dallas, tx — october 27, 2025
something felt off the moment the dallas cowboys took the field in denver. the rhythm, the energy, the chemistry — gone. but the biggest shock wasn’t the 44–24 loss. it was the silence of jake ferguson.
through six weeks, ferguson had been dak prescott’s safety valve — reliable, consistent, a rock in chaos. yet, against the broncos, he didn’t register a single catch. not one. for fans and analysts alike, that silence spoke volumes.

after the game, head coach brian schottenheimer revealed the reason: “they play real wide. that’s their design — wide contain, wider than the widest. vance joseph’s a hell of a coach. they had a plan, and it worked.”
schottenheimer’s words peeled back the curtain on a chess match the cowboys simply lost. denver’s defense schemed to choke off prescott’s bootlegs and shut down his connection with ferguson — a strategy that threw dallas’ entire rhythm off balance.
the result? a disjointed offense, riddled with frustration and pre-snap penalties that buried drives before they began. nine penalties. eighty yards lost. zero momentum.
even when dallas found brief life — striking on big plays to ceedee lamb and tony pollard — the defense collapsed, surrendering 44 points in what many are calling the cowboys’ worst outing of the season.
fans flooded social media, asking the same question: “where was ferguson?” some blamed play-calling, others said prescott hesitated under pressure. but deep down, everyone knew — this was a failure that ran deeper than one player.
from the sideline to the locker room, the vibe was heavy. frustration. regret. realization. the cowboys weren’t beaten by talent alone — they were out-thought, out-disciplined, and out-executed.
now sitting at 3–4, the cowboys face a crossroads. either this loss becomes the wake-up call they desperately need — or the beginning of a spiral that ends their playoff dreams.
“we win together, we lose together,” schottenheimer said afterward. “but make no mistake — we’ll learn from this. fergie’s a big part of who we are. the ball will find him again.”
for now, though, one truth remains: in denver, the cowboys didn’t just lose a game — they lost their identity.