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Cowboys owner Jerry Jones spent his regular Tuesday morning radio show talking through yet another loss, the latest a 28-14 thud on Monday Night Football at home to Tennessee.
He has been consistent in his support of third-year quarterback Dak Prescott, even as the offense flounders and the team dropped to 3-5. But on this day, he took his Dak Backing to another level.
“Dak is the quarterback of the Dallas Cowboys,” Jones said on 105.3 The Fan [KRLD-FM]. “He’s young, and he’s going to get extended.”
Jones by no means needs to make that decision now, much less state it publicly. He and the rest of the Cowboys decision-makers could use the second half of the season to make up their minds if they want to negotiate what is expected to be a $100 million long-term deal with Prescott because of the going rate of quarterbacks.
The two sides can begin negotiating an extension after this season, though they don’t have to. Prescott is under contract through 2019.
Prescott’s play going back to last season has made others question if he should be the franchise quarterback going forward, but Jones has not wavered. This support comes after Prescott threw an interception in the end zone in double coverage Monday and lost a costly fumble. The pbading offense has struggled to get on track.
“He is completely capable,” Jones said of Prescott, “of looking at what the situation was last night, looking at a throw like he made in the back of the end zone for the interception. You don’t have anybody more capable of looking at that and taking it to the practice field and learning from that for the next ball game.”
Jones also said not to expect major coaching or personnel changes as the team prepares for playing Sunday at Philadelphia on a short week. He noted the moves over the bye week of adding receiver Amari Cooper and firing offensive line coach Paul Alexander and said this team can play better.
“I want to emphasize this – what bothers me anything is the way that we’ve played, more so, if you will, than 3-5,” he said. “To win games, we have got to play better in all phases of the game. …I believe, strongly, that we can play better. We can play better with our personnel, we can play better on an individual basis. I think that we will play better. …
“This is not the time in my to be changing concepts or changing philosophy.”
Jones said that despite the veneer Jason Garrett displays publicly, the head coach is acutely aware of what Dallas is up against.
“You’d have to be a complete robot to not understand that we have a lot of work to do,” Jones said. “He will go about in his judgment the best way to line up here and play the game this week.”
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