Lamb, who started and finished strong en route to six catches for 118 yards and a touchdown, said postgame he just went absent, dubbing it “very weird.”
Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott had similar thoughts on Lamb’s day, but believes the wideout’s strong first quarter – in which he caught four passes for 93 yards and eclipsed 100 yards from scrimmage – prompted change from Dolphins defensive coordinator Vic Fangio.
“‘Strange,’ I guess, is a good word,” Prescott said. “But when you have three or four catches and 70 yards from the jump, you’re playing a defensive coordinator over there that’s been around for a long time.”
Still, Lamb made an impact when needed most, catching passes of 14 and 11 yards to convert on third and fourth down, respectively, in the final quarter Sunday.
Two issues stem from all of this …
1 – Quite notably, Lamb played his way into the Cowboys’ history books. More on that below.
2 – Dallas simply cannot afford to have a defense “take away Lamb” because the other team has a “coordinator who’s been around for a long time.” If this generally top-notch offense is going to get defeated, it should do while giving its best weapon every chance to rescue it.