The Dallas Cowboys' 31-14 loss to the Chicago Bears on Sunday was one of those games that can change the entire trajectory of the season. After looking like a competitive team in the first two weeks of the season, the Cowboys looked like an entirely different team in Week 3.
It’s going to be a long week for the Dallas Cowboys after a frustrating blowout loss to the Chicago Bears in Week 3. For the second week straight, their pass defense was picked apart, but this time, their offense wasn’t able to mount a comeback.
The Cowboys’ 31-14 loss to the Bears exposed familiar flaws — a leaky defense, questionable schemes, and an overreliance on Dak Prescott to carry the load.
Dallas Cowboys wide receiver CeeDee Lamb is expected to miss 3-4 weeks with a high ankle sprain, multiple outlets reported Monday. Lamb was injured on a tackle by the Chicago Bears' Noah Sewell during the first quarter of Sunday's 31-14 road loss.
As years go by, it's easy to forget some of the players who suited up on the gridiron. While the quarterback is the one position in the NFL that is under
It was a tough day for the Dallas Cowboys on Sunday as they suffered their second loss of the season, falling to the Chicago Bears in Week 3. Their defense is taking a lot of heat, and deservedly so.
Any hope that the Cowboys had turned over a new leaf after a thrilling overtime win over the Giants in Week 2 was quickly squashed in Week 3 when the Bears raced out to a 24-14 halftime lead en route to a 31-14 blowout win in Week 3 in Chicago.
The Dallas Cowboys arrive at Soldier Field this Sunday for a Week 3 matchup that carries equal weight for correcting their own mistakes and confronting the Chicago Bears.
While fans have already questioned Tom Brady's chops in the booth, a strange comment during Sunday's broadcast of Bears-Cowboys has only led to more critiques for the seven-time Super Bowl champ.
If you have watched the Dallas Cowboys’ first three games and come away believing Dak Prescott is the problem, it may be time for you to reevaluate this organization.
Jerry Jones’ Dallas Cowboys haven’t won a Super Bowl for nearly thirty years, last won a playoff game in the 2022-23 season, and are 1-2 under new head coach Brian Schottenheimer.
The Dallas Cowboys defense is far from where it needs to be if Brian Schottenheimer is to debut as an NFL head coach with a winning record. And three weeks into the 2025 NFL season, his defensive coordinator, Matt Eberflus, is dealing with so much criticism that talk about an early coaching fire has begun by fans and media members alike.
The Dallas Cowboys entered Sunday's game against the Chicago Bears as slight favorites. After all, Caleb Williams and the Windy City franchise were winless prior to the Week 3 showdown and were coming off a 31-point blowout loss to the Detroit Lions.
Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones' most famous line of the 2025 NFL offseason was delivered on Netflix's documentary of him and the 1990s Cowboys: "It's a soap opera 365 days a year." What if the soap opera is bad through three long episodes?
The Dallas Cowboys may have survived their 40-37 overtime shootout against the Giants, but the last two weeks have exposed this scheme and a disturbing truth: this defense is broken—and it’s Matt Eberflus’ fault.
The Dallas Cowboys came into the third game of the 2025 season feeling good about themselves. They’d nearly beaten the Eagles to open the season then upended the Giants the next week in overtime.
It was an ugly affair on "Sunday Night Football" as the Kansas City Chiefs pulled away in the second half to take down the winless New York Giants, 22-9, and get their first victory of the season.
The Dallas Cowboys have been ravaged by injuries in the secondary early this season. Trevon Diggs has managed to play both games in 2025, but he, too, could be unavailable on Sunday.