Cowboys Climb to Top of NFC East With Sloppy Win Over Giants

This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

The New York Sun

IRVING, Texas – The Dallas Cowboys and New York Giants wanted to find out yesterday which of them looked ready to challenge for supremacy in the NFC East.


The Cowboys won, but the answer to the bigger question might be neither.


Dallas committed four turnovers, missed two field goals, and allowed a tying touchdown with 19 seconds left, yet overcame it all with a 45-yard field goal by Jose Cortez on the opening drive of overtime for a 16-13 victory over the equally inept Giants.


“I feel pretty fortunate,” Cowboys coach Bill Parcells said.


He should. Coming off a throttling victory over the Philadelphia Eagles, Dallas (4-2) gave New York every chance to put this game away early. But Eli Manning and the Giants (3-2) couldn’t do it. They trailed 7-6 midway through the third quarter after the Cowboys had already committed all of their turnovers. Then the Giants started giving the ball away: four turnovers in five drives, including a fumble at the Dallas 1 with 1:18 left while down by seven.


“We just shot ourselves in the foot,” Manning said. “We were letting them get the best of us.”


Keeping with the game’s theme, the Cowboys wasted their chances, too. Manning wound up throwing a 24-yard touchdown pass to Jeremy Shockey that forced overtime.


Dallas won the overtime coin toss and never gave the ball back. Drew Bledsoe moved the Cowboys 51 yards in eight plays and Cortez made it pay off, giving them consecutive victories for the first time this season – and first place in the NFC East.


“It was luck, totally luck,” Dallas receiver Keyshawn Johnson said. “We’re entitled to have a bad game and still win, at least once.”


The flip side was felt in the Giants locker room, where the only solace was knowing the rematch will be at Giants Stadium on December 4.


“This feels like a blown opportunity,” defensive end Michael Strahan said. “We should’ve won. … You’re not going to win when you handicap yourself.”


Bledsoe finished 26-of-37 for 312 yards, with a touchdown, an interception, and two lost fumbles, one on a snap. Johnson caught eight passes for 120 yards, his most since 2002, but also fumbled, although it did not prompt a sideline confrontation with Bledsoe, as happened last week.


Anthony Thomas started in place of injured Julius Jones and ran 21 times for 47 yards. Rookie Marion Barber III was Dallas’s most effective running back in the second half, finishing with 30 yards on 11 carries and two receptions for 21 yards.


Manning was 14-of-30 for 215 yards and a touchdown, but he ended a streak of 125 attempts without an interception and lost a fumble. Shockey caught five passes for 129 yards and Plaxico Burress had 55 yards on five catches, with a fumble. Tiki Barber gained 64 yards on 14 carries.


Dallas limited New York to 92 yards and four first downs through three quarters. The Giants didn’t convert on third down until there was less than four minutes left in the game and finished 1-of-11.


“The offense really let down the defense,” Shockey said. “We left them out there on the field too long.”


The Cowboys bailed themselves out of one jam when Roy Williams knocked the ball from rookie running back Brandon Jacobs just shy of the goal line with 1:18 left. However, that forced Bledsoe to take snaps practically in the end zone and he couldn’t run out the clock. That gave Manning the ball with 52 yards and 52 seconds to go, leading to the tying score.


Bledsoe opened overtime by completing passes of 10, 13, and 26 yards. A pass interference penalty on Antonio Pierce gave Dallas another first down, then a third-down incompletion to Johnson left it up to Cortez. The Giants tried icing him with a timeout, but – like most things both teams tried yesterday – it didn’t work.


The New York Sun

© 2025 The New York Sun Company, LLC. All rights reserved.

Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. The material on this site is protected by copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used.

The New York Sun

Sign in or  Create a free account

or
By continuing you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use