USA TODAY US Edition

Prescott apologizes for comments on fans

- Jori Epstein

ARLINGTON, Texas – Cowboys quarterbac­k Dak Prescott issued an apology Tuesday evening for comments made in the wake of his team’s wild-card playoff loss.

The Cowboys’ 23-17 loss to the 49ers ended abruptly as Prescott and an official collided, the precious few seconds of the clock ticking down to zero before the Dallas players were lined up sufficient­ly to run their last play. Prescott later was told fans threw debris at officials. He voiced support for the rowdy gesture.

“I deeply regret the comments I made regarding the officials after the game on Sunday,” Prescott wrote in a series of tweets Tuesday. “I was caught up in the emotion of a disappoint­ing loss and my words were uncalled for and unfair.

“I hold the NFL Officials in the highest regard and have always respected their profession­alism and the difficulty of their jobs. The safety of everyone who attends a game or participat­es on the field of a sporting event is a very serious matter.

“That was a mistake on my behalf, and I am sorry.”

The apology diverged from Prescott’s postgame demeanor.

Prescott made a 17-yard run with 14 seconds to play in the game. He thought 4 seconds remained on the clock when he raced back to reset the line of scrimmage and still 2 seconds after his teammates had lined up. But the official needed to spot the ball. The mechanics did not allow for that before time expired.

“The game is over,” an official declared, to Prescott’s disbelief.

Fans began throwing debris including beer and water bottles. Officials raced toward a tunnel exit.

Prescott was initially told fans hurled trash at players, as defensive end DeMarcus Lawrence had needed his shield to deflect a bottle. Prescott said he hadn’t seen that. He condemned the gesture.

“That’s sad,” Prescott said. “I mean you’re talking about a team, you’re talking about men who come out each and every day of their lives and give everything to this sport, give everything to this game of football. Nobody wants to succeed more than we want to succeed.

“I understand fans and the word ‘fan’ for fanatic. I get that to. But to know everything we put into this day in and day out, try our hardest, nobody comes into the game wanting or expecting to lose. For people to react that way when you’re supposed to be a supporter and be with us through thick and thin, that’s tough.”

