
The Dallas Cowboys’ nightmare season hit a new low on Monday night after a humiliating 27-20 loss to the Arizona Cardinals — a game that left fans, coaches, and even athletes from other sports questioning the team’s leadership and identity.
The Cowboys, now 3-5-1, looked disjointed on both sides of the ball. And while Dak Prescott’s stat line wasn’t disastrous — 250 passing yards, one touchdown, one interception, and 34 rushing yards — his performance once again failed to inspire when it mattered most.
For many, it was just another frustrating chapter in Prescott’s rollercoaster career. But for Draymond Green, the outspoken four-time NBA Champion and Golden State Warriors forward, it was something more — a reflection of what he called “empty stats and soft moments.”

In his latest episode of the “Why Is Draymond Green Talking About Football?” podcast with Fox Sports’ Jordan Schultz, the veteran hooper didn’t hold back:
“Dak is a bum,” Green said bluntly. “He’s getting numbers, but they stink. They’ll never win with Dak.”
The statement instantly went viral, setting social media ablaze. Hashtags like #DraymondVsDak and #CowboysChaos trended nationwide, with fans either applauding Green’s brutal honesty or blasting him for disrespecting an NFL Pro Bowler.
When Schultz challenged his criticism, Green doubled down — this time offering what he called “context.”
“I’ve won four championships,” Green explained. “When I say ‘bum,’ I don’t mean he’s bad. Dak’s a good quarterback. But when it’s for all the marbles — when the pressure’s on — who is he? He disappears. When they had their best team, best O-line, best everything — he still folded. That’s a bum in my book.”
Green’s words cut deep because they echoed a painful truth many Cowboys fans already whisper: Prescott’s postseason failures.
In seven playoff appearances, Dak has managed just two wins, with his most recent postseason outing being the infamous 48-32 blowout against the Packers in 2023 — a game that still haunts Cowboys Nation.

Statistically, Prescott has been stellar in the regular season, boasting a 98.2 passer rating over his career. But when January comes, that number drops to 89.8 — a reflection of inconsistency under pressure.
To be fair, Dallas’ defensive breakdowns have often compounded Prescott’s struggles. But in a league built on big moments, leadership is judged by what happens when the lights shine brightest.
And that’s exactly where Green’s words hit home.
While calling any franchise quarterback a “bum” is a stretch, there’s no denying that the Cowboys’ championship drought — now nearing 30 years — continues to define the Dak era.
If the next two seasons don’t bring playoff success, Dallas will face an uncomfortable question: Can you win it all with Dak Prescott?
For now, Draymond’s fiery take has done what he always does — spark a national debate that won’t cool off anytime soon.