dpf1123
DCC 4Life
- Joined
- Apr 8, 2013
- Messages
- 2,979
Decoding Schotty Week 2 - Big Time Players
The Cowboys scored 40 and needed every single one to avoid a catastrophic defeat.
Bob Sturm
Sep 16, 2025

Here we go. Our objectives for today:
The Cowboys production on Sunday was ridiculous, but no less ridiculous than the entire event, to be fair. They scored 40 points – including scoring on five straight drives to end regulation to save the day – and never were they given a short field. The average field position was their own 26 and they are forced to go the length of the field again and again.
And they did. Again and again they needed to go get points against a very impressive group on that Giants defense. The Giants were a problem up front and with the talent they have assembled, they are going to get to some QBs all year. But, Dallas was able to hold up and survive so that their QB could do what he can do.
And that remains my biggest takeaway to the start of the season. If your QB1 is playing his very best football and if he can keep this up, this team can go places.
More on that in a moment.
First, let’s look how a day like this ranks in the Cowboys historical archives.
They scored 40 points, with 478 yards, and 32 first downs. Admittedly, those are fairly arbitrary and random numbers, but I thought I would look for similar games over the decades.
It turns out there have only been six others.

One was Don Meredith vs the Eagles in 1966, which was the biggest offensive day in Cowboys history. Two more were Roger Staubach blowouts in the 1970s. Another is that famous season opener for Aikman in Washington in 1999. And the other three have all been Dak Prescott games since 2020.
Yes, he has done this three times now and two of them – this and that ridiculous win against Atlanta in 2020 – were the most absurd wins in the most absurd ways possible. Who can forget the watermelon kick incident where Bones Fassel and Greg Zuerlein designed a crazy plan against Falcons coach Dan Quinn?
The takeaway from games like this are obviously sweet and sour. But, since we write the offense on one day and the defense on the next, today will be mostly solid reviews.
But, yes, they needed every point and every yard in this one.
Let’s check the drive chart to get a feel for this crazy game. Two worthless drives to start the game (as it seems like they insist on slow starts for noon games) and then two worthless drives in overtime before being given a very rare third try late in overtime to rescue the win.

But, the drive lengths were immense. Nine different times they had drives with multiple first downs and eight times they moved the ball at least 38 yards. This offense was humming. And evidently, they will need to be because the defense is a problem.
OK, here is Josh’s statistical graphic for Week 2:

The running game is a work in progress.
Honestly, the only thing we aren’t crazy about is the running success rate and the 1st down success rate and those two things are quite related. Dallas was running the ball over and over again on 1st down and usually got almost nothing. In fact, if you take away the Javonte Williams touchdown run, then you have 16 1st down runs for 38 yards which is barely over 2-yards per carry.
First-down runs from under center were really rough and unproductive which, of course, consistently sets up 2nd and 9.
Here are all the running plays (any down) but divided up by personnel groupings.

As you can see, the 11 personnel running package is fine. But, we expect that because 3 WRs will spread out the defense and make them worry about CeeDee and Pickens.
But, what I am always looking for is the following answer: Can you run when they know you want to run. In other words, when you bring out your big personnel groupings (12, 13, 21, 22) and it is a run situation (1st down and under center), can you run it?
The answers so far are very mixed. We will take the production overall and 135 yards rushing is a very good day. But, I would not be willing to call the running game fully fixed. I would agree that it is getting better, though.
Big Time Throws from QB1
Dak Prescott leads the NFL in big-time throws through the first two weeks of the season. If you are new this season, please know that #SturmStack is a PFF friendly site that wasn’t always that way, but I have been converted due to nearly a decade of working with them for Troy Aikman.
They keep the grades for “Big-time throws” and “turnover-worthy plays” and I have found them much more useful than counting touchdowns and interceptions, because so much of QB play is dependent on your help. If Jake Ferguson keeps dropping great passes, that isn’t on Dak. Also, if the defense drops interceptions, that doesn’t mean the pass wasn’t dangerous. So, these are independent grades of results. I recommend you watch the videos that explain these. Big time throws are here. And turnover worthy plays are here. I need to reprint my study on this from the Athletic, but for now, I just want to draw your attention to a remarkable performance from Dak Prescott which made him the offensive player of the week (again).
He was credited with five big time throws in this game and also had four last week. That gives him nine and he leads the NFL through two games.
Here are the five big-time throws this week and they are spectacular.
The third one is on third down and CeeDee Lamb is double covered. He puts it right there. And then the last one is deep in overtime and he puts a dart right on George Pickens with a free runner coming right at him. Incredible accuracy, arm strength, and yes, throwing his men open (which his critics have long tried to tell people at the water cooler that he couldn’t do).
The tape speaks very loudly. He has had 6 in a game before, but this was quite a performance for sure. In 2023, he had 41, but Josh Allen had 42 to lead the NFL, so Dak has been doing this a long time. But, this year he is out of the gate like he plans on a huge season.

