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49ers vs. Cowboys score, takeaways: San Francisco blows out Dallas as George Kittle scores three TDs

For the third consecutive matchup, the San Francisco 49ers dealt the Dallas Cowboys a crushing defeat. In each of the last two postseasons, the Niners sent the Boys home by prevailing in close games. On Sunday night, it looked like the gap between the two teams had widened considerably as San Francisco controlled the proceedings from the start and was never seriously threatened as it prevailed, 42-10. 

The 49ers held the Cowboys to a combined eight yards on their first four drives, forcing three three-and-outs and a fumble and eventually staking themselves to a 14-0 lead before Dallas even recorded a first down. After the Cowboys finally got on the board, the Niners answered right back, and they never allowed the Cowboys to make it a one-possession game for the rest of the night. 

San Francisco looked unstoppable offensively, racking up over 400 yards and efficiently moving the ball at more than 6 yards per play. The vaunted Dallas pass rush never had a chance to get going, and Brock Purdy calmly tore up the secondary for 252 yards and four touchdowns (three of them to George Kittle) while completing 17 of 24 pass attempts as his receivers ran completely wide open all night long. Even with Christian McCaffrey largely getting bottled up on the ground, the Niners just kept driving right down the field for scores. There was nothing Dallas could do about it.

The Dallas offense, meanwhile, looked inept for pretty much the entire evening. With the exception of an 11-play, 78-yard touchdown drive early in the second quarter, it was a disaster zone littered with stuffed runs, limp check-downs, sacks, and turnovers. The Cowboys kept trying to go east-west against a 49ers defense that is much faster than their offense, and it did not remotely work. The Niners defense had Dak Prescott absolutely flummoxed all night long, giving him nothing down the field and picking him off three times.  

As if the final score wasn't bad enough, the Cowboys also lost several players to injury during the contest, including defensive starters Leighton Vander Esch, DaRon Bland and Donovan Wilson, as well as core special-teamers KaVontae Turpin and C.J. Goodwin. 

In this game, the 49ers reasserted themselves as the class of the NFC, and a team that is a good deal better than the Cowboys. It's really that simple. 

Why the 49ers won

Kyle Shanahan ate Dan Quinn's lunch, Steve Wilks did the same to Mike McCarthy, and the roster the 49ers have assembled overwhelmed the Cowboys in every facet of the game. This was a team that had an answer for absolutely everything Dallas wanted to do on both sides of the ball. 

The Cowboys came into this game having pressured opposing quarterbacks on nearly 55% of their dropbacks. They barely touched Brock Purdy all night in this one. The Cowboys had limited opposing passing games all year long. Niners receivers were running in wide open space all night long. 

The much ballyhooed offensive changes the Cowboys made this offseason to account for the fact that they simply couldn't solve San Francisco's defense appeared to be for naught as Wilks' unit practically squeezed the Dallas offense to death. Dak Prescott had basically nothing available to him farther than 10 yards down the field, and the Niners rallied to the ball with relative ease when he tried to take the underneath stuff. And even that wasn't available to him all that often. 

It was a complete performance from a complete team. 

Why the Cowboys lost

Dallas just made far too many mistakes, and did so right from the jump. On the opening play of the game, Donovan Wilson was whistled for a face-mask on Christian McCaffrey. A few plays later, Micah Parsons was called for an offsides penalty. Then, Markquese Bell lost George Kittle in the scramble drill and gave up a touchdown. Tony Pollard lost a fumble. Jayron Kearse lined up offside on third-and-5 to gift the 49ers a first down. Wilson was called for a personal foul on what would have been another third-down stop, and the drive ended with a Christian McCaffrey touchdown. And those were just the players' mistakes. In the first half. Prescott was intercepted three times after halftime, and the run defense sprang leak after leak as the Niners tried to kill the clock with Jordan Mason.

Coaching was also an issue. Trailing by 14 points and having only stopped the Niners offense on a drive where McCaffrey fumbled, Mike McCarthy sent out the punt team on fourth-and-2 from his own 42-yard line. On the Cowboys' opening drive of the second half, they chose to run the ball on third-and-5 from just outside the 30-yard line, then kicked a field goal instead of going for it. Naturally, the Niners immediately drove for a touchdown and pushed their lead to three scores, and the game never got closer than that.

The Cowboys made mistake after mistake against a team that routinely makes you pay for mistakes, which is exactly what happened here. 

Turning point

It honestly might have been Dallas winning the coin toss and then deferring to the second half instead of taking the ball. That allowed the 49ers to have the first possession; and San Francisco marched right down the field for 75 yards on its opening drive, which ended with George Kittle finding the end zone from 19 yards out. The Niners had the Dallas defense off balance for pretty much the entire night after that. (It certainly didn't help that right from the start of that very first drive, the Cowboys kept gifting the 49ers free first downs with penalties.)

