Part IV: The Dallas Cowboys
The Giants 2008 Improbable Playoff Season
John Delach
October 2025
The prize for beating the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, the Number Four Seed, was the dubious privilege to play the Number One Seed in the NFC, the Dallas Cowboys in their home stadium.
Nobody, I say, nobody thought Big Blue would beat America’s Team and win this game. In fact, not a single Number One Seeded team had ever lost its first playoff game in eighteen years! Added to that, the Cowboys had beaten the Giants in both of their two regular season games played that year. The Cowboys were favored to win by 6 points.
Despite the odds, the Giants were playing with the house’s money. Going into the 2007 regular season, the Giants were suffering turmoil and controversy on the field and in the press. Coach Coughlin held his job by a thread and the teams early 0-2 start set the stage for the tom toms to starting beating his demise.
But once again, and I do love this because, when a team that is down and out upsets all of the pundits, experts and talking heads by snatching a victory from the jaws of defeat. It is a reminder of one of the basic tenants of sports: And That’s Why They Play the Game!
Game Three was an away game against the Redskins that began as a continuation of Big Blue’s poor showing in the first two games. By halftime, the Giants had sunk to a 14-point deficit as the Redskins led 17-3. Incredibly, New York rallied from this deficit and engineered a victory that included a game-ending goal line stand.
Wow, out of nowhere, with zero expectations, this victory launched the team on a six-game winning streak. Then, after they beat the winless Dolphins in a game the NFL showcased in London, they ran out of lousy teams. After a week off to re-adjust to Eastern Time, they lost to the Cowboys for the second time this season. The rollercoaster ride continued as they edged the Detroit Lions and the Chicago Bears, but lost to both the Minnesota Vikings and the Redskins.
The team was still adrift until the second half of the Buffalo Bills game that they won despite Eli Manning’s lackluster performance, when running back, Ahmad Bradshaw, scored on a long run and the defense returned a pass interception for a touchdown. The last game of the season was a total effort against the Patriots that, despite the loss, launched Big Blue into the playoffs.
The Cowboys were rightly confident that this was their game to win. To reinforce their confidence, their owner, Jerry Jones, declared that the game would be a white-out and instructed all fans planning to attend the game dress in white. He also left an envelope in each players’ locker containing two tickets to the NFC Championship Game to be played next weekend in Green Bay, Wisconsin.
Despite the hype, the Giants scored the first touchdown when Armoni Toomer turned a short pass into a long touchdown when the Dallas defenders failed to follow his moves after he caught the ball. Giants 7-0.
I watched the game at Dave Brackett’s house. Of course, we were pleased, but the Cowboys tied the score: 7-7. In the second quarter, Big Blue pinned the Cowboys deep in their territory as a result of the Giants punter, Jeff Feagles, giving Dallas terrible field position thanks to his coffin corner kick. But their quarterback, Tony Romo engineered a second long and damaging drive culminating in Dallas’ second touchdown: Cowboys 14-7 with 43 seconds left in the second quarter.
Dave and I groaned, especially when, Troy Aikman, doing the color on Fox, said: “The Giants have to move the ball down the field to score.”
Dave reacted to this: “Fat chance. Maybe, one or two shots, but that’s it.”
Instead, Manning moved them down the field hitting rookie, Steve Smith who was wrestled out of bounds by his face mask making the refs tack on 15 more yards. Then Manning advanced the ball by hitting Mike Boss and Toomer for a Giants touchdown. Halftime score: Giants 14-Cowboys 14.
We were stunned. We were still concerned by the message the Cowboys sent in the first half that they could move the ball on Big Blue, but still, the game was tied. The Giants defensive coordinator, Steve Spagnola decided to abandon the heavier pass coverage he used in the first half and throw everybody and their dogs directly against Romo to rattle him and disrupt the flow of the game.
It was at this point that the Cowboys decided to lose the game. First, they abandoned their effective running game. Second, they dropped a couple of passes that should have gone for big chunks of yardage and, third, Romo did become rattled. The Cowboys managed a field goal, but the Giants countered with a sustained drive and a rushing touchdown scored by running back, Brandon Jacobs. Jacobs almost blew the score by throwing the ball at the 24 second clock, but fortunately, the game officials chose not to throw a flag.
The game ended when the Giants intercepted a Romo pass that he threw in desperation. Final score Giants 21, Cowboys 17.
The look on their owner, Jerry Jones face, as he stood on the sideline when the game ended was priceless.
Next week the Giants would play the Green Bay Packers for the right to go to Super Bowl XLII.