Checking in on targets other than CeeDee Lamb.
One reason he will have a huge season, most likely, is the weapons are incredible.
I want to make sure we aren’t just featuring the same parts of the offense every week and with the huge performances from George Pickens and KaVontae Turpin
George Pickens
Pickens is 6-foot-3, 200 pounds, and runs at 4.47 which means he is absolutely a model No. 1 WR.
But, if you have CeeDee Lamb, you can dial him back to being a guy who wins on slants, wins in the red zone, and provides all sorts of coverage problems to any team that thinks they can just double Lamb all day. He is physical enough to draw pass interference calls every week, but fast enough to stack any player who can’t run a sub 4.5 40, so good luck. And yes, the Cowboys have not had a dominant red zone winner in a long time, so I am thrilled to have this back in the playbook. I said it in May and I will say it again – this acquisition changes things significantly for this team. And no, I am not worried about his personality. This offense needs some emotion.
Kavontae Turpin
Meanwhile, if they can make Turpin a solution in the slot, on 3rd downs, and as a jet-sweep speed guy, then this offense expands its danger. He has been about a 2.7 touches per game player in the offense in 2024, but if they double that to 5-6 touches per game, you insert 4.3 speed and another mismatch problem. Again, you are only talking about 12-15 snaps a game, but make the defense defend him and when they do, they have to deploy resources that they don’t have for others.
I thought Pickens and Turpin are massive differences to this 2025 attack and raise the ceiling as a duo. We know Lamb is going to get 100 yards almost every week. But, where else are the problems? Now, we are seeing them.
The Offensive Line had a very rough day.
Yes, there are developmental stories that we are monitoring, but this week, I want to focus on the one veteran of the group. Right Tackle Terence Steele is in his 6th season at the position and is in a vital year in his contract where Dallas can walk away at the end of this year and save about $9m if they don’t want to play his $18m for 2026. That, like Trevon Diggs, is a blinking light to tell us the front office is watching closely.
Here is a cut-up of his day on Sunday and this is just not good enough.
As usual, the run stuff isn’t bad. But, the pass pro was really rough. Now, again, the Giants are really good up front and they have three edge players now who are all better than anyone on the Cowboys roster. So, this is quite a front, but Steele has to put better tape out there than Tyler Guyton and I am not sure he did on Sunday.
With Cooper Beebe going down for a what might be two months, the Cowboys insert Brock Hoffman and now we are wondering how well this OL can hold up. Steele has to be a positive piece or this whole thing is in danger. He will deal with Montez Sweat on Sunday (who has given him issues, for sure), so let’s see him bounce back.
Offensive Roles and Snaps Data

