What just happened? Cowboys, Commanders score 41 points in frantic 4th

What just happened? Cowboys, Commanders score 41 points in frantic 4th

After three slow quarters, the NFC East rivalry came to life.

The Dallas Cowboys scored a 99-yard touchdown and the Washington Commanders scored an 86-yard touchdown in the final three minutes of what became an out-of-control fourth quarter.

Ultimately, the Cowboys snapped a five-game losing streak with the 34-26 win, improving to 4-7 as the Commanders fell to 7-5 with their third consecutive loss.

But before any of those outcomes were assured, there was a wild fourth quarter.

Let’s break it down.

Momentum began to spike when the Cowboys defense tapped into the takeaway skills now-Commanders coach Dan Quinn had taught them during Quinn’s prior three years as their defensive coordinator. Safety Donovan Wilson punched a ball free from Commanders receiver John Bates with 8:11 to play in the game, linebacker Eric Kendricks recovering it to give Dallas a short field.

Quarterback Cooper Rush noticed a coverage bust in the red zone and responded with a 22-yard touchdown pass to tight end Luke Schoonmaker, the first score of the rookie’s career.

Then Daniels completed 7-of-7 passes, including a touchdown strike to tight end Zach Ertz and a 2-point conversion keeper of his own.

Would Washington erase the second-half lead Dallas had been building?

A Cowboys special teams unit that made most possible mistakes in the first half had other plans.

Sure, the kickoff bounced through KaVontae Turpin’s legs, a fitting last gaffe for a group that had already sustained a field goal blocked, a field goal missed and a punt blocked. But Turpin nonetheless grabbed the loose ball at the 1-yard line and powered a spin move to confuse the Commanders’ leverage.

His 99-yard touchdown seemed to seal the Cowboys win.

Until Daniels found Terry McLaurin for an 86-yard catch-and-run on the first play of their final-30-seconds drive.

Trailing by one, Washington opted to go for the more surefire extra-point attempt than the two-point attempt.

Austin Seibert’s kick – like many before it on what play-by-play announcer Joe Davis fittingly called the “worst special teams day in history” – shanked wide left.

Washington attempted an onside kick for a last-ditch effort, the Cowboys instead recovering it and scoring a touchdown.

Daniels’ Hail Mary heave in the final four seconds was intercepted.

This developing story will be updated.

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