Dak Prescott Sends Message on Cowboys’ Playoff Hopes

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Dak Prescott has confidence in his team moving forward.
With a big win in the books, Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott believes there’s more ahead.
Prescott expects they will only get better amid the motivation found in honor of late teammate Marshawn Kneeland. The Cowboys played for the first time since the Nov. 6 tragedy and delivered a 33-16 blowout win over the Las Vegas Raiders on Monday.
That has the Cowboys at 10th in the NFC with a 4-5-1 record and a tough slate of games ahead. Yet, Prescott believes they can turn around what has been a mostly dismal season.
“So, it’s about intensifying everything that we do to carry the legacy of Marshawn,” Prescott told reporters afterward. “Then over the next three games with the opponents coming in and us wanting to get to where we want to go, everything’s just got to heighten.”
“The discipline, the focus, the intensity, the aggressiveness, and that’s at practice. That will just carry over into the game,” Prescott added. “I’ve always said, ‘the game’s a celebration of the work that you put in throughout the week.'”
Dallas has a gauntlet ahead in the next three games with the Philadelphia Eagles (8-2), Kansas City Chiefs (5-5), and Detroit Lions (6-4). Then, the Cowboys finish the season with the Minnesota Vikings (4-6), Los Angeles Chargers (7-4), Washington Commanders (3-8), and New York Giants (2-9).
Cowboys Turned Around Slow Start Against Raiders
For Monday, the Cowboys looked the part of a team aiming for the playoffs. Dallas took hold of the game after a 6-3 Raiders lead and pulled away with five consecutive scoring drives, sparked by Prescott’s three touchdown passes in the second quarter.
“Obviously, coming out there tonight and playing with the style that he played with, the intensity, the effort, the finish, super proud of the guys,” Prescott said. “This doesn’t put a cap on it. We’re going to continue to move forward, shining a light on Marshawn and carrying his legacy. And we need to play like this every week moving forward.”
Prescott went 25-33 for 268 yards and four touchdowns. Wide receiver George Pickens made Prescott’s job easy with nine receptions for 144 yards and a score, and fellow wideout CeeDee Lamb had five receptions for 66 yards and a touchdown. Tight end Jake Ferguson added four receptions for 16 yards and a score.
Cowboys running back Javonte Williams stepped up with 22 carries for 93 yards on the ground to support the passing attack. The Cowboys defense, meanwhile, played one of its best games of the season.
Defensive tackle Quinnen Williams posted 1.5 sacks and four tackles in his debut. Osa Odighizuwa and Jame Houston had a sack apiece, and safety Markquese Bell had a pick.
Dak Prescott Pays Tribute to Marshawn Kneeland
The teams observed a moment of silence for Kneeland before the game, and the Cowboys players wore helmet decals with No. 94 and had shirts with Kneeland’s picture. Prescott’s wrist tape had “one love” on it for Kneeland.
“We love Marshawn and will continue to shine a light for him,” Prescott said.
For Prescott, it was close to home as he also lost his brother, Jace, to suicide five years ago.
Mike McCoy has been the opposite of everything the Titans needed in an interim HC, and there's only one option going forward

Tennessee Titans interim head coach Mike McCoy has been in charge for nearly a month and a half now, and things have gone about as poorly for him as they could possibly go.

