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Giants Light It Up, Cowboys Steal It On Brandon Aubrey's Leg

Hunter Tierney 's profile
Original Story by Wave News
September 15, 2025
Giants Light It Up, Cowboys Steal It On Brandon Aubrey's Leg

Cowboys–Giants games don’t always deliver, but this one was different from the jump. Dallas outlasted New York 40–37 in overtime, and it took every last snap — sixty minutes, a record‑breaking pair of kicks, and a walk‑off at the end — to figure it out. It wasn’t clean or tidy. It was the kind of game that had you laughing at the penalties one second and shaking your head at the deep balls the next.

Both teams came in hungry after opening‑week losses, and you could see it in the way they swung at each other. Brandon Aubrey stole the headlines with his monster leg, but this game was far from a one‑man show. Russell Wilson looked like his old self, Malik Nabers put the rivalry on notice with a breakout performance, and Dak Prescott calmly guided Dallas out of trouble more than once. That’s how you end up with 77 points, seven lead changes, and a crowd that never sat down.

A True Rollercoaster of a Game

First Quarter: Giants March in Circles

New York actually came out swinging, but not in the way Brian Daboll would’ve drawn it up. The Giants strung together a marathon 16‑play, 110‑yard drive that ate almost nine minutes of clock, a statement possession if there ever was one. The problem was, it ended in just a 38‑yard Graham Gano field goal. The culprit was discipline — or lack of it. With All‑Pro left tackle Andrew Thomas sidelined, backup James Hudson III got exposed. Four penalties in six snaps is brutal for any lineman, and each one chipped away at momentum until the drive felt more like an obstacle course than an opening punch.

And if that wasn’t enough, a 67‑yard kick return that could’ve given the Giants an instant spark was wiped off the board by another flag. So despite holding the ball nearly the entire quarter, New York was stuck with six measly points. For Dallas, things weren’t much better. The Cowboys punted away their first chance, then botched a 4th‑and‑1 when the play clock hit zero. It was a start that looked more like two teams trying to lose a comedy contest than grab control of a divisional game.

Second Quarter: Fireworks and Rising Stars

Sep 14, 2025; Arlington, Texas, USA; New York Giants wide receiver Malik Nabers (1) reacts after scoring a touchdown during the fourth quarter at AT&T Stadium.
Credit: Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images

Dallas finally broke through midway through the second. Prescott zipped a 34‑yard strike to CeeDee Lamb up the seam, a throw that reminded everyone how quickly this offense can crank into gear. But a sack pulled them out of the red zone, leaving Brandon Aubrey to calmly drill a 51‑yarder to make it 6–3.

Russell Wilson responded with some vintage work. First he found Wan’Dale Robinson streaking across the field for a chunk play, and then he dialed up a throw to Malik Nabers, who climbed the ladder and snagged a 29‑yard touchdown right over Trevon Diggs. Suddenly it was 13–3, and the Giants looked ready to take control.

But just as quickly, Dallas punched back. Their next drive turned into an eight‑play brawl, the kind of possession where every snap had something wild — four flags on a single play (three of them on New York), Dak ripping lasers into tight windows, and the Giants looking like they were unraveling. The exclamation point came when Prescott found KaVontae Turpin in the endzone for six. What had been a 10‑point hole was down to 13–10 by halftime, and instead of the Giants riding high into the locker room, the Cowboys had wrestled the momentum right back.

Third Quarter: Punch, Counterpunch, Repeat

Out of halftime, it looked like New York had found the break it needed. Corner Dru Phillips laid out for a diving interception, giving the Giants prime real estate inside the Dallas 15. But that red zone possession ended in frustration — on 4th‑and‑3, the Giants came up empty.

The Cowboys wasted no time flipping it. On just the sixth play of their answering drive, Javonte Williams shed an arm tackle and exploded through the second level, sprinting 30 yards to the house. It was the kind of run that changes the vibe of a whole game — suddenly Dallas was up 17–13, and the Giants were left wondering how they had nothing to show for their golden chance.

Russ wasn’t done trying to counterpunch, though. He uncorked a rainbow to Darius Slayton for 52 yards, a bomb that reminded everyone he still has that deep-ball touch. It only turned into a field goal, but those three points proved to be much more important than we may have thought in the moment.

Meanwhile, the injury list started to pile up. Giants linebacker Darius Muasau left with a concussion. Dallas lost return ace KaVontae Turpin with a neck scare. Cowboys' center Cooper Beebe tweaked an ankle. But instead of slowing things down, it only seemed to crank up the tempo.

