DALLAS — For one November afternoon, it was the other way around. The less fortunate and downtrodden had something to give those who have it all.
The Dallas Cowboys served early Thanksgiving dinners to Salvation Army men and women at the Carr P. Collins Social Service Center. It didn’t matter the Cowboys weren’t enough 24 hours removed from a baffling, frustrating, embarrassing 27-7 loss to the Atlanta Falcons that saw quarterback Dak Prescott sacked eight times. The ‘Boys were greeted with the adulation reserved for victors.
“For them to say, ‘hang in there; you guys are going to get back on track,’ you appreciate that support,” said tight end Jason Witten.