I have really appreciate discovering Anthony Reinhard’s work on Twitter and at Statbutler.com and asked him if he would allow me to post his stuff in my reports. He was all for it, so give him a follow and support if you like what you see. I think this is great information that is laid out in a visually exceptional way. I hope you like it.
FILM STUDY
OK, let’s end like we always do by looking at a few individual plays. I will try to be brief on each one so you don’t spend your entire lunch hour on this piece.
2Q - 15:00 - 3-7-DAL 34 - D.Prescott sacked at DAL 33 for -1 yards (B.Burns).
This is the first sack and to me this is an example of great coverage, nothing available, and then the Giants close down the escape lanes nicely. In particular, Brian Burns is a beast and Tyler Guyton cannot stay in his way as he has way too much space to close downhill and Dak is a sitting duck. I don’t really call this much other than a coverage sack as Dak isn’t interested in a short pass on 3rd and 7. He waited to move the chains and it closed on him.
2Q - 9:10 - 3-10-NYG 25 - D.Prescott sacked at NYG 33 for -8 yards (K.Thibodeaux).
This one is totally different. This is not a coverage sack at all and Dak will tell you that they have a touchdown to Turpin and a touchdown to Pickens if he has time. But, here, the protection is thrown off because the RB Williams chips 5-Thibodeaux so hard that he actually sends him right past Booker and to Dak. Kayvon Thibodeaux is such an athlete that he kept his feet and went to go get the QB. I am telling you, the Giants have some freaks up front. This was a touchdown.
3Q - 14:49 - 2-10-DAL 21 - D.Prescott pass deep middle intended for C.Lamb INTERCEPTED by A.Phillips
This is a bad decision by Dak and he will have to monitor this all season. Him and CeeDee are going to always think they can make any play and coverage doesn’t matter. I agree, but pick your spots better. This is two snaps into the half, the score is fine, and it is 2nd down. Just don’t even try this nonsense because there is no reason to risk your mortgage at this point. I am fine with the occasional bad decision based on confidence or overconfidence, but use it for a more critical spot. It comes with the dinner, but again, let’s use it better.
3Q - 7:27 - 1-10-NYG 30 - J.Williams right tackle for 30 yards, TOUCHDOWN.
Last week we talked plenty about bringing powers and counters back to the running game and I am very excited. This is “power” because the pulling guard 73-Smith is the wrapping guard who comes from the backside to lead the ball carrier and 1-Tolbert is the kickout to seal the edge. There looks like no space is generated at first, but Javonte is really impressing me and he stays after it and finally busts through for the big run. 78-Steele does a great job here, too. He gets multiple Giants including the 2nd level LB that springs this to paydirt.
4Q - 10:42 - 3-4-DAL 21 - D.Prescott pass deep right to C.Lamb to DAL 37 for 16 yards.
We already talked about this play, but this is an example of risking properly. It is a 3rd down late in the game. Do you take Ferguson underneath? Probably a safer plan but his trust level is not nearly that of Lamb. Lamb is doubled, but Dak and him have a belief in eachother that did not die in Philadelphia. This is incredible and unstoppable.
4Q - 7:38 - 3-5-NYG 19 –Prescott pass short left to G.Pickens to NYG 10 for 9 yards (P.Adebo).
Huge 3rd down? Slant to Pickens. Move the chains. It is over.
4Q - 6:17 - 2-4-NYG 4 - M.Sanders right guard for 4 yards, TOUCHDOWN.
Another goal-line run? Another chance to call up Power and run it again behind Tyler Smith. This time Hunter Luepke will get the edge and away we go. This is the 2nd time they ran it in the game and both were touchdowns.
4Q - 2:06 - 4-3-DAL 36 - D.Prescott pass short middle to J.Tolbert to DAL 47 for 11 yards (A.Phillips).
This is 4th down and the Cowboys lose if they don’t make this play. The design is interesting because Pickens and Lamb are wide and they don’t really seem to get a look. Personally, I would not trust Jalen Tolbert here and this is not an easy throw and catch. But, they pulled it off. Dak probably could have run for it which is a higher percentage play, but again, he kept making shots. What a block by Cooper Beebe on the stunt, by the way.
4Q - 0:14 - 2-10-DAL 33 - D.Prescott pass deep middle to J.Ferguson to NYG 49 for 18 yards (A.Phillips; B.Okereke).
Again, another do or die. They have to get to midfield and they have no time. This play has to be the one, most likely. Dak does Dak things. Back shoulder throw to a guy who is not even looking at you. He turns and the ball is on him. Incredibly strong play.

Anticipation throw with the entire game on the line. I cannot express how good this is.
OT - 2:00 - 1-10-DAL 30 - D.Prescott pass deep right to G.Pickens to NYG 43 for 27 yards (P.Adebo) [B.Okereke].
This is also ridiculous. Man in his face who is unblocked and Dak throws the ball 36 yards on a string to Pickens and leads him perfectly. The computers calculate this as a 27% likelihood. Make today the day you allow nobody to slander this QB, please.

