Bears earn fourth straight win as Cowboys continue to slump

Chicago Bears quarterback Mitchell Trubisky, left, and wide receiver Anthony Miller connected for a touchdown pass during Thursday night's 31-24 home win against the Dallas Cowboys. / AP Photo by Morry Gash
Chicago Bears quarterback Mitchell Trubisky, left, and wide receiver Anthony Miller connected for a touchdown pass during Thursday night's 31-24 home win against the Dallas Cowboys. / AP Photo by Morry Gash

CHICAGO - Mitchell Trubisky and the Chicago Bears appear to be hitting their stride even if it might be too late to salvage their season.

Trubisky threw three touchdown passes and ran for a score in Chicago's 31-24 victory over Dallas quarterback Dak Prescott and the slumping Cowboys on Thursday night.

In a matchup between disappointing teams that made the playoffs last season, the Bears (7-6) came away with their fourth win in five games after dropping four in a row. The Cowboys (6-7) have lost seven of 10 since a 3-0 start.

"I think it says we're resilient," Trubisky said. "We stick together. We believe in each other even when nobody else believes in us. It's a special group in that locker room. We just want to keep this feeling going."

Trubisky shook off an early interception near the goal line to complete 23 of 31 passes for 244 yards. He matched a season high for touchdown throws and set a high with 63 yards rushing. That included a 23-yard scoring dash early in the fourth quarter that made it 31-14.

Allen Robinson caught two touchdown passes and Anthony Miller had one as Chicago tied a season scoring high, and on the other side of the ball Khalil Mack had a sack.

Linebacker Roquan Smith left the game with a pectoral injury on the opening drive, with coach Matt Nagy saying it "doesn't look real good for him," but the Bears took out the NFC East leaders after beating the struggling Detroit Lions twice and the New York Giants in recent weeks.

"Most teams at some point in time will hit some type of adversity," Nagy said. "We went through that four-game stretch. It was difficult in a lot of different ways. ... Everybody's seeing what type of people we have on this football team. No one's flinched. We've pulled together. We've become even tighter."

Facing a top-10 defense for the third week in a row, the Cowboys once again couldn't get their high-powered offense going.

NFL passing leader Prescott was 27-of-49 for 334 yards and a touchdown. Ezekiel Elliott ran for 81 yards - his fifth straight game with less than 100 rushing yards - and two scores.

Michael Gallup had 109 receiving yards and Amari Cooper caught six passes for 83 yards and a touchdown, but the Cowboys took their third straight loss. They lead Philadelphia by a half-game in the division.

"I can't put a finger on it," Prescott said. "I wish I could right now. If I could we wouldn't be in this situation, we would be getting over this and out of this slump, but that's the most frustrating part: We have the skill level, we have the players, we have the chemistry at times. But we're not playing together as a team, complementary enough when we need to, and we need to figure it out what it is."

Kept out of the end zone in a 13-9 loss at New England two weeks ago and then held to two touchdowns while falling 26-15 to Buffalo on Thanksgiving, the Cowboys went 75 yards for a score on the opening possession Thursday. Elliott lunged in from the 2 to cap a 17-play drive.

Jourdan Lewis then intercepted Trubisky's pass with a neat play near the left pylon, dragging his left foot. He was initially ruled out, but the call was overturned by a replay review.

It was all Bears after that, though.

Chicago tied it early in the second quarter when Trubisky hit Robinson with a 5-yard pass and took a 10-7 lead on a 36-yard field goal by Eddy Piñeiro. Cowboys kicker Brett Maher then missed a 42-yarder wide right. Chicago added to the lead in the closing seconds of the half with Trubisky's 8-yard pass to Robinson, and Miller's 14-yarder on a screen in the third made it 24-7.

Maher is 20-for-30 on field goals this season after making one of two attempts Thursday. The 10 misses are more than any other NFL kicker in a single season the past four years.

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