Fourth Quarter: Chaos Turned Up to Eleven

Sep 14, 2025; Arlington, Texas, USA; New York Giants quarterback Russell Wilson (3) passes the ball against Dallas Cowboys defensive end Donovan Ezeiruaku (41) during the third quarter at AT&T Stadium.
Credit: Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

Forty‑one combined points and the lead changed hands five times in this frame. It was football chaos, the kind you watch with your hands on your head, and somehow each swing of momentum felt crazier than the last.

Dallas briefly extended their lead when Brandon Aubrey knocked through a 44‑yarder, but the Giants had an answer lined up. A defensive pass interference bailed them out, and rookie Cam Skattebo finished the job with his first NFL touchdown from the one.

The play that set it up, though, is what made everyone scratch their heads. Out trots Jaxson Dart — yes, the first‑round rookie taking his first NFL snaps in the fourth quarter, down four points to a division rival — while Russell Wilson was in the middle of an absolute heater. All he did was hand off to Skattebo for a 24‑yard burst, but the whole moment was bizarre. You’re throwing a kid into his very first NFL action, in the fourth quarter of a back‑and‑forth rivalry game, with the crowd and stakes at full tilt. That’s a mountain of pressure for a cameo role, and the fact that Daboll pulled it out of his bag when Russ was dealing? It left a lot of us wondering what the plan really was. Dart got his feet wet, sure, but the usage was just plain strange, and Daboll should be hearing about that all week.

Once that sideshow passed, the game went right back to haymakers. Dak answered by going 5‑for‑5 on a clinical 60‑yard drive capped by a Miles Sanders 4‑yard run to flip the lead again. Then, on 4th‑and‑4, Russ trusted Wan’Dale Robinson and delivered a gorgeous 32‑yard strike. Dallas flipped it again in the final minute when Dak hit George Pickens for his first Cowboys touchdown, a six‑yarder that looked like the dagger. But Russ wasn’t done, unleashing a scrambling heave that Malik Nabers pulled down for a stunning 48‑yard score with just 25 seconds left. That should’ve been the story.

Instead, Dallas had just enough time to set up a legend. Two quick throws against a Giants defense playing much too soft of a defense got them to midfield, and then Brian Schottenheimer put it all on the shoulders of one man: Brandon Aubrey. A simple handoff to line up the spot, then a jaw‑dropping 64‑yard bomb through the uprights. Tie game.

Overtime: One Bad Decision, One Calm March

Under the updated OT format that guarantees both teams a possession, they traded punts first. And then Russell Wilson made the one decision he’ll see in his sleep: on 2nd & 14, pressure coming, he took a deep shot to an open Malik Nabers on the sideline. The problem was, the ball didn't end up anywhere near the sideline. It never even got to the numbers, and Donovan Wilson intercepted it like a punt returner waiting for a fair catch at the Dallas 30 with 2:00 left in OT.

From there, Dak did exactly what veteran quarterbacks do. He ripped 27 to Pickens, then tucked it and ripped 14 up the gut — just enough to make everyone in the building think, yep, this is over. It was. Aubrey from 46 at the horn. Ballgame.

The Box Score Matters, But Context Matters More

Sep 14, 2025; Arlington, Texas, USA; Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott (4) reacts after a play against the New York Giants during overtime at AT&T Stadium.
Credit: Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

If you’re a Giants fan, the stat sheet feels like a prank. New York out‑gained Dallas 506–478 and averaged a gaudy 7.8 yards per play. Russell Wilson went 30/41 for 450 and 3 TDs. Nabers torched for 9 receptions, 167 yards, and 2 touchdowns. Robinson added 8‑142 and his own score. That’s normally a win.

So why not today? Two big reasons:

  1. Red Zone Execution. The Giants went 1‑for‑5 down there and had one singular passing yard in that area for the entire game. The Cowboys went 3‑for‑3. You don’t need a math degree: that’s the game.

  2. Discipline. New York committed 14 penalties for 160 yards — their most penalty yardage since the 1940s — and it felt even worse in the flow. Six flags on the opening march. Four on a single snap later in the game. Extended Dallas drives on third downs. The whole buffet. Dallas wasn’t pristine either (12 for 106), but the Giants repeatedly turned touchdowns into field goals and punts into first downs.

Fireworks Now, Footnotes Later

In the end, this was just flat‑out fun to watch. Getting a flashback version of Russell Wilson slinging it around was cool, and Aubrey’s heroics only added to the drama. But when you zoom out, it leaves some big questions hanging for both sides. Both defenses gave up chunk plays like they were on clearance, and if that doesn’t get fixed quick, neither side is going to be taken seriously come December.

Dallas didn’t dominate. New York didn’t choke. One team handled the last three minutes of regulation and the final two minutes of OT just a hair better. This could go down as one of those wild early‑season games we’ll remember for the fireworks, but that ultimately doesn’t mean much in the postseason picture.

All stats courtesy of NFL Pro.

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