It was painfully obvious early on that he is no good at this. The decision-making behind his appointment when Brian Callahan was fired made sense on paper: he would be the least disruptive option who has the requisite experience to handle the rest of the year. He’s not a coordinator in charge of a unit, and he’s been a head coach before. He can be a high-floor stopgap.
That was the rationale everybody, myself included, rolled with. And on paper, it made sense. But we’d never spoken to McCoy a single time since coming to Tennessee, despite asking to multiple times. In hindsight, it’s very clear why that was never allowed to happen.
With seven games left to play, every Sunday is already a groan fest that he finds a way to invoke from fans. Calls for him to become the first fired interim head coach anybody can recall are rampant. But can you even do that, fire an interim? And would the Titans ever consider it?
Why firing Mike McCoy would be justified
I cannot push back on anybody already done with McCoy this year. He is not good at this. It’s not personal at all, I just have not ever been out on a guy faster in my time covering the league. Making him the interim has quickly proven to be a big fat mistake.
He is the opposite of everything that an interim is supposed to be. Interims typically come in and loosen things up, but McCoy has tightened it all. Interims typically work to endear themselves to the team, the media, and the fanbase. McCoy has done nothing but distance and alienate himself. Interims typically come in and change some things, they try some different things on Sundays. McCoy hasn’t done any of that, at least nothing of substance or note. Interims typically have an ascendant future in the NFL, McCoy does not. Interims typically take chances, operating with nothing to lose. McCoy has been defiantly conservative, safe, and stale.
That conservatism has robbed Cam Ward and the other young pieces that make up the nucleus of this team of valuable opportunities. It’s kept them from gaining experience in big moments. It’s demonstrated a complete lack of faith in them to rise to the occasion. And I’d argue it’s robbed them of the chance to do some winning, which is something they cannot learn to do without actually doing it!
This football team stinks right now. The harsh reality is that they cannot out-efficient their opponents on Sunday. A lot of football teams take the approach that “if we just play our brand of football today, we will win this game”. And for many teams, that’s true. For these Titans, it is not. They’re going to have to take some risks to win more games this season. And McCoy simply is not willing to do that.
As far as I’m aware, no interim has ever been fired before in the NFL. I’m not sure it’s ever happened in any sport, for that matter. It would be a bold, unforeseen move for Amy Adams Strunk to make. But is there one person in this fanbase or in the local media who wouldn’t understand it? There is not. So I don’t blame people who want to see it.
Why the Titans won’t move off McCoy until January
That being said, it’s never going to happen. At the very top of the list of reasons why is that it would be a national embarrassment. Amy Adams Strunk and her football leadership have already garnered for themselves a reputation of incompetence. Fair or not, the big talk they talked this offseason about stabilizing the franchise and embracing patience was completely torched by their shortsighted decision to fire Brian Callahan after six weeks with a rookie QB. It seemed clear to me at the time, and is certainly crystal clear today, that they should have stuck with the plan. They should have kept Callahan as the play calling head coach until the end of the season or until he lost the locker room, whichever came first, and then fired the whole staff after the season. Yanking play-calling from him after Week 3 and firing him after Week 6 were both foolish, reactionary moves. And that falls squarely at Amy Adams Strunk’s feet. She wanted to beat the allegations of being a rotating door of incompetence in Tennessee, and she failed.
She’s aware of this reputation, though. The entire building is. So the last thing they want to do is go making history by firing their head coach after 6 weeks, and then their interim after 6, and then moving on from the second interim after 6. What a horrendous mess that is when you say it out loud, no matter how justified you may feel in each individual case.
The other big reason they wouldn’t do it is because you would have to replace him with somebody. And this was really the driving factor behind making him the choice in the first place. Special Teams Coordinator John Fassel is somebody they want to keep around on the next coaching staff. Elevating him to interim and then trying to demote him back to coordinator is just messy, for both Fassel and the next head coach. That’s a legitimate reason to stay away from doing that. As for Defensive Coordinator Dennard Wilson and Offensive Coordinator Nick Holz, it’s pretty clear that this front office doesn’t want them leaving their units to try to be a head coach for two months. And promoting anybody from the position coaching ranks at this point is a gamble on inexperience.
So McCoy will go on serving out his final seven weeks of football, and then his time in Tennessee will be over without a second guess. I do not expect him to be considered for the full time job, not even interviewed as a formality. It's a shame he's embracing this reputation for himself at what could be his final stop anywhere in the NFL, it's a shame Cam Ward and the other future pieces of this team have to operate like this in their remaining games of valuable experience, and it's a shame Titans fans have to put up with it all. The Giants just promoted an interim with a bright future in this league; the Titans should take a page out of that playbook the next time they're in a position to make this choice.