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Mike McCarthy explains Cowboys’ questionable final play call
Mike McCarthy and the Cowboys are ousted from the playoffs after winning the NFC East. Robert Deutsch-USA TODAY Sports

Dallas coach Mike McCarthy will be questioned for his final play call in the Cowboys' wild-card loss to San Francisco on Sunday. He maintains that the Cowboys were ready to execute it, however.

McCarthy controversially ran a quarterback draw from the 49ers’ 40-yard line with 14 seconds left and no timeouts in the fourth quarter, with Dallas in need of a touchdown to tie the game. Dak Prescott got 17 yards, but time ran out on the Cowboys before the QB could spike the ball.

After the game, McCarthy said the Cowboys practiced the play on a weekly basis and anticipated getting another snap. The coach added that he expected more time to be put on the clock after a review as well.

In reality, McCarthy’s explanation demonstrates why the play call was so bad. In any event, an official must touch the ball to set it before there can be another snap. Prescott essentially blew by that rule, which burned vital seconds and made it much more difficult for referee Ramon George to do his job.

The Cowboys can practice the play all they want. The call simply involves far too many variables that they could not account for in a game situation, such as whether the officials and the defense can set up quickly enough. That is simply too much risk for a play that was never going to give the Cowboys the reward they needed.

This article first appeared on Larry Brown Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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