Cowboys at Chargers: The good, the bad, and the ugly 2
Los Angeles, CA - October 16: Dallas Cowboys Dak Prescott looks to escape the pocket against the Los Angeles Chargers at SoFi Stadium on Monday, Oct. 16, 2023, in Los Angeles, CA. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Cowboys at Chargers: The good, the bad, and the ugly

October 19, 2023
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For the first time this season, Dallas Cowboys fans strolled confidently into work on a victory Tuesday.

The Cowboys football team rolled into Los Angeles on Monday Night Football, and stole the lightning bolt like Percy Jackson did back in 2010.

Dallas improved their record to 4-2 on the season, and are now on their bye week before coming back the following week to take on the other Los Angeles team, the Rams.

The game didn’t start in ideal fashion, with the Cowboys going three & out, and the Chargers driving 42 yards for a touchdown with little resistance.

It felt like one of those games, and the frustration carried over from the San Francisco game.

Luckily, the defense tightened up, and held the Chargers to 10 points for the entire rest of the game.

Last week’s version of this article was titled “The bad, the bad, and the ugly” because there were no silver linings to speak of.

This week is different, so let’s dive in to some good, some bad, and some ugly from the 20-17 victory at SoFi Stadium.

The Good

Here are some things that went well for the Cowboys this past Monday night.

 1
Dak Prescott scored a rushing touchdown in the opening quarter.

Dak Prescott

Let’s start with the quarterback.

Dak Prescott had arguably his best game of the season when the Cowboys needed him the most.

The eighth year signal caller finished with season highs in passing yards (272), yards per attempt (9.1), yards per completion (13.0), rushing attempts (7), and rushing yards (40).

Throw in a 70% completion percentage and zero turnovers, and Prescott had himself a game.

Dak continually evaded pass rushers, and picked perfect moments to scramble for first downs to keep the chains moving for the offense.

For the first time in 15 games, Prescott had a passing touchdown and a rushing touchdown in the same game.

If he keeps this up, the offense will be in fine shape moving forward.

DeMarcus Lawrence Ranked 10th Best Edge Rusher By ESPN
Cowboys DE DeMarcus Lawrence

Rush Defense

An Achilles heel in the losses versus the Cardinals and 49ers, the rush defense is a completely different animal in the Cowboys’ four wins.

It’s almost like being able to stop the run allows other areas of the defense to shine. Who would’ve thought?

The Chargers, boosted by the return of RB Austin Ekeler, did not have the success they hoped to have against the Dallas front seven.

Led by veteran DE DeMarcus Lawrence, the Cowboys held the Chargers to just 53 yards on 23 carries, a 2.3 yard per carry average.

The longest rush allowed was nine yards, and that was a scramble by Justin Herbert.

The performance was especially impressive considering top LB Leighton Vander Esch did not suit up with a neck injury.

That injury will sideline him for weeks, and if the Chargers game was any indication of how the rush defense will respond with him out of the lineup, the team will be ok.

The Bad

Here are some aspects of the game that are not up to standards, but maybe no reason to panic either.

Cowboys at Chargers: The good, the bad, and the ugly
Cowboys QB Dak Prescott sacked by Chargers DE Khalil Mack

Pass Protection

The Chargers field a pair of edge rushers who no offensive tackle in the league would be excited to line up against.

Joey Bosa and Khalil Mack have not performed to the standards that the team expected when they signed Mack, but they are still effective.

Bosa was coming off of injury, and appeared to be slowed by that.

His teammate was coming off of a game where he registered six sacks, and the NFL world was thinking Mack was back to his prime.

He didn’t hit six sacks, but he did contribute one sack to the five sack total.

Prescott is facing a disturbing pattern of being sacked more each week.

After not allowing a sack at all versus the Giants in Week 1, the sack totals after that are one, two, three, three, and finally five this past Monday.

One of the perks of the Texas Coast offense is that the ball comes out quickly, so it’s alarming how many sacks Prescott is taking.

It appears teams are getting to Prescott by completing stunts up front that the offensive line is having trouble blocking.

Hopefully there are some tweaks made during the bye week.

The Ugly

This section is reserved for the worst aspect of the game, and something we hope to not see anymore.

Cowboys at Chargers: The good, the bad, and the ugly 1
Cowboys HC Mike McCarthy

Penalties

Wasn’t this supposed to get fixed this offseason?

For two years running now, penalties have greatly affected the Cowboys in big games.

Dating back to the 2021 Wildcard loss versus the 49ers where the Cowboys had 14 penalties, we have been waiting for the discipline to kick in.

The Chargers accepted 11 penalties on Monday night, and that’s not counting the three or four flags that were picked up after Los Angeles decided to decline.

No team is perfect, and there are some penalties that are easy for the referees to call in the heat of a play, but the mental mistakes are concerning.

Of the 11 penalties, five of them were of the pre-snap variety.

One 12 men on the field, one illegal shift, one illegal formation, and two offsides penalties.

Los Angeles was given four 1st downs by penalty, which made up nearly 25% of their total for the game.

Hopefully a reset on the bye week will show us a more disciplined team on the other end.

2 Comments

  1. Dak still holds onto the ball too long instead of throwing it away. Most of his sacks involve him holding onto the ball and taking the sack instead of throwing it away or pulling it down and scrabbling when there is a lane wide open. Instead, all too often, he hesitates, the lane closes, and he ends up eating the sack. Or worse, he throws an ill-conceived pass that gets intercepted. He never learned the lesson on when and how to throw the ball away.

  2. Good article. QB1 played well, run defense was really good, bottling up Ekeler, and some of their penalties were self-inflicted. On the other hand, that roughing the passer and TE by Chargers were definitely debatable. It’s getting to the point you can’t touch the QB anymore. And with so many penalties being called and then add in all those commercials, the game was not that enjoyable except for the W. It’s like after almost every play you’re looking for a flag. Refs were too damn involved IMO.

    Herbert was off, and that was probably made a pretty big difference. Unlike him and fortunately for Cowboys, he missed wide open WRs. Toward the end the of game they put a lot of pressure on him to close it out. If I nit-pick, QB1 could have closed out the game the drive before, but he missed a wide-open player, I think was Pollard, in the end zone.

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