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Cowboys turn 6 Giants turnovers into rare home victory
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Associated Press

Cowboys Beat Giants

The Giants' six turnovers helped the Cowboys to a 36-31 win in Week 1.
Tags: Eli Manning, Tony Romo, Victor Cruz
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Giants Hurt By Mistakes
ARLINGTON, Texas -- Brandon Carr and the Dallas Cowboys are serious about forcing turnovers.

They needed six to put away Eli Manning and the New York Giants.

Carr returned an interception 49 yards for the clinching touchdown, and the Cowboys overcame a big night from Manning to beat him for the first time at their fancy $1.2 billion stadium in a 36-31 victory Sunday night.

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Tony Romo shook off hits to the ribs that knocked him out for the final Dallas play of the first half and threw a pair of touchdown passes to Jason Witten.

Manning threw three touchdown passes to Victor Cruz and four overall, and he had New York in position for a comeback victory despite the flurry of mistakes.

But with the Giants trailing 30-24, Manning's pass went off the hand of running back Da'Rel Scott into Carr's arms.

The cornerback beat Manning down the sideline with 1:50 left for Dallas' second defensive touchdown. Barry Church returned a fumble 27 yards for a touchdown in the third quarter.

"It's infectious. It's contagious," Cowboys coach Jason Garrett said. "We challenged them at halftime. We had three, let's get three more."

The Cowboys had only 16 turnovers all last year, switched to a four-man front with new defensive coordinator Monte Kiffin and swore all preseason that taking the ball away was the foremost thing on their minds. They proved it from the first snap of the season.

DeMarcus Ware intercepted Manning's first pass, and the Giants turned it over on their first three possessions. The Cowboys didn't take advantage of the early gifts, but built a big enough lead to hold off a New York comeback once the Giants finally stopped turning it over.

It matched the most turnovers for the Giants since 1987, when they had seven against New Orleans. And it was the most Dallas has forced since 2003.

"Just tells you our system is so much built on attitude," said defensive line coach Rod Marinelli, who was defensive coordinator for Chicago last year when the Bears led the NFL with 44 turnovers. "We had a lot of guys play tonight who jumped in and helped us. It's just team defense."

Church scored on the fourth New York turnover -- the second fumble from new starting running back David Wilson, who lost control of the ball on a strip by Nick Hayden just before hitting the ground. Church scooped up the ball and ran it in.

The Cowboys went up 27-10 in the third quarter after the fifth miscue -- a punt that bounced and hit Trumaine McBride while he was trying to block for the return. Rookie DeVonte Holloman won a scramble for the loose ball, and Romo threw a 4-yard scoring pass to Witten.

"I just think it's pretty exciting to see what our team defensively has been able to do here, in training camp, preseason and into the season," Romo said.

When the mistakes stopped, the Giants made it a game again. New York went 80 yards, capped by Cruz's second score on an 18-yard pass, and Cruz scored again from the 10 to pull the Giants to 30-24 midway through the fourth quarter.

New York got the ball back, but the Cowboys forced a quick punt. After Dallas again failed to move the ball, Carr came through with the clinching interception.

"You're not going to win the game turning the ball over five times and muffing a punt," Giants coach Tom Coughlin said. "I'm totally, totally disappointed, embarrassed about that football. That's sloppy, sloppy football."

The Giants scored with 11 seconds left on Manning's fourth touchdown, a 4-yarder to Brandon Myers. But Dallas recovered an onside kick.

Manning was 27 of 42 for 450 yards and had three 100-yard receivers in Cruz (five catches, 118 yards), Hakeem Nicks (five for 114) and Rueben Randle (five for 101)

Romo was 36 of 49 for 263 yards, and Miles Austin had 10 catches for 72 yards. Witten, who had only three touchdowns last year, had eight grabs for 70 and became the third tight end in NFL history with 9,000 yards receiving. DeMarco Murray had 86 yards rushing for Dallas.

Romo threw a 15-yard TD pass to Witten before halftime, and Dan Bailey also had two field goals (30 and 38 yards) by then for a 13-10 lead.

In the final minute of the first half, Romo was hit in the ribs and had the wind knocked out after being crushed between Mathias Kiwanuka and Justin Trattou after throwing an incompletion. Kyle Orton came on to finish the half, but Romo was back after halftime.

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said Romo didn't receive any treatment, and that the medical staff cleared him to play.

"One tough player, one tough man," Jones said. "He will go out and play in pain and play hurt."

After Manning's second interception, this one by new Cowboys safety Will Allen, Dallas had third-and-11 at the Giants 14.

Romo threw a pass toward rookie Terrance Williams that instead deflected off the Giants' Prince Amukamara into the arms of New York teammate Ryan Mundy, who raced 91 yards. He was caught from behind by Murray at the 1.
 

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Bryant: Double-teams sign of respect
September, 9, 2013
SEP 9
2:33
AM ET
By Tim MacMahon | ESPNDallas.com
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ARLINGTON, Texas -- Frustrating as it may be, Dez Bryant is flattered by the attention.

At least, that's how the rising star receiver felt after the Cowboys' 36-31 win over the New York Giants in Sunday night's season opener.

Bryant's statistics (four catches for 22 yards) don't indicate that he was much of a factor in the Cowboys' victory. You need to look elsewhere in the box score for evidence of his impact, such as tight end Jason Witten's eight catches for 70 yards and two scores and receiver Miles Austin's 10 catches for 72 yards.

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Tim Heitman/USA TODAY Sports
Dez Bryant racked up just 22 yards on four catches but the Cowboys still managed 263 receiving yards.
The Giants defense was determined not to allow Bryant to blow up, like he did in the second half of the 2012 season, when he caught 50 passes for 879 yards and eight touchdowns in the last eight games. New York doubled-teamed Bryant “the whole game,” quarterback Tony Romo said, with a cornerback playing press coverage and a safety over the top.

“Hey, I got my stats through Witt, through Miles, through Tony and the rest of the other guys,” Bryant told ESPNDallas.com after receiving treatment for a foot injury suffered in the fourth quarter. “[The Giants] respected me tonight. I know what I can do. Everybody across this world knows what I can do. And they know, if the ball is thrown my way, I'm going to get to it. I don't care if it's double [coverage], triple or whatever. I'm going to try my best to get to it.

“But we play smart football here. We want to win, and I think we went the smart route tonight.”

That meant not force-feeding the Cowboys' most explosive playmaker. Bryant was targeted eight times, but Romo only took one deep shot to No. 88, and that pass by the wounded quarterback fell well short for an incompletion.

The Giants' game plan certainly was not a surprise. Bryant knew there was a strong possibility that New York would make him the primary focus of their defensive scheme. It's why head coach Jason Garrett frequently says that Bryant can be an improved player if his statistics aren't as good as last season's.

“Obviously any time 88's on the field, he's going to draw attention,” Witten said. “He's a phenomenal receiver. He's going to have a great year.”

There will also be games like this that test Bryant's patience. That's life as a premier receiver in the NFL.

Bryant would be lying if he said that he wasn't frustrated at points Sunday night, but it's an emotion born out of competitiveness, not selfishness. He said he thought there were some opportunities for him to make plays when Romo didn't target him, but he noted in the same breath that it's impossible for a quarterback to see everything when facing a pass rush.

As long as the Cowboys win, serving as a decoy is cool with Bryant.

“If teams want to continue to keep doing that, we'll continue to keep doing what we're doing,” Bryant said. “I honestly feel like it's respect. You're respecting me, so therefore, it's always good to see somebody else shine.

“When it opens up for me, I'm going to do what I love to do, and that's make plays.”
 
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