a previously maligned Cowboys defense denied the Eagles points on eight straight possessions. A Cowboys offense that struggled to find rhythm in the first half settled slowly but surely and then suddenly and explosively.
Prescott finished with 354 yards and two touchdowns passing in addition to a rushing score.
Scoring 24 unanswered points, the Cowboys rallied to upset one of the best teams in the NFC.
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Team owner Jerry Jones, who a week ago had acknowledged the Cowboys' season was sure to end before the playoffs, started to wonder if maybe his team still has a chance.
âVery, very much,â Jones said after the 24-21 win. âThis game tonight, this was our season.â
Breaking record fueled Prescott, but not in way you might think
In the tides of emotion that characterized an at-least tipsy game, an early third-quarter display on the scoreboard bothered Prescott.
With a 9-yard completion to George Pickens, Prescott surpassed 13-year veteran Tony Romoâs 34,183 passing yards for the Cowboysâ all-time record.
Two plays after he broke the record, Eagles linebacker Nakobe Dean sacked Prescott and forced a punt. The Cowboys were still in a 14-point hole. Prescott shushed his teammatesâ attempts at congratulations, telling them they could discuss any accolades after they win. And they would win, he believed.
âInitially when I looked up there and saw that, there was a little emotion that hit me that I damn sure wasnât ready for and didnât know would come,â Prescott said. âThatâs why I countered that with anger. Like, âLet that go â weâll celebrate it later.
ââI donât want to hear anything about that right now.ââ
Late in the third quarter, Prescott went on a tear. No matter that CeeDee Lamb had dropped most of his seven missed targets on the day already, including a miss on second-and-5. With 3:02 left in the third quarter, facing third-and-5, Prescott dropped back and mailed a ball deep down the right sideline.
Lamb adjusted to catch it despite Eagles cornerback Cooper DeJeanâs tight coverage. The Cowboysâ 2020 first-round draft pick hauled it in for 48 yards and a red-zone entry. Three plays later, Prescott found second-year undrafted tight end Brevyn Span-Ford for a touchdown.
Dallasâ defense contained Philadelphia to a 56-yard field-goal attempt, which they would miss. Prescott responded on the next play with another deep ball â this time to the other sideline, to his other top receiver.
Dak to CeeDee for 50 on the last drive, Dak to George Pickens for 43 on this onepic.twitter.com/1iIccMKHnd
â Jori Epstein (@JoriEpstein) November 24, 2025
George Pickens caught an airborne 50-yarder through double coverage from DeJean and Eagles safety Sidney Brown. Prescott scored the game-tying touchdown with his feet â well, except for when he left his feet to somersault into the end zone and tie the game.
âIt was a play that is particularly drawn up to beat a man [coverage],â Prescott said. âYou bring the motion for an indicator and I realized that it wasnât man and Iâm going to have to take a drop and allow for the play to develop. I did that and had a rush up the edge, and I just got out.â
Tight end Jake Ferguson blocked his defender, and Prescott evaded the rest of the visitors.
âI didnât want to get hit in the knees, so I jumped and got a good roll,â he said. âAfter that, it was just electric.
âAt that moment, I knew the game was going to be ours.â
Two Cowboys fumble recoveries and a Brandon Aubrey kick later, it was.
With Chiefs and Lions coming quickly, Cowboys will find answers to questions
Six days prior, the Cowboys had dismantled the Las Vegas Raiders on the road in a prime-time game. The Cowboys looked complete and confident as Prescott alternated between Lamb and Pickens as his poison of choice and the newly assembled Cowboysâ defensive front tore apart the Raidersâ offensive line.
But beating a team that has since fallen to 2-9 begged the question: What did the victory mean? Sure, it counted in the win column. But would Dallas ever beat a club with a winning record?
As they faced a 21-point hole early Sunday, the answer seemed trending clearly in one direction. When the currents reversed, a strong offense led by Pickensâ nine catches for 146 yards and a touchdown deserved credit. But the defense, Prescott emphasized, kept the team competitive until the offense belatedly awoke.
A defensive interior front of Osa Odighizuwa, August acquisition Kenny Clark and trade deadline acquisition Quinnen Williams frustrated an Eagles front that has weathered injuries including to star right tackle Lane Johnson.
Cowboys DL runs off field with Marshawn Kneeland flag pic.twitter.com/tz7C87iGG9
â Jori Epstein (@JoriEpstein) November 24, 2025
The Cowboys hit Hurts six times and pressured him additionally. And, unusual for Cowboys defenses in recent years, they contained Barkley to 2.2 yards per rush (Barkley did catch seven passes for 52 yards atop his 22 rushing yards).
Eagles brass credited a five-man Cowboys front they werenât expecting, Hurts referring to âhow theyâre built now given the three interior defenders they haveâ in explaining the defensive shift. Jones celebrated his deals and his ability to poach Williams after interest in the preseason didnât materialize into a deal.
But everyone knew: Right now, the 5-5-1 Cowboys have the NFCâs 10th best record in a playoff format that will take just seven of them. More is necessary.
The Cowboys will have an imminent chance to ride this momentum on Thanksgiving Day against the defending AFC champion Kansas City Chiefs and then a week later, in prime time, against a Detroit Lions team that last season claimed the NFCâs top seed. The most daunting stretch of Dallasâ schedule has arrived. With it, the Cowboys can accurately gauge how much theyâve actually improved.
Jerry Jones says of course he wants George Pickens on Cowboys next year. So why not work on extension now?Jerry: pic.twitter.com/Cr4XguOUeR
â Jori Epstein (@JoriEpstein) November 24, 2025
If the Cowboys upset both the Chiefs and Lions, their playoff chances will rise from 13% to 49%, according to The New York Timesâ NFL playoff simulator.
Hopes are higher than they were a week and two weeks ago after the Cowboysâ first consecutive wins of the Brian Schottenheimer era. And yet â an observer of recent Cowboy history will fairly argue that the Cowboys upsetting their division rivals at home may not be the pivot point they need.
Sundayâs win improved Prescott to 22-2 against division teams at home in his career, the .917 record the highest division home winning clip of any quarterback since the NFL merger. Beating the Eagles is standard in the Prescott era. A deep playoff run is not yet.
Can Chiefs and Lions victories bring Dallas closer to the chance to change that?
The question is swirling in Cowboysâ players minds. And itâs a tick less outlandish than it felt a week ago.
âYou just go out and take each championship opportunity as its own,â Schottenheimer said. âAnd when itâs all said and done, after 17 games, weâre going to either be in the playoffs or not.
âIf we keep playing the way weâre playing right now, I like our chances.â
Brian Schottenheimer is hyped after his first home win over Eagles as Cowboys head coach https://t.co/Z6LcKeqHQX pic.twitter.com/ZzwB84gBnv
â Jori Epstein (@JoriEpstein) November 24, 2025
Prescott does, too. He declined to rank the victory among his favorites in 10 Dallas seasons, even as the Cowboys tied their record for largest deficit (21 points) before a comeback and Prescott claimed the franchiseâs passing yards record.
Sure, he admitted, he told trainers he wanted to keep the jersey â a sentimentality he doesnât often permit. But to rank this game among his favorites will hinge on the teamâs performance the rest of the season.
âHopefully, I can look back and say this was the moment, this was the time, this game meant everything to this season,â Prescott said. âRight now, just staying where my feet are. Super thankful for this team, for the men, for this opportunity.
âItâs a game that I wonât forget.â
Source: âAOL Sportsâ