Jaw-dropping Ezekiel continues Cowboys' impressive run

Dallas running back Ezekiel Elliott (top) gets a lift from center Travis Frederick after scoring the game-winning touchdown to lead the Cowboys past Pittsburgh 35-30 on Sunday. Elliott finished with 209 yards of total offense and three touchdowns as Dallas won its eighth game in a row.
Dallas running back Ezekiel Elliott (top) gets a lift from center Travis Frederick after scoring the game-winning touchdown to lead the Cowboys past Pittsburgh 35-30 on Sunday. Elliott finished with 209 yards of total offense and three touchdowns as Dallas won its eighth game in a row.

PITTSBURGH -- Dak Prescott and Ezekiel Elliott have little interest in the big picture. Yes, the rookies understand the Dallas Cowboys are on a serious roll. Just don't expect them to start thinking about what it all means.

photo

AP

Wide receiver Dez Bryant caught six passes for 116 yards and had a 50-yard touchdown catch in the third quarter for Dallas, which remained atop the NFC East with its victory over Pittsburgh.

photo

AP

Dallas Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott (21) celebrates his game-winning touchdown with teammates Travis Frederick (left), Tyron Smith (77) and Ronald Leary (right) on Sunday in Pittsburgh. Elliott had 114 yards and 2 touchdowns on 21 carries and caught 2 passes for 95 yards and another touchdown.

"I really don't think about what's normal and what's abnormal," Prescott said.

Maybe because what's happening in Dallas might be the new normal.

Elliott ran for 114 yards and 2 touchdowns -- both in the final 2 minutes -- and turned a screen pass into an 83-yard score as the Cowboys pulled off a thrilling 35-30 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday night for their eighth consecutive victory.

Twice late in the fourth quarter Dallas (8-1) had the ball in Pittsburgh territory with a chance to run out the clock and attempt a game-winning field goal. Twice Elliott found himself running free into the end zone, the last a 32-yard sprint up the middle with nine seconds left.

"It parted like the Red Sea," Elliott said after pushing his season rushing total to an NFL-best 1,005 yards. "All I had to do was run."

Prescott overcame an early fumble to pass for 319 yards and two scores and felt his jaw drop while watching Elliott score the third and final touchdown of a wild final 115 seconds.

"I was just shaking my head like 'Wow,'" Prescott said. "We were just trying to get us in position to get in good field goal range and Zeke said otherwise."

When safety Byron Jones pushed Pittsburgh wide receiver Antonio Brown out of bounds at the Dallas 20 on the final play, the Cowboys had perhaps their most impressive victory of an increasingly surprising season. Prescott also took another step toward stopping any discussion about the team's starting quarterback.

Veteran Tony Romo practiced during the week and is nearly fully recovered from a broken bone in his back, but he spent his Sunday afternoon the same way he spent every other one this season: in street clothes watching Prescott do his thing.

Owner and General Manager Jerry Jones declined to name Prescott the permanent starter in the giddy aftermath, though there appears to be no plans -- and really no reason -- to make a switch even though Jones anticipates Romo being the backup next week against Baltimore.

"I think the longer [Prescott] plays like this, the more we have a chance to have another win," Jones said. "Everybody here wants to do one thing and that's win. There's nobody that would introduce any other issue or any other consideration than doing what it takes to win the game."

Asked if he's been around a team where two rookies have done so much so quickly, and the 74-year-old gleefully shook his head.

"Not two that are so in sync to where they're feeding off each other and the team feeding off them," Jones said. "I haven't seen that."

Dallas wide receiver Dez Bryant caught 6 passes for a season-high 116 yards, including a 50-yard touchdown in the third quarter that gave the Cowboys a 23-18 lead. Rather than do his typical touchdown celebration -- making an X with his forearms while barking at the crowd -- Bryant pointed at the sky instead in tribute to his father, MacArthur Hatton.

Hatton died Saturday, according to Jones. And while Bryant quietly ducked out of the locker room without speaking to reporters, his teammates figure Bryant's play on the field did all the talking necessary.

"I think the game gives him peace," Prescott said. "I told him 'Your father is watching. He's got the best seat in the house.' I told him to honor him today and Dez went out and did exactly that and had a great night."

Sports on 11/14/2016

Upcoming Events