Two weeks after saying Dak Prescott was "somewhere between" signal-callers Jared Goff and Cam Newton, Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones appeared to double down on his quarterback and the team's offense.
During an appearance on 105.3 The Fan on Friday, host Mike Bacsik asked Jones if he watched the Los Angeles Rams play the Minnesota Vikings on Thursday Night Football, which Jones said he didn't. Bacsik then asked what Jones has seen out of the Cowboys this season that could match the Rams' accomplishments.
"Well, I like our offensive line when it stacks up against the Rams or, to be specific, since we're comparing the Rams, but I like our offensive line," Jones said, via 105.3 The Fan. "I think it's fair to say we've got good running backs.
"The quarterback -- I remember Goff when he first came in, they moved him along at a little slower pace than Dak got to come in -- but I know that we've been just as proud of Dak as those that are Rams fans that are proud of their quarterback. We've done that and had that feeling in the past. So when I see them executing in a way that creates the offense they got, I look at our personnel -- I don't have to reach to basically see that."
Sure, both units possess strong offensive lines and each team boasts an elite running back -- Rams have Todd Gurley, Cowboys have Ezekiel Elliott -- but the parallels arguably come to a screeching halt when looking at the numbers.
At the quarterback position, Prescott hasn't thrown for 200 yards in nine of the past 11 games with eight total touchdown passes. Goff, however, has just two games of not hitting 200 yards and has 26 touchdown passes in the same span, including five Thursday night against the Vikings.
The Rams currently boast three receivers with 323 yards receiving or more on the season. The Cowboys have one receiver, Cole Beasley, with more than 100 yards receiving in three total games.
"You say, 'Well, but we might not have the established receiver that they have," Jones said. "Well, last year they had [Tavon] Austin. We got Austin this year. They made the trade with us, we got it. So when I look at what we might be able to do -- and I put my finger on personnel and then move up with what we know we want to do with our personnel -- I don't think it's a reach to think maybe we can approach that kind of productivity."
The radio host wasn't buying it, though.
"That's why you're doing radio and they're doing the coaching" Jones responded.