
"Yes, and that's what made the win feel more repeatable than fluky. When Washington pushed coverage to Lamb, Dallas didn't force-feed him, they looked elsewhere. You saw more reduced splits and motion to identify coverage, then the use of quick passes, including over the middle to Jake Ferguson, to stay on schedule. They also used Lamb to drag safety help out of the middle and created a clean one-on-one for KaVontae Turpin."
"No. One solid game doesn't rewrite the evaluation or the roster plan. Malik Davis gave them competent snaps, but competent isn't the standard if you're trying to build a backfield that can carry an offense when the weather turns and the margin gets thin. The Cowboys still need real depth next year at running back. Davis is fine as an RB3, he shouldn't be the reason you pass on adding talent."
Dallas used motion and reduced splits to identify coverage and stayed on schedule through quick passes, including over the middle to Jake Ferguson. The offense avoided forcing targets to CeeDee Lamb when Washington bracketed him and instead attacked with George Pickens, KaVontae Turpin, and the ground game. Lamb’s route concepts pulled safety help from the middle to create clean one-on-one opportunities. Malik Davis provided competent snaps but lacks the breakaway speed and ball security desired for a lead back. The Cowboys still need true running back depth and a weapon with breakaway ability to sustain the offense in adverse conditions.
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