4 reasons why the Chargers turned the lights out on the Cowboys 

4 reasons why the Chargers turned the lights out on the Cowboys 
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New week, same result. Even with the Dallas Cowboys being eliminated from the postseason, the hope was that the team could find some positives in the last few weeks of the 2025 season. Unfortunately, that didn’t really happen on Sunday. The Cowboys suffered another crushing loss at home, and quarterback Dak Prescott watched the final few minutes from the sidelines.

Aside from pride, what else do the Cowboys have to play for? The Cowboys could win their next two games and at least claim that they didn’t have a losing season, should they end the year at 8-8-1. Regardless of them not competing for the postseason, losing stings. Here’s how the Los Angeles Chargers thunderstruck the Cowboys.

The pass rush goes missing

Where has the pressure gone? Last week, the Cowboys couldn’t lay a finger on Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy. This week, it was more of the same thing against a much more potent passer in Justin Herbert. Mind you, Los Angeles’ offense is battered, playing with several backups and a third-string right tackle in Bobby Hart, who was relatively awful last week.

Whenever the Cowboys committed an extra defender on a blitz, Herbert escaped the pocket to find his receivers or green turf ahead of him. In one critical moment in the game, Kenneth Murray had a free rush at Herbert, but couldn’t bring him down, and Herbert scampered away for a 33-yard gain. Déjà vu once more, as for the second consecutive week, Dallas fails to sack the opposing quarterback. Five-man fronts, dropping seven in coverage, nothing has seemed to work over the last two games. With two games left in the season, and defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus coaching for his job, he has to fix a defense that can’t get to the quarterback.

Not containing Quentin Johnston

The Chargers have a lot of ways to beat you. Jim Harbaugh loves to establish the run and control the line of scrimmage, but he also has a great quarterback with weapons that can create explosive plays, and Quentin Johnston efficiently detonated on the Cowboys’ secondary. From the Chargers’ opening drive, he proved he was going to be a problem for Dallas. On Los Angeles’ first touchdown, he made a great one-handed grab to get the Chargers going.

He followed that up with a 50-yard bomb over the Cowboys’ secondary, then had a significant third-down grab over Trevon Diggs that allowed the Chargers to play keep-away and continue to drain the clock. Johnston had four receptions on five targets for 104 yards. When targeted, Herbert had a perfect 158.3 quarterback rating when throwing in his direction. The Cowboys allowed Johnston to be a one-man show to anchor the Chargers’ passing attack, and it cost them dearly.

Poor tackling in the secondary

Although the Cowboys’ front seven didn’t give the secondary many opportunities, the secondary was also very disappointing. Many players in the back half of the defense had some pretty rough outings, namely, Shavon Revel. He was defending in...