Spitting Mad: Eagles Lose Carter but Still Beat the Cowboys
Before we even got a snap off, the night already felt like peak NFC East chaos. A starter was tossed before the first snap, the rain started coming down harder, and by the third quarter the sky literally shut things down with a lightning delay. Toss in a banner ceremony, wet grass, and a loud crowd, and you had the perfect storm for a rivalry game.
Through all of that noise, the defending champs kept things simple. Jalen Hurts ran when it mattered most, the Eagles cashed in every redzone trip, and they slipped past the Cowboys 24–20 in a muddy, chippy season opener.
A Rivalry in the Rain
The game never eased us in. On the opening kickoff, Philadelphia lost special‑teamer Ben VanSumeren to a knee injury. Then, before the offense could even line up, disaster for the Eagles. Officials tossed Jalen Carter for spitting on Dak Prescott. That’s not just any penalty — it’s your best defensive lineman, maybe your best defender period, gone before he takes a snap. In a rivalry game. In the opener. You could feel the whole stadium gasp. Saquon Barkley said he's come to expect this type of chippiness in this rivalry:
It's Eagles vs. Cowboys. It's supposed to be like that.
Replays showed Dak spit forward — like quarterbacks and linemen do a hundred times a game — but Carter was in the general direction, and took it as disrespect, causing him to fire back with spit of his own. The ref saw it, called it a “non‑football act,” and Carter was gone. Just like that. The Cowboys got 15 free yards, the Eagles' defense lost their anchor, and the tone of the night was set. Nick Sirianni admitted after the game:
We need that guy on the field. He’s a really good player.
From there, both teams were more than happy to lean into the rivalry energy. Dallas turned the short field into points right away behind a quick‑game strike to CeeDee Lamb down to the goal line and a Javonte Williams plunge. The champs answered with a 10‑play, 70‑yard statement of their own. Saquon Barkley bounced an edge run for 16. Will Shipley flashed for 20. Hurts finished it with a four‑yard keeper. 7–7, and we were off.
The First‑Half Track Meet
For about 30 minutes of clock and an hour of your life, this was a fast‑paced, well‑scripted football game where both play callers had the answers. Dallas moved the chains with a mix of quick hitters to Lamb and Jake Ferguson, sprinkled in a couple boundary shots, and ran it better than most expected against an Eagles front still settling in without Carter. Philadelphia leaned into what it does best: leverage downs with Hurts’ legs.
Hurts’ second score summed up the whole idea. Third‑and‑medium, everybody in the building feeling a QB run, and he still found a crease for fifteen to keep the drive alive before finishing it with an eight‑yard keeper. That was the theme of the Eagles' offense all night.
Dallas had answers of its own. Brandon Aubrey pushed them back in front with a 41‑yard field goal after the Eagles stiffened up, and the Cowboys kept early‑down rhythm by staying on schedule — seven first‑half third‑down conversions tells you they were well prepared on those money downs.
Then came Jahan Dotson with the moment that flipped the half. Inside of two minutes, Hurts found him on a deep post for 51, and Barkley punched it to finish out the drive. The Cowboys scraped together three more on a roughing‑the‑passer gift from Nolan Smith, plus crisp sideline throws, and we hit halftime 21–20 Eagles with both teams moving the ball with ease and the crowd very much into it.
Head coach Nick Siriani talked about the impact Dotson had in his first game as an Eagle:
That is such a huge ability to have when you have the other guys that they’re keying on, and then Jahan comes in and makes the plays that he does. Um, again, I know the story will be AJ only got one target [in] the fourth quarter, but how about Jahan Dotson? Played a heck of a game.
When Lightning Killed the Rhythm
Early in the third, Philly stretched the lead when Jake Elliott uncorked a 58‑yard field goal that split the uprights. The ball flew straight through the drizzle, and suddenly the Eagles had a little cushion. Then, just when it looked like the Cowboys might fade out of this game, Miles Sanders ripped off a 49‑yard run that woke the entire stadium up. Dallas was knocking on the door at the 11 and had everyone thinking the lead was about to flip.
On first down, Jihaad Campbell punched the ball free and Quinyon Mitchell scooped it and came awfully close to taking it the distance. Without a Dak Prescott dive and a shoestring tackle, the Cowboys would've been staring down a 10-point deficit. The momentum drained out of Dallas in a heartbeat.
And right when you thought the game couldn’t get any stranger, the skies made sure it did. With 4:44 left in the third, lightning forced the teams into the locker room for more than an hour. The broadcast ran out of highlights and turned to weather radar, and when play finally resumed, the juice was gone. Both offenses cooled off — literally and figuratively.
Tonight's drive chart tells a story:
TD
TD
TD
TD
FG
TD
FG
<halftime>
FG
FUMBLE
<weather delay>
punt
punt
punt
punt
punt
downs
<end of game>
— Courtesy of Warren Sharp.
Outside of a Hurts scramble here and there, we got punts, a couple short‑lived Cowboys pushes, and then the moment Dallas fans will try not to think about all week: three fourth‑quarter Lamb drops on the last two drives, two of them with room to run, all three coming in massive spots where Dallas could've taken control of the game.
Three Plays That Mattered More Than the Rest
You could pick ten, but if you’re forcing me to rank the night:
Campbell’s punch‑out at the PHI 11. Dallas had the ball, the momentum, and the field position. They left with nothing. That’s a huge swing in a four‑point game.
Dotson’s 51‑yard shot inside two minutes of the first half that turned a “hold for three and live with it” into a sudden seven. Momentum isn't a stat, but that doesn't make it any less real.
The late Lamb drops. Those aren’t character indictments; they’re game facts. He went 7 for 110 on 13 targets and still walked off kicking himself for the ones he usually corrals. He owned it postgame. Dallas needed at least one of them.
Honorable mention: Elliott from 58. Not just the points — though those were the last ones of the night — but the psychological effect. In a rain game, knowing your kicker is live from the logo changes how you call third down and punt‑plus situations.
Stats Don’t Tell the Whole Story, But They Certainly Add Context
Red zone: Philadelphia went 3‑for‑3 down there. Dallas went 2‑for‑3, and the one empty trip is the one we’re still talking about.
Time of possession: 34:52 to 25:08, Eagles. That’s Hurts on third down, plus a run game that wasn't super efficient on yards‑per‑carry but was efficient situationally.
Jalen Hurts: 19/23 for 152, no TDs or picks; 14 carries for 62 and two scores. It wasn’t pretty through the air, and it didn’t have to be. He led the game in rushing yards and almost all of them came in critical situations.
Saquon Barkley: 18 for 60 and a TD. Didn't break off the usual 70-yarders we'd become accustomed to last year, but the value showed in short yardage and the red zone.
Jahan Dotson: 3 for 59, headlined by the 51‑yard shot that set up six.
AJ Brown: 1 target, 1 catch, 8 yards... He said all the right things after the game, but you have to wonder how many of these types of games he can take while continuing to stay quiet. We've seen this movie before.
Dak Prescott: 21/34 for 188, no TDs, no picks. In control most of the night. Jerry Jones went as far as to say, "I thought this was one of the best games I've seen Dak play."
Javonte Williams: 15 for 54 and two TDs, physical between the tackles.
CeeDee Lamb: 7 for 110 with the late misses stuck to the end of the line.
Coaching Decisions That Showed Up on the Tape
Nick Sirianni and Kevin Patullo deserve points for clarity. First‑and‑long sequencing was crisp. They let Hurts play point guard, then battering ram, and never got cute in the red zone. After the delay, the choice to keep the ball in Hurts’ hands on crunch downs rather than force something to an outside receiver was the right one, even if it made the box score look 1998.
Brian Schottenheimer schemed a good first half. He stole three points before the break with tempo and sideline management, which always matters in road games. Where it bogged down was the post‑delay adjustment. Philadelphia came back tighter in the run fits and rotated help to Ceedee Lamb more; Dallas never found the counter punch.
Wrapping Up a Wild Opener
Sometimes Week 1 gives you fireworks. Sometimes it gives you weather and attitude. This was the latter — and it was still a good watch. Philadelphia rode the thing it can always ride, the quarterback who can steal six yards when you need them most. Dallas showed plenty to build on and truly changed how people are going to look at them this season.
If Week 1 taught us anything, it’s that we’re in for a ride this season. We saw an ejection before we saw a snap, and fans don’t have to wait long for another rivalry fix. The very next game on the slate is Chiefs‑Chargers in São Paulo, streaming free on YouTube.