The wide receiver known as "Angry" Doug Baldwin lived up to his reputation after the Seattle Seahawks were upset by the Dallas Cowboys 30-23 Sunday at CenturyLink Field. "We have to quit BS-ing ourselves. We've got to be real with
ourselves," Baldwin said. "When we get in the meeting room, we've got to
actually pay attention to things and not blow smoke up our tails that
everything's going to be all right. Things aren't going right. Pay
attention to things that we're not doing right and correct them." This is a statement win for the Cowboys, who should be considered
legitimate threats in the NFC after beating up the defending Super Bowl
champions. The Cowboys proved that their winning formula is no fluke,
and they have an offensive line that can beat up even the best defense
in the NFL. The Cowboys racked up 401 yards against Seattle, including
162 rushing yards, and dominated time of possession by more than 15
minutes. Keep that up, and the Cowboys will be able to win anywhere.
The Seahawks were only in this game because of strong play from their
special teams, who scored a first-quarter touchdown on a blocked punt
and set up Russell Wilson's third-quarter touchdown run by recovering a
muffed punt. It was an ugly day for Wilson, especially, who had at least
four ugly passes that could have been intercepted. Wilson's final throw
in the game's last minute — as he was trying to lead a game-tying or
winning drive — was intercepted to seal just the Seahawks second home
loss of the Wilson era. It hasn't happened often that the Seahawks weren't the tougher team in
their home stadium, but when Dallas quarterback Tony Romo jogged back
onto the first in the first quarter after a brutal hit
from Seattle linebacker Bobby Wagner, it was clear this would be a much
more difficult day for the Seahawks than they anticipated. Aside from a
botched snap in the third quarter, Romo was nearly flawless, throwing
for 250 yards and a pair of touchdowns. He was particularly clutch on
the game-winning drive in the fourth quarter, with third-down
completions to Dez Bryant and Terrance Williams. Cowboys running back DeMarco Murray confirmed his status as the NFL's
best running back with a monster fourth quarter, including three rushes
for 46 yards on the Cowboys' game-winning touchdown drive. Murray
finished with 115 rushing yards against the Seattle defense that hadn't
allowed an opponent to rush for more than 38 yards in a game this
season. The Cowboys converted 10-of-17 third downs — a crucial stat against a
Seattle defense that prides itself in getting off the field. The Seahawks travel to St. Louis to play the Rams, who will be on a
short week after Monday's game against the San Francisco 49ers. Dallas returns home for a huge division game against the New York Giants.

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