And lastly…
OT - 0:36 - 2-9-NYG 42 - D.Prescott scrambles up the middle to NYG 28 for 14 yards (J.Holland).
QB1 goes and shows you he knows how to end the game. It wasn’t pretty and it wasn’t easy, but that was a top-tier QB performance that should be appreciated.
And then the best kicker on the planet finished the job.
Tomorrow is unlikely to be pleasant.
The Cowboys scored 40 and needed every single one to avoid a catastrophic defeat.
Bob Sturm
Sep 16, 2025

Here we go. Our objectives for today:
- Huge production from the offense and they needed it all.
- The running game is a work in progress.
- Big Time Throws from QB1.
- Checking in on targets other than CeeDee Lamb.
- A big step back for Terence Steele.
- Look at some All-22 film and see what we can see.
The Cowboys production on Sunday was ridiculous, but no less ridiculous than the entire event, to be fair. They scored 40 points – including scoring on five straight drives to end regulation to save the day – and never were they given a short field. The average field position was their own 26 and they are forced to go the length of the field again and again.
And they did. Again and again they needed to go get points against a very impressive group on that Giants defense. The Giants were a problem up front and with the talent they have assembled, they are going to get to some QBs all year. But, Dallas was able to hold up and survive so that their QB could do what he can do.
And that remains my biggest takeaway to the start of the season. If your QB1 is playing his very best football and if he can keep this up, this team can go places.
More on that in a moment.
First, let’s look how a day like this ranks in the Cowboys historical archives.
They scored 40 points, with 478 yards, and 32 first downs. Admittedly, those are fairly arbitrary and random numbers, but I thought I would look for similar games over the decades.
It turns out there have only been six others.

One was Don Meredith vs the Eagles in 1966, which was the biggest offensive day in Cowboys history. Two more were Roger Staubach blowouts in the 1970s. Another is that famous season opener for Aikman in Washington in 1999. And the other three have all been Dak Prescott games since 2020.
Yes, he has done this three times now and two of them – this and that ridiculous win against Atlanta in 2020 – were the most absurd wins in the most absurd ways possible. Who can forget the watermelon kick incident where Bones Fassel and Greg Zuerlein designed a crazy plan against Falcons coach Dan Quinn?
The takeaway from games like this are obviously sweet and sour. But, since we write the offense on one day and the defense on the next, today will be mostly solid reviews.
But, yes, they needed every point and every yard in this one.
Let’s check the drive chart to get a feel for this crazy game. Two worthless drives to start the game (as it seems like they insist on slow starts for noon games) and then two worthless drives in overtime before being given a very rare third try late in overtime to rescue the win.

But, the drive lengths were immense. Nine different times they had drives with multiple first downs and eight times they moved the ball at least 38 yards. This offense was humming. And evidently, they will need to be because the defense is a problem.
OK, here is Josh’s statistical graphic for Week 2:

The running game is a work in progress.
Honestly, the only thing we aren’t crazy about is the running success rate and the 1st down success rate and those two things are quite related. Dallas was running the ball over and over again on 1st down and usually got almost nothing. In fact, if you take away the Javonte Williams touchdown run, then you have 16 1st down runs for 38 yards which is barely over 2-yards per carry.
First-down runs from under center were really rough and unproductive which, of course, consistently sets up 2nd and 9.
Here are all the running plays (any down) but divided up by personnel groupings.

As you can see, the 11 personnel running package is fine. But, we expect that because 3 WRs will spread out the defense and make them worry about CeeDee and Pickens.
But, what I am always looking for is the following answer: Can you run when they know you want to run. In other words, when you bring out your big personnel groupings (12, 13, 21, 22) and it is a run situation (1st down and under center), can you run it?
The answers so far are very mixed. We will take the production overall and 135 yards rushing is a very good day. But, I would not be willing to call the running game fully fixed. I would agree that it is getting better, though.
Big Time Throws from QB1
Dak Prescott leads the NFL in big-time throws through the first two weeks of the season. If you are new this season, please know that #SturmStack is a PFF friendly site that wasn’t always that way, but I have been converted due to nearly a decade of working with them for Troy Aikman.
They keep the grades for “Big-time throws” and “turnover-worthy plays” and I have found them much more useful than counting touchdowns and interceptions, because so much of QB play is dependent on your help. If Jake Ferguson keeps dropping great passes, that isn’t on Dak. Also, if the defense drops interceptions, that doesn’t mean the pass wasn’t dangerous. So, these are independent grades of results. I recommend you watch the videos that explain these. Big time throws are here. And turnover worthy plays are here. I need to reprint my study on this from the Athletic, but for now, I just want to draw your attention to a remarkable performance from Dak Prescott which made him the offensive player of the week (again).
He was credited with five big time throws in this game and also had four last week. That gives him nine and he leads the NFL through two games.
Here are the five big-time throws this week and they are spectacular.
The third one is on third down and CeeDee Lamb is double covered. He puts it right there. And then the last one is deep in overtime and he puts a dart right on George Pickens with a free runner coming right at him. Incredible accuracy, arm strength, and yes, throwing his men open (which his critics have long tried to tell people at the water cooler that he couldn’t do).
The tape speaks very loudly. He has had 6 in a game before, but this was quite a performance for sure. In 2023, he had 41, but Josh Allen had 42 to lead the NFL, so Dak has been doing this a long time. But, this year he is out of the gate like he plans on a huge season.

