Day 74 of the Cowboys’ 100-day countdown to kickoff takes us back to the afternoon DeMarco Murray went from rookie curiosity to headline act in one snap.
Dallas came into Week 7 at 2-3, still stinging from a late loss to the Patriots and still trying to sort out its offense. St.
Louis was 0-6, banged up, and shaky against the run. The Cowboys needed a clean win.
Instead, they got a runaway and a record-setting performance that still stands out in franchise history.
Sunday, October 23, 2011 - 4:15 p.m. ET
Cowboys Stadium, Arlington, Texas
Final Score: Dallas Cowboys 34, St.
Louis Rams 7
Murray didn’t start the game, but he changed it immediately. On his first carry, with Dallas backed up near its own goal line, the rookie from Oklahoma burst through a huge lane and raced 91 yards for a touchdown. It was his first NFL score, the second-longest run in Cowboys history behind only Tony Dorsett’s 99-yarder, and the opening shot in a monster afternoon.
From there, Dallas took control. Tony Romo connected with Jason Witten on a one-yard touchdown in the second quarter to make it 14-0.
St. Louis managed one sustained drive, an 80-yard march finished by Steven Jackson’s six-yard touchdown run, but Dan Bailey added a field goal before halftime and the Cowboys went to the break ahead 17-7.
The second half belonged to Dallas. Bailey knocked through a 51-yard field goal in the third quarter, then the Cowboys finished things off in the fourth. Phillip Tanner scored from six yards out, and Romo later found Dez Bryant for a 20-yard touchdown to close the scoring.
The bigger story was Murray, and it wasn’t close. He finished with 25 carries for 253 yards and a touchdown, breaking Emmitt Smith’s Cowboys single-game rushing record of 237 yards, which had stood since 1993 against the Eagles. Murray also set the franchise’s single-game rookie rushing mark, while Dallas piled up 445 total yards.
The game changed the shape of Murray’s rookie year. Felix Jones was injured, Tashard Choice technically started, and Murray came in with plenty still to prove.
By the end of the day, there was no doubt he had earned a bigger role. The Cowboys had found a back who could rip off explosive runs, finish drives, and eventually become the NFL’s Offensive Player of the Year in 2014.
That’s why this one belongs on the countdown. It wasn’t just a big rushing day. It was a 91-yard touchdown on Murray’s first carry, 253 yards on 25 attempts, a broken Emmitt Smith record, and the moment a new Cowboys offensive centerpiece announced himself to the league.
Murray’s 253 rushing yards remain the Cowboys’ single-game rushing record. He broke Emmitt Smith’s previous mark of 237 yards, which had stood for 18 years.
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Cowboys Finally Showed Their Hand With Caleb Downs
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Todd Archers read on the situation suggests the Cowboys are leaning into Downs ability to move around, with the rookie likely to see most of his work in the slot while still giving Dallas options at safety. It is a notable early clue about how the team plans to use one of its newest pieces, and it also says plenty about how seriously the Cowboys are treating a position that has become central to modern defenses. [Read more 🡒]
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By the middle of October in 2014, the Cowboys were still trying to prove their hot start was something more than a good story. Then came a trip to CenturyLink Field and a 30-23 win over the defending Super Bowl champions, the kind of result that changes how a team is viewed around the league. Dallas had to dig out of a 10-point hole, but the victory gave that season a different kind of weight.
The finish only sharpened the sense that this group was for real, with DeMarco Murray putting Dallas ahead for good on a 15-yard touchdown with 3:16 left. From there, the Cowboys walked out of Seattle with a defining regular-season win and a stronger case as legitimate NFC contenders, the sort of game fans circle later when they think back on when a season started to feel different. [Read more 🡒]
