Truly wild: 49ers hang on, Cowboys make another quick postseason exit

AP photo by Roger Steinman / San Francisco 49ers middle linebacker Fred Warner, left, celebrates with quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo after Sunday's NFC wild-card playoff win against the Dallas Cowboys in Arlington, Texas.
AP photo by Roger Steinman / San Francisco 49ers middle linebacker Fred Warner, left, celebrates with quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo after Sunday's NFC wild-card playoff win against the Dallas Cowboys in Arlington, Texas.

ARLINGTON, Texas - San Francisco 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan walked onto the field with an emphatic nod, believing his team had beaten the Dallas Cowboys after a chaotic finish that left many unsure of what was happening.

The official word came a short time later.

Versatile receiver Deebo Samuel's 26-yard touchdown run gave San Francisco what seemed like a comfortable lead in the third quarter, before the Cowboys rallied but ran out of time trying to get a final play in the 49ers' 23-17 victory Sunday in an NFC wild-card playoff game.

"I'm still trying to figure out where I'm at," Shanahan said after coaching San Francisco's first playoff victory at Dallas in a storied postseason rivalry. "It's pretty emotional out there. Lots of opportunities to win the game."

Shanahan said the third-seeded Cowboys "just kept fighting. We made a couple mistakes there at the end. We shouldn't have let it get there."

The sixth-seeded 49ers overcame an interception by Jimmy Garoppolo when they led by 13 in the fourth quarter. Their next visit is to the top-seeded Green Bay Packers for a divisional game, where they'll be looking for another trip to the NFC championship game two years after losing to the Kansas City Chiefs in the Super Bowl.

The wait for Dallas to reach even an NFC championship game will tick up to 27 years after another first-game flameout in the postseason for Dak Prescott. It's the second in three trips over six seasons for the Cowboys star quarterback, who in the offseason signed a contract worth $40 million annually.

Prescott ran for a touchdown to get Dallas within a score after Garoppolo's interception, and he had plenty of time to get his team in front for the first time on a drive that ended near midfield. His desperation fourth-down pass was just out of receiver Cedrick Wilson's reach.

A 14th penalty from the NFL's most penalized team in the regular season helped San Francisco run out most of the clock, and the 49ers intended to go for the win on fourth down when a run from Samuel ended up short - by inches after the ball was nudged up on review.

Instead, San Francisco punted after a false start, giving Dallas one more chance. Without enough time, as it turned out.

The Cowboys started at their 20-yard line with 32 seconds to go. Wilson pitched to CeeDee Lamb on a hook-and-lateral play for 20 yards, and Dalton Schultz gained 9 yards before getting out of bounds with 14 seconds remaining.

Prescott took off on a designed run and slid at the end of a 17-yard run, with about eight seconds to go. Umpire Ramon George bumped Prescott trying to set the spot. The snap from the San Francisco 24 came after the clock expired.

photo AP photo by Ron Jenkins / Umpire Ramon George backs away from the line of scrimmage after setting the ball on the final play for the Dallas Cowboys near the end of Sunday's NFC wild-card game against the San Franciso 49ers in Arlington, Texas.

Dallas coach Mike McCarthy suggested Prescott was slowed by the collision with George, and that a sideline official assured him the play was being reviewed.

"The communication that I was given on the sideline was they were reviewing it," McCarthy said. "They were going to put time back on the clock. And the next thing I know, they're running off the field."

Players from both teams streamed onto the field immediately after Prescott took the snap and spiked the ball, and many did a U-turn as officials discussed the play. Then referee Alex Kemp announced the game was over.

"It was like the whole day, it really was," Garoppolo said of the final sequence. "It was a dogfight, hell of an atmosphere out here. I mean, the fans were nuts. It was everything we thought it was going to be. It was fun."

Kemp said in a pool report George was trailing the play at a proper distance and acted appropriately to get the ball spotted correctly. The umpire has to touch the ball before another play can happen.

Kemp said the decision that the snap came after the clock had expired was made on the field, not on a replay assist from New York.

"The umpire was simply spotting the ball properly," Kemp said. "He collided with the players as he was setting the ball because he was moving it to the proper spot."

The 49ers were in control in the fourth quarter, but not leaning on the running game they figured could carry them to a win when Garoppolo threw an interception to Anthony Brown that set up Prescott's 7-yard touchdown run.

Garoppolo's mistake came not long after Prescott was picked off at the Dallas 26 by K'Waun Williams and Samuel ran untouched on a cutback up the middle to the end zone on the next play for a 23-7 lead.

San Francisco lost star pass rusher Nick Bosa to a concussion just before halftime when he was crunched in the head and neck area by teammate D.J. Jones, but the 49ers kept enough pressure on Prescott, finishing with five sacks while holding the NFL's No. 1 offense to 307 yards.

"Guys just stepping up big in big key situations, that's really what it was all day," Garoppolo said. "Early on, we got it rolling with the offense and the defense just throughout the entire day. We got some dogs on our defense, man. It's fun."

San Francisco scored on its first four possessions - but three times settled for field goals from Robbie Gould to help keep the Cowboys close.

Rookie Elijah Mitchell ran for 96 yards and the game's first points on a 4-yard run. Samuel had 72 yards on 10 carries and three catches for 38 yards.

As was the case most of the season, Dallas couldn't get the running game going with Ezekiel Elliott. The two-time NFL rushing champion had 31 yards on 12 carries as the Cowboys were outgained 169-77 on the ground.

Prescott was 23-of-43 for 254 yards. Garoppolo, whose future with the 49ers beyond this season is uncertain with rookie Trey Lance waiting his turn, was 16-of-25 for 172 yards.

Dallas was down 13-0 when Prescott threw a 20-yard touchdown pass to Amari Cooper. The Cowboys had the final possession of the first half and the opening drive of the second half to get closer and couldn't.

"The team should not have been in a position to make that last play be something controversial," Dallas owner Jerry Jones said. "I'm not going to make it bigger than it is."

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