Checking in on targets other than CeeDee Lamb.
One reason he will have a huge season, most likely, is the weapons are incredible.
I want to make sure we aren’t just featuring the same parts of the offense every week and with the huge performances from George Pickens and KaVontae Turpin
George Pickens
Pickens is 6-foot-3, 200 pounds, and runs at 4.47 which means he is absolutely a model No. 1 WR.
But, if you have CeeDee Lamb, you can dial him back to being a guy who wins on slants, wins in the red zone, and provides all sorts of coverage problems to any team that thinks they can just double Lamb all day. He is physical enough to draw pass interference calls every week, but fast enough to stack any player who can’t run a sub 4.5 40, so good luck. And yes, the Cowboys have not had a dominant red zone winner in a long time, so I am thrilled to have this back in the playbook. I said it in May and I will say it again – this acquisition changes things significantly for this team. And no, I am not worried about his personality. This offense needs some emotion.
Kavontae Turpin
Meanwhile, if they can make Turpin a solution in the slot, on 3rd downs, and as a jet-sweep speed guy, then this offense expands its danger. He has been about a 2.7 touches per game player in the offense in 2024, but if they double that to 5-6 touches per game, you insert 4.3 speed and another mismatch problem. Again, you are only talking about 12-15 snaps a game, but make the defense defend him and when they do, they have to deploy resources that they don’t have for others.
I thought Pickens and Turpin are massive differences to this 2025 attack and raise the ceiling as a duo. We know Lamb is going to get 100 yards almost every week. But, where else are the problems? Now, we are seeing them.
The Offensive Line had a very rough day.
Yes, there are developmental stories that we are monitoring, but this week, I want to focus on the one veteran of the group. Right Tackle Terence Steele is in his 6th season at the position and is in a vital year in his contract where Dallas can walk away at the end of this year and save about $9m if they don’t want to play his $18m for 2026. That, like Trevon Diggs, is a blinking light to tell us the front office is watching closely.
Here is a cut-up of his day on Sunday and this is just not good enough.
As usual, the run stuff isn’t bad. But, the pass pro was really rough. Now, again, the Giants are really good up front and they have three edge players now who are all better than anyone on the Cowboys roster. So, this is quite a front, but Steele has to put better tape out there than Tyler Guyton and I am not sure he did on Sunday.
With Cooper Beebe going down for a what might be two months, the Cowboys insert Brock Hoffman and now we are wondering how well this OL can hold up. Steele has to be a positive piece or this whole thing is in danger. He will deal with Montez Sweat on Sunday (who has given him issues, for sure), so let’s see him bounce back.
Offensive Roles and Snaps Data

I have really appreciate discovering Anthony Reinhard’s work on Twitter and at Statbutler.com and asked him if he would allow me to post his stuff in my reports. He was all for it, so give him a follow and support if you like what you see. I think this is great information that is laid out in a visually exceptional way. I hope you like it.
FILM STUDY
OK, let’s end like we always do by looking at a few individual plays. I will try to be brief on each one so you don’t spend your entire lunch hour on this piece.
2Q - 15:00 - 3-7-DAL 34 - D.Prescott sacked at DAL 33 for -1 yards (B.Burns).
This is the first sack and to me this is an example of great coverage, nothing available, and then the Giants close down the escape lanes nicely. In particular, Brian Burns is a beast and Tyler Guyton cannot stay in his way as he has way too much space to close downhill and Dak is a sitting duck. I don’t really call this much other than a coverage sack as Dak isn’t interested in a short pass on 3rd and 7. He waited to move the chains and it closed on him.
2Q - 9:10 - 3-10-NYG 25 - D.Prescott sacked at NYG 33 for -8 yards (K.Thibodeaux).
This one is totally different. This is not a coverage sack at all and Dak will tell you that they have a touchdown to Turpin and a touchdown to Pickens if he has time. But, here, the protection is thrown off because the RB Williams chips 5-Thibodeaux so hard that he actually sends him right past Booker and to Dak. Kayvon Thibodeaux is such an athlete that he kept his feet and went to go get the QB. I am telling you, the Giants have some freaks up front. This was a touchdown.
3Q - 14:49 - 2-10-DAL 21 - D.Prescott pass deep middle intended for C.Lamb INTERCEPTED by A.Phillips
This is a bad decision by Dak and he will have to monitor this all season. Him and CeeDee are going to always think they can make any play and coverage doesn’t matter. I agree, but pick your spots better. This is two snaps into the half, the score is fine, and it is 2nd down. Just don’t even try this nonsense because there is no reason to risk your mortgage at this point. I am fine with the occasional bad decision based on confidence or overconfidence, but use it for a more critical spot. It comes with the dinner, but again, let’s use it better.
3Q - 7:27 - 1-10-NYG 30 - J.Williams right tackle for 30 yards, TOUCHDOWN.
Last week we talked plenty about bringing powers and counters back to the running game and I am very excited. This is “power” because the pulling guard 73-Smith is the wrapping guard who comes from the backside to lead the ball carrier and 1-Tolbert is the kickout to seal the edge. There looks like no space is generated at first, but Javonte is really impressing me and he stays after it and finally busts through for the big run. 78-Steele does a great job here, too. He gets multiple Giants including the 2nd level LB that springs this to paydirt.
4Q - 10:42 - 3-4-DAL 21 - D.Prescott pass deep right to C.Lamb to DAL 37 for 16 yards.
We already talked about this play, but this is an example of risking properly. It is a 3rd down late in the game. Do you take Ferguson underneath? Probably a safer plan but his trust level is not nearly that of Lamb. Lamb is doubled, but Dak and him have a belief in eachother that did not die in Philadelphia. This is incredible and unstoppable.
4Q - 7:38 - 3-5-NYG 19 –Prescott pass short left to G.Pickens to NYG 10 for 9 yards (P.Adebo).
Huge 3rd down? Slant to Pickens. Move the chains. It is over.
4Q - 6:17 - 2-4-NYG 4 - M.Sanders right guard for 4 yards, TOUCHDOWN.
Another goal-line run? Another chance to call up Power and run it again behind Tyler Smith. This time Hunter Luepke will get the edge and away we go. This is the 2nd time they ran it in the game and both were touchdowns.
4Q - 2:06 - 4-3-DAL 36 - D.Prescott pass short middle to J.Tolbert to DAL 47 for 11 yards (A.Phillips).
This is 4th down and the Cowboys lose if they don’t make this play. The design is interesting because Pickens and Lamb are wide and they don’t really seem to get a look. Personally, I would not trust Jalen Tolbert here and this is not an easy throw and catch. But, they pulled it off. Dak probably could have run for it which is a higher percentage play, but again, he kept making shots. What a block by Cooper Beebe on the stunt, by the way.
4Q - 0:14 - 2-10-DAL 33 - D.Prescott pass deep middle to J.Ferguson to NYG 49 for 18 yards (A.Phillips; B.Okereke).
Again, another do or die. They have to get to midfield and they have no time. This play has to be the one, most likely. Dak does Dak things. Back shoulder throw to a guy who is not even looking at you. He turns and the ball is on him. Incredibly strong play.

Anticipation throw with the entire game on the line. I cannot express how good this is.
OT - 2:00 - 1-10-DAL 30 - D.Prescott pass deep right to G.Pickens to NYG 43 for 27 yards (P.Adebo) [B.Okereke].
This is also ridiculous. Man in his face who is unblocked and Dak throws the ball 36 yards on a string to Pickens and leads him perfectly. The computers calculate this as a 27% likelihood. Make today the day you allow nobody to slander this QB, please.

And lastly…
OT - 0:36 - 2-9-NYG 42 - D.Prescott scrambles up the middle to NYG 28 for 14 yards (J.Holland).
QB1 goes and shows you he knows how to end the game. It wasn’t pretty and it wasn’t easy, but that was a top-tier QB performance that should be appreciated.
And then the best kicker on the planet finished the job.
Tomorrow is unlikely to be pleasant.
