
WATCH: Cowboys-Eagles brawl results in Sydney Brown, Jalen Brooks and Troy Pride Jr. all being ejected from the game
Sydney Brown Ejected – If only the Dallas Cowboys had shown as much fight on the field as they did in the late-game brawl during Sunday’s 41-7 shellacking at the hands of the Philadelphia Eagles.
Tensions boiled over late in the fourth quarter, with Eagles safety Sydney Brown tangling with Cowboys wide receiver Jalen Brooks and cornerback Troy Pride Jr., resulting in all three being ejected.
WATCH: Cowboys-Eagles brawl results in Sydney Brown, Jalen Brooks and Troy Pride Jr. all being ejected from the game
Unfortunately for Dallas, the scuffle marked the first real sign of life from the team all game.
Ridiculous view from @panteli.sourias on Instagram
Eagles Dominated from the opening kickoff
The Cowboys got off to a disastrous start, with quarterback Cooper Rush throwing a pick-six on the opening drive. Rush momentarily redeemed himself by finding Jalen Tolbert for a touchdown to tie things up, but it was all Eagles from there.
Philadelphia’s Kenny Pickett, stepping in for the concussed Jalen Hurts, had a field day. The second-year quarterback threw for one touchdown and ran for another in the second quarter, building a lead Dallas couldn’t recover from.
Even when Pickett exited in the second half, Tanner McKee stepped in and threw two more touchdown passes, hammering the final nails into Dallas’s coffin.
Cowboys’ Offense Implodes
Dallas was a mess offensively, managing just 268 total yards and coughing up the ball four times. Cooper Rush threw two interceptions, one of which was the game-opening pick-six and Rico Dowdle along with Jake Ferguson each lost fumbles, compounding the Cowboys’ misery.
This wasn’t just a bad day; it was a total collapse against a division rival. The Eagles defense dominated and proved yet again, this time from Sydney Brown, that this unit is NOT one you want to try to bully around a football field.
Moving forward in the NFC East
For the Eagles, the win is another feather in their cap as they gear up for a playoff run, even with Hurts sidelined. Meanwhile, the Cowboys—already eliminated from playoff contention—must regroup for a meaningless Week 18 matchup against the Washington Commanders.
Dallas entered this game riding a two-game win streak and looking to end the season on a high note. Instead, they were humbled by their NFC East rivals, leaving little doubt about who owns the division.
Sydney Brown held his own and I guess the brawl itself provided a brief spark of excitement, but it was too little, too late for the Cowboys. They that energy from the opening whistle—not in the dying moments of a blowout loss.
More from Sunday’s 41-7 Eagles win over the Dallas Cowboys here >>




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