
The NFL MVP isn’t an honor that is won in the first seven weeks of a season. Things change so quickly week by week, and narratives can shift within the hour.
However, it’s hard to find a narrative that can undermine what Dak Prescott is doing in Big D. By all possible metrics, Prescott is performing at the highest level in the NFL. Fan and media voices alike have tried to say otherwise, but the facts don’t care about their feelings.
It’s time for Dak Prescott to receive his flowers (it’s been time, really).
Through the first seven games, Prescott has lit up the stat sheet. His 16 passing touchdowns are good for second in the league, only behind Matthew Stafford. He ranks second in passing yards, with his 1,881 only trailing Justin Herbert. He’s also added 56 yards of timely rushes and one rushing touchdown on top of all of it.
But Prescott isn’t just driving the Cowboys’ high-scoring offense. He is constantly keeping it on the field, only turning the ball over three times this season — all of which are interceptions.
His completion percentage is 71.4% — fourth in the NFL — and his 185 completions are the most in the league. So, despite throwing as much as anyone, leaving himself vulnerable to more trouble and less efficiency naturally, Prescott is right at the top of the league in terms of efficiency.
Those stats are astounding, but they become even more so when you see what Prescott has been working with lately. On top of star WR CeeDee Lamb being out for, essentially, five weeks, his offensive line has also been banged up.
The #Cowboys are expected to be without LT Tyler Guyton, LG Tyler Smith, RG Tyler Booker, and C Cooper Beebe today.
Their projected starting offensive line vs. the #Jets, via @toddarcher:
LT: Nate Thomas
LG: Hakeem Adeniji
C: Brock Hoffman
RG: TJ Bass
RT: Terence Steele pic.twitter.com/gTLBxDtF2b— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) October 5, 2025
Right before the massive Micah Parsons homecoming, Prescott was set to be without his WR1 and his rising left tackle against a seriously good Green Bay defense. His 319-yard, three-TD masterclass, however, would’ve suggested he was never shorthanded against a premier defense on primetime.
Against the Jets, he went to battle without 80% of his offensive line and no CeeDee, yet again. It didn’t matter — 237 yards and four touchdowns later, most people couldn’t deny what their eyes were seeing.
Even in the loss last Sunday afternoon, Prescott still had no Lamb, no Booker, and added no KaVontae Turpin. He went 25-for-34 for 261 yards, threw three touchdowns, and didn’t turn the ball over.
Without his big names, Dak Prescott has put up big numbers.
Just imagine what he’ll do when he gets those names back.
If the basic stuff paints a masterpiece, the advanced analytics paint a Prescott-faced Mona Lisa.
The NFL tracks several statistics called “Next Gen Stats”, and one of those stats is aggression%. Simply put, this tracks the % of throws a QB makes into tight coverage —Prescott’s mark of 19.2% puts him second on the list, only trailing the recently-benched Jake Browning.
That puts him ahead of notable aggressive QBs like Baker Mayfield and Stafford. Couple that with his completion percentage, and it tells a story — Prescott is making whatever throws he wants, and he’s completing them.
Now, 15 times in Cowboys history, they have had a game with:
400 yards of offense:
40 points:
0 giveaways:Staubach, Aikman, White, and Romo did it once.
Meredith twice.
Dak Prescott NINE TIMES (above the blue line). pic.twitter.com/YevkVW8Ark— Bob Sturm (@SportsSturm) October 21, 2025
EPA stands for Expected Points Added, and it’s a fancy way to show who’s driving their offense the best. Many sites track it, and there are many different ways to categorize it, which makes it even more useful for evaluation.
In terms of overall EPA, Prescott is fourth, just behind the pleasant redemption story of Daniel Jones. If we focus on passing only, Dak Prescott’s 60.83 Pass EPA is the single best mark in the league. People for years have crucified Prescott for only being good in garbage time, but in 2025, no one has been better outside of it. His non-garbage time EPA sits at 77.12.
When looking at the base of Prescott’s work, one will find a gunslinging, precise, and deadly athlete under center. Taking a deeper dive only confirms those findings.
The only thing Dak Prescott naysayers have to cling to at this point is the fact that the Cowboys are 3-3-1. They’ve latched onto this and claimed that Prescott isn’t, and therefore cannot, play winning football. However, it might actually be quite the opposite.
The Cowboys, as a unit, have the second-best scoring offense in football. Their passing attack is second in the league.
Yet, Dallas is the only team in the top-eight of either category that doesn’t have a winning record.
That’s because the Dallas Cowboys’ defense is terrible. Historically terrible. It’s not particularly good at anything, and it’s horrible at a lot of things.
Dallas allows the most YPG in the league at 401.6. They’re third in PPG allowed at 32.3, third in rushing YPG allowed at 141.3, and first in passing YPG allowed at 260.3.
If someone ran 1,000 simulations with this current Cowboys defense, Dallas would be 0-7 in half of them, 2-5 in 400 of them, and 3-4 in 99 of them. Cowboys fans can call themselves lucky that they live in the one world where they’re 3-3-1.
Or, they can thank their all-world QB who’s lit the league ablaze.
Don’t let this historically bad defense distract from the fact that Dak Prescott is going scorched earth on the NFL, and he has put his hat in the ring for best QB on planet Earth.
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