Cowboys' Super Bowl drought reaches 30 years after Eagles become first repeat NFC East winner since 2004
Chris Broussard graded the Dallas Cowboys after their loss to the Minnesota Vikings. Nick Wright, Brou, Kevin Wildes and Greg Jennings discussed whether this grade was fair.
The Dallas Cowboys will have gone 30 straight years without reaching the Super Bowl after they were eliminated from playoff contention Saturday night when the Philadelphia Eagles beat the Washington Commanders 29-18.
The Eagles' victory over Washington clinched Philadelphia's second straight NFC East title, becoming the division's first repeat champion since the 2004 Eagles.
The Cowboys' had an outside chance to compete for the division title entering Saturday night. They would have needed to win their final three games and the Eagles to lose their final three games.
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Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones interacts with fans during warmups before the Cowboys take on the Detroit Lions at AT&T Stadium Oct. 23, 2022, in Arlington, Texas. (Tom Pennington/Getty Images)
By virtue of the Eagles' win, Dallas will now take the field against the Los Angeles Chargers Sunday with nothing to play for.
It also marks the first time the Cowboys will miss the playoffs for two consecutive seasons since 2020.
Dallas went all-in at this year's trade deadline in an attempt to bolster its playoff chances, trading a 2027 first-round pick and a 2026 second-round pick to the New York Jets for defensive tackle Quinnen Williams. But it won't pay off in the short term for the Cowboys after their 2025 failure. Williams is under contract until 2027.
COWBOYS' TRADE FOR JETS STAR QUINNEN WILLIAMS FACES HARSH CRITICISM: 'DALLAS IS DRUNK'
Dallas Cowboys head coach Brian Schottenheimer during the second half against the New York


