By JUSTIN EINHORN
STATS Senior Editor
This matchup between the Dallas Cowboys and Philadelphia Eagles
isn't nearly as big as the last one. Still, it always seems
meaningful when these archrivals play, and the 100th meeting is
certainly no different.
A few weeks after both teams seemed headed in the wrong
direction, the Cowboys and Eagles have gotten back on track but
only one will leave Lincoln Financial Field on Sunday night
alone atop the NFC East.
A wild-card playoff berth was at stake when Dallas visited
Philadelphia to close the 2008 regular season, and the Cowboys
trailed by 24 at halftime en route to a 44-6 loss. While the
Eagles had little chance to make the playoffs when the day began
but got the help they needed, Dallas entered only needing a win
but had five turnovers - three by Tony Romo - and Philadelphia
had fumble returns for touchdowns of 73 and 96 yards.
"We just flat out got our tail whooped, man. No excuse or
anything like that," receiver Patrick Crayton told the Cowboys'
official Web site. "We went home and had to sulk and had to deal
with that for the whole offseason."
It was their most lopsided loss in the history of this series,
which the Cowboys (5-2) lead 55-44 including playoffs.
"I think we all remember so much - I know I do and so many
players on this team remember - how we left Philadelphia last
year," owner Jerry Jones said.
The hangover appeared to carry into this season as Dallas opened
2-2. The two victories came against winless teams and the
Cowboys beat another one - Kansas City - in Week 5 but needed
overtime to do it.
A bye week followed and they've responded with two impressive
wins, defeating Atlanta 37-21 before last Sunday's 38-17 rout of
Seattle.
"Ever since their bye week, they've been playing well, too, so
it's going to be a challenge for us no matter what," Donovan
McNabb said.
A healthier McNabb has helped Philadelphia (5-2) recover from an
embarrassing 13-9 loss at Oakland on Oct. 18. McNabb was sacked
six times in that game, his second after missing two contests
with a rib injury, but has since received better protection and
more help from the running game in wins over Washington and the
New York Giants.
Arguably his best performance of the season came in last
Sunday's 40-17 victory over the Giants, who had been in first
place, as he went 17 of 23 for 240 yards with three touchdowns
and no interceptions. Even without Brian Westbrook (concussion),
who is likely to return this week, Philadelphia ran for 180
yards.
"The challenge is everybody kind of has a big head and you know
just bouncing around like it's going to be like that every
week," McNabb said. "You have to make sure everybody calms
down."
His biggest concern may be staying on his feet because the
Eagles have been jumbling their offensive line much of the
season and now face a Dallas defense which has 17 sacks in the
past 18 quarters. DeMarcus Ware has five sacks in the last three
games - he had none in the first four - after leading the NFL
with 20 last year.
"Defensively, they're flying around," Eagles coach Andy Reid
said. "They're blitzing from all over the place."
That's what the Eagles defense is known for. That unit is tied
for second in the league with 23 sacks and third in
interceptions (14), having allowed more than 17 points once all
season.
Romo hasn't thrown an interception in a career-high three
straight games while passing for eight touchdowns.
"I'm seeing things. It's as simple as that," said Romo, who has
won 12 consecutive November starts. "I'm not throwing and
hoping."
He's been helped by the discovery of Miles Austin, whose 482
receiving yards in his first three starts are the most by any
player since 1970. He's scored in each of those games, totaling
five TD receptions.
DeSean Jackson continues to be the big-play guy for
Philadelphia. He notched his sixth touchdown of 50 yards or more
last Sunday, three shy of breaking the NFL single-season record.
"I've just been put in some great positions to score long
touchdowns," Jackson said. "Whatever we need to do to make it
work, that's what we're going to do. I want to keep winning,
keep making plays and hopefully make it to the Super Bowl."
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