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5 takeaways from Cowboys’ nail-biting season-opening loss to Eagles

The Dallas Cowboys traveled to Lincoln Financial Field to take on the defending Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles and dropped a 24-20 nail-biter Thursday.

It was a game full of festivities, as Eagles defensive tackle Jalen Carter was ejected before the first play of the game for spitting on Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott. Later in the first half, a fight broke out on a kickoff that saw two Cowboys get penalized.

Then, in the second half, a one-hour, two-minute lightning delay put a halt in the action that forced the game to last until after midnight on the east coast.

The Cowboys start 0-1, but it was an eventful first contest to start the 2025 season. Here are the five takeaways from the season opener.

It’s an encouraging start to the season

The final result doesn’t count any differently than if they were blown out, but a close loss on the road in a rowdy environment is an encouraging start to the Brian Schottenheimer era in Dallas.

The defense is still getting back to full strength from a health perspective, and the offense is still working through rhythm after not playing in the preseason. Being shut out in the second half isn’t an encouraging effort, but walking away having only allowed three points in the second half is more of a positive.

The loss is still a loss. But with an encouraging slate of opponents upcoming, there’s more hope for this Cowboys team to make a push for the playoffs today than there was yesterday.

Linebacker play was a huge disappointment

Despite new defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus having a long history of linebacker development, it’s easy to say that the second level was the worst part of the Cowboys’ defense on Thursday night.

From allowing Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts to find big gains with his legs to tight end Dallas Goedert leading both teams with seven receptions, it was tough to find much consistency from the unit headlined by Kenneth Murray Jr. and Jack Sanborn.

The complete analytics report will tell the full story on Friday morning, but the use of blitz felt uncharacteristically low of a Cowboys defense but characteristic of an Eberflus defense. As a result, there wasn’t much Marist Liufau, who could have been used with his unique athleticism compared to the rest of the room.

Schottenheimer offense starts with a bang

On the first four offensive drives of the night, the Cowboys’ unit led by Dak Prescott scored points in what was a lightning-fast start for the Brian Schottenheimer play-calling era.

In the pass game, Prescott found CeeDee Lamb early and often for big gains -- Lamb finished the night with 15.7 yards per catch. In the run game, starting running back Javonte Williams quieted durability concerns with a healthy effort that included two rushing touchdowns on the first two drives. He finished the night with 75yards on 15 carries.

From the use of pre-snap motion to some intriguing aggressiveness on third-and-short situations, Schottenheimer’s system has some intriguing wrinkles that will unfold over the course of the season. It’s a healthy refresh from the two seasons under Mike McCarthy that didn’t feature many modern concepts.

Surprise: Cowboys still can’t stop the run

When the Cowboys traded away Micah Parsons a week before the start of the season, Jerry Jones emphasized that the deal was about being able to stop the run. Acquiring three-time Pro Bowl defensive tackle Kenny Clark was the reason the Packers were the chosen offer on the table, but his name wasn’t called often on Thursday night.

After finishing 28th in run defense last season, the Cowboys are well on their way to having a similar effort in 2025 after giving up 158 yards and three touchdowns on the ground.

It’s a disappointing reality for Dallas that, despite re-signing Osa Odighizuwa, trading for Clark and signing Solomon Thomas over the offseason, the defense still can’t contain the ground game.

Fortunately, the next two opponents, the New York Giants and Chicago Bears, had the 23rd and 25th ranked rushing offenses in 2024, respectively.

CeeDee Lamb’s drops cost the team

It was a strong night statistically for CeeDee Lamb, finishing with seven receptions for 110 yards, but two very costly drops in the second half cost this team points. There’s an argument to be made that it cost the team the game.

On a third-and-10 in the fourth quarter, Prescott put a 12-yard crosser right on the money to Lamb who saw it go through his hands and bounce off his helmet. On the final drive, Lamb appeared to haul in a deep post route before kicking it out of his hands. Again on the final drive, Lamb saw a leaping catch -- a grab he has made so many times before -- go through his hands on fourth down.

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