The Dallas Cowboys turned a dominant first half into just enough breathing room on Thursday, fending off a spirited second-half surge from the Washington Commanders to secure a 30â23 victory in the NFLâs Christmas Day opener.
With playoff hopes already extinguished on both sidelines, pride and presentation carried the weight. For much of the afternoon, Dallas looked ready to turn the holiday showcase into a rout. Instead, the Commanders made it uncomfortable â and entertaining â right to the final minutes.
Fast start sets the tone
The Cowboys wasted little time asserting control. Quarterback Dak Prescott carved through Washingtonâs defence early, guiding Dallas to touchdowns on its first three possessions and a 21â3 lead that suggested the contest might be over before the wrapping paper hit the floor.
Prescottâs command of the offence was reflected not only in the scoreboard but in Dallasâ aggression. The Cowboys repeatedly stayed on the field on fourth down, converting each early opportunity and keeping Washingtonâs defence trapped in a long, draining first half.
By halftime, Dallas led 24â10, having run 17 first downs while limiting Washington to fewer than 20 offensive snaps â a lopsided opening that appeared decisive.
Commanders refuse to fold
What followed was a reminder that divisional games rarely obey scripts. Washington emerged from the break with renewed energy, leaning on pressure and pace to drag themselves back into contention.
Second-year defensive lineman JerâZhan Newton anchored a fierce pass rush, helping sack Prescott six times and forcing Dallas into a string of stalled drives. The Cowboys failed to score a touchdown after halftime, relying instead on field goals to stay ahead.
Offensively, Washington found its spark through rookie running back Jacory Croskey-Merritt, who delivered two touchdowns â including a 72-yard burst that cut the deficit to a single score and injected genuine tension into the festive crowd.
Prescott delivers when it matters
Despite the mounting pressure, Dallas never fully lost its grip. Prescott finished with 307 passing yards and two touchdowns, avoiding turnovers and converting crucial fourth downs late to bleed the clock and protect the lead.
An 86-yard strike to KaVontae Turpin in the first half proved decisive, while kicker Brandon Aubreyâs second-half field goals ensured Washington never drew level.
Running back Malik Davis shouldered the load after Javonte Williams exited with a shoulder injury, grinding out key yards as Dallas focused on game management rather than fireworks.
A Christmas showcase beyond the score
Beyond the result, the afternoon served as a showcase for the NFLâs evolving holiday ambitions. Streaming giant Netflix carried the game to a global audience, marking another step in the leagueâs push beyond traditional broadcast boundaries.
For all the talk of âmeaninglessâ games, the matchup delivered drama, momentum swings and a reminder that divisional pride rarely fades â even when the postseason is out of reach.
Dallas improves to 7-8-1 with the win, while Washington drops to 4-12, left to reflect on a performance that showed fight if not enough polish to overturn a slow start.
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Written by James Carter â NFL Correspondent at Swikblog










