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Cowboys End Their Losing Streak

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From the Associated Press

Dallas Coach Bill Parcells challenged his struggling offense to “do something” to keep pace with the high-scoring Kansas City Chiefs.

Then he gave them some gimmicks to help pull it off.

Getting touchdowns on a flea flicker, an end around inside the 10-yard line and a pass to a blocker who hadn’t scored in two years, the Cowboys kept their playoff hopes alive by pulling out a 31-28 victory Sunday in a tense, thrilling game.

Drew Bledsoe had his best game in months, throwing for 332 yards and matching his season-best with three touchdowns. He led Dallas (8-5) on a go-ahead drive early in the fourth quarter, then took the club 68 yards in 14 plays for the winning score -- a one-yard pass to tight end Dan Campbell with 22 seconds left.

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“That was really a great drive, probably the best one of the year,” Parcells said.

Yet ending their two-game losing streak wasn’t that simple. The Cowboys had to hold their breath as Lawrence Tynes went for a 41-yard field goal that would’ve forced overtime. After a low snap, it went wide right, ending a three-game winning streak for the Chiefs (8-5).

The victory for Dallas does more for their confidence and outlook than it does in the standings. The Cowboys could’ve lost this one and still had a chance to finish 10-6, but they would’ve been in a real funk with a three-game losing streak and the next two on the road.

“This is a hugely important game for us,” said Bledsoe, who completed 22 of 34 passes with no turnovers. He also moved into fifth place on the career completions list and 15th on the career touchdown passes list.

The final play was only part of the frustration for Kansas City. The Chiefs also wasted 143 yards rushing and three touchdowns by Larry Johnson and 340 yards passing by Trent Green, plus a chance to move up in the AFC wild-card chase because of a loss by division rival San Diego.

Kansas City missed a chance to put the game away early as its first five possessions reached at least midfield, but only two ended in touchdowns. The Chiefs were at the Dallas nine, poised to go up 21-10, when Green was sacked by former teammate Scott Fujita and fumbled. Defensive end Marcus Spears returned it 59 yards, leading to a 26-yard touchdown pass from Bledsoe to Jason Witten that put Dallas up, 17-14, at halftime.

“I’m sick to my stomach,” Green said.

“We had many opportunities to win. That’s the disappointing part.”

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