Cowboys shut out Eagles to claim NFC East title
For an entire year, the Dallas Cowboys have had to deal with the fallout from a crushing, season-ending loss to the Philadelphia Eagles.
Now it is the Eagles' turn — for this week, at least.
Tony Romo threw a pair of early touchdown passes and the defense took over from there, carrying Dallas to a 24-0 victory over Philadelphia on Sunday that was filled with milestones for the Cowboys, the most important being that they won the NFC East and will host a rematch in the first round of the playoffs next weekend.
Some of the other good stuff for Dallas: Posting consecutive shutouts for the first time in team history, Romo and the entire offense setting all sorts of single-season records, having a winning record after Dec. 1 for the first time since 1996 and ending a nine-game losing streak in season finales.
With all that going their way, perhaps the Cowboys (11-5) can finally a win a playoff game for the first time since '96. Kickoff will be 8 p.m. ET Saturday.
"This ballclub has done a good job of putting its best foot forward when it has to,'' Romo said. "We haven't arrived and we haven't accomplished anything. This is a step in the process to continue to get to where we want to go. It's a positive one, definitely, but we still need to keep improving. There's hopefully a lot of season left.''
The Cowboys won the division two years ago, then opened the playoffs at home against a division rival they'd beaten twice that season — and lost.
But this Dallas team seems to be different. Since opening December with consecutive losses, they've won three straight, knocking off the Saints when they were 13-0, then shutting out Washington on the road and now blanking the powerful Eagles (11-5).
Philadelphia came in having already set the franchise scoring record and riding a six-game winning streak during which it averaged 31.2 points per game. The Eagles still had a lot to play for because a victory would've locked up the No. 2 seed and a first-round bye.
The loss sinks them all the way to the sixth seed, the lower of two wild cards.
"It's kind of embarrassing,'' said tight end Brent Celek, who led Philadelphia with seven catches for 96 yards. "I didn't expect to come down here and play like this. We're lucky we have another opportunity to play again. That's all we can ask for.''
Donovan McNabb threw for 223 yards and the Eagles gained just 228 overall. The Cowboys had 291 yards by halftime, on their way to gaining 474.
Philadelphia's game-breaking receivers DeSean Jackson and Jeremy Maclin failed to have any plays longer than 32 yards, and that was better than they did in the first matchup. The defense saw Romo go 24 of 34 for 311 yards; he went over 300 in both meetings.
"We're going to go back to the drawing board,'' coach Andy Reid said.
The challenge for the Cowboys is coming up with more of the same.
Romo finished this season with the most attempts, completions and yards passing ever by a Cowboys quarterback. His nine interceptions are by far the fewest of his career. Dallas also set a record for single-season yards.
Yet it's the defense — which is run by coach Wade Phillips — that is carrying this team.
Over the last four games, the Cowboys faced the NFL's three highest-scoring offenses and held all of them to their fewest points of the season. These back-to-back shutouts are quite the capper. It hasn't been done in the NFL since Tennessee did it in 2000, and it's only the third time in 50 seasons that Dallas has posted two shutouts in year.
"There's no secret,'' linebacker Keith Brooking said. "We have a great coaching staff on our defense, we have players that really care about what they're doing. ... They believe in the system and accepted their roles. As long as we continue to do that, I really like our chances.''
Team owner Jerry Jones called Phillips "the MVP of the defense'' earlier this week. Now that Phillips has won two division titles in his three seasons in charge, Jones is likely to pick up the team option on the coach's contract for next season; that was iffy just a few weeks ago.
Jones had plenty to love about this game - from the biggest crowd since the opener (100,621) to the payday of a home playoff game at his $1.2 billion stadium. In the final minutes, the giant video boards showed him celebrating in his suite, wearing a gray division champion hat along with guests Emmitt Smith and golfer John Daly.
This victory also validates all the moves he had since the 44-6 loss to the Eagles last year.
"It's very satisfying,'' he said.
The stadium was buzzing long before kickoff, with flag wavers running out with sparklers flying out the top of their flagpoles.
Romo threw touchdowns on his first and third drives. The Cowboys were inside the 10 on the series in between, but a pass was tipped and intercepted. Dallas got a field goal for a 17-0 halftime lead. The only second-half points came on a 49-yard touchdown run from Felix Jones.
Philadelphia's best drive reached the Dallas 14 in the second quarter, then McNabb fumbled a low snap from new center Nick Cole. The Eagles never got anything going in the second half. Reid let David Akers try a 53-yard field goal and he missed.
Notes: Dallas' third-down RB Tashard Choice left with a concussion. ... Suisham missed a 30-yard field goal in the fourth quarter. ... The stadium's video boards blanked out for about a minute late in the fourth quarter. ... The Cowboys didn't score a TD on their opening drive in the first 13 games, but have now done it in three straight. ... Because of a midseason trade, Eagles LB Will Witherspoon became only the fifth player to play 17 regular-season games.