Justin Herbert Cowboys Debate Reopens Chargers Biggest Frustration

With Eisen casting his vote in favor of Justin Herbert, this article explores the striking similarities and playoff aspirations that could redefine the way we view the Chargers and Cowboys.

Rich Eisen’s answer in a routine “What’s more likely” segment landed on Justin Herbert and the Chargers over Dak Prescott and the Cowboys, but the choice opened the door to a bigger comparison between two franchises that have spent years chasing the same finish line.

Eisen was asked which “much maligned” quarterback would reach a Super Bowl first in 2026, Herbert with Los Angeles or Prescott with Dallas. He sided with Herbert and added, jokingly, “Harbaugh over the Cowboys any day of the week.”

That kind of question fits this part of the NFL calendar, when teams are between OTAs and training camp and national shows are always hunting for something to chew on. The Chargers will get back to work in late July, with rookies reporting on July 23rd and veterans following five days later on the 28th.

On the surface, the Herbert-Prescott debate is just a hypothetical. Both quarterbacks could, in theory, end up facing each other in the Super Bowl by season’s end. But the more interesting layer is what that matchup says about the Chargers and Cowboys as organizations.

The two clubs have long lived in a similar space, even if they play in different conferences. Each has spent stretches as an offseason darling.

Each has leaned on a franchise quarterback for years - Philip Rivers before Herbert in Los Angeles, Tony Romo before Prescott in Dallas. And each has endured brutal playoff moments that still hang around the conversation, from the Chargers’ Marlon McCree fumble in the 2006 divisional round to Dez Bryant’s non-catch in the 2014 divisional round.

So the real question is bigger than one segment on a daily sports show: which team finally breaks through first?

The Chargers are trying to change their story by reshaping the offense around Herbert. They brought in new offensive coordinator Mike McDaniel and installed a wide-zone rushing attack that fits Omarion Hampton. The passing game is also being reworked so Herbert can get the ball out faster, throw with more anticipation, and create more yards after the catch and explosive plays.

That quicker approach is meant to solve a problem that has shown up in January: the Chargers’ offensive line struggling against the pass rush.

Dallas, meanwhile, has made changes on the other side of the ball and has a case that those moves could help Prescott get over the hump too. For now, though, Eisen’s pick favors Herbert and the Chargers - and it comes with a familiar undertone for two franchises still trying to turn promise into something bigger.

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