The Cowboys have now lost two games this year, and it's not a coincidence that they were the only two games in which their opponent has started the game with the ball and immediately driven down the field for a score. This is a team that needs to play from ahead so its defense can tee off against the opposing quarterback, and it never got into that kind of game script tonight. 

Highlight play

George Kittle entered this game having had a relatively quiet receiving season to date and he was coming off a one-catch, 1-target game against the Cardinals a week ago. But he scored a touchdown on the 49ers' first drive of the night, and he scored a second on this absolute beauty of a play call early in the second quarter. 

If that play looks familiar, it should. The Detroit Lions ran almost the exact same play earlier in the day to free their own tight end -- Sam LaPorta who, like Kittle, went to Iowa -- for a long touchdown up the right sideline. The Cowboys were completely flummoxed by it, just as the Panthers were on Sunday afternoon.

What's next

Dallas falls to 3-2 with this loss and are now two games behind the NFC East-leading Philadelphia Eagles. The Cowboys play on "Monday Night Football" next week, heading to Los Angeles to take on the Chargers. They then go on the bye in Week 7. 

The 49ers are 5-0 and remain, along with the Eagles, one of the league's only two unbeaten teams. The travel to Cleveland to play the Browns next week at 1 p.m. ET, then play the Minnesota Vikings on Monday night the following week. 

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Live updates
 
@49ers via Twitter
 
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The Cowboys are playing desperation football right now. Despite it being first down, quarterback Dak Prescott rocket-launched the football deep down the left sideline with Brandin Cooks in his sights. Unfortunately, he overthrew Cooks and the football landed in the arms of 49ers safety Tashuan Gipson. This game looks well out of reach. San Francisco leads 28-10 late in the third quarter.  

 
@49ers via Twitter
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@49ers via Twitter
 
@49ers via Twitter
 

49ers tight end George Kittle now has a career-high three receiving touchdowns after hauling in a 10-yard pass from Brock Purdy for the score. The middle of the field has been wide open all night long as San Francisco has found a successful way to chip Micah Parsons and DeMarcus Lawrence, mitigating the effect of the Cowboys pass rush. The 49ers extend their lead to their largest of the game now up 18, 28-10, with 7:20 left in the third quarter. 

 
@49ers via Twitter
 
@49ers via Twitter
 

Jourdan Lewis goes out with an injury, Noah Igbinoghene comes on to take his place, and the 49ers immediately go right at him. Long catch for Brandon Aiyuk... but it comes back due to a holding penalty on Spencer Burford. 

 
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The Niners have gotten pretty much whatever they have wanted on offense all night. They've averaging over 6 yards per play against a defense that had yielded just 4.7 per play on the year coming into this game.

 
@dallascowboys via Twitter
 
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Mike McCarthy told sideline reporter Melissa Stark that he needs to get more balanced with his play calls in the second half, presumably meaning he wants to run the ball more. KaVontae Turpin -- who scored the TD earlier -- is often involved in the jet sweep/trick play aspect of the run game, but he is out with an ankle injury.

 

Dallas Cowboys receiver/return man KaVontae Turpin has been ruled out of the second half with an ankle injury, according to NBC Sports' Melissa Stark. 

 
@49ers via Twitter
 
@dallascowboys via Twitter
 
@49ers via Twitter
 

Surprising to see the Niners stall out like that on that drive, but quick pressure got into Brock Purdy's face and made him throw low to Brandon Aiyuk, so the pass was broken up. Dallas desperately needs a score both here and on the first drive after halftime in order to make this a game again.

 
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After San Francisco moved easily down the field and was gifted another first down via Cowboys penalty, Christian McCaffrey scored from a yard out. Then, Dak Prescott threw short of the sticks on third-and-5 just before the two-minute warning. Dallas really cannot afford to punt the ball back to the Niners here and potentially go down by three scores, but also obviously can't afford to go for it and not convert. 

 
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@dallascowboys via Twitter
 
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The Cowboys get on the scoreboard thanks to motion and speed. Dak Prescott sent receiver/return man KaVontae Turpin in motion to the slot, and then he hit him in stride for a 26-yard touchdown. Just like that, Dallas has life. 14-7 49ers with 7:45 left in the half. 

 

That was a DIME by Dak Prescott to KaVontae Turpin. The Cowboys finally used some motion to get someone a free release, and Turpin took advantage by smoking Isaiah Oliver off the line of scrimmage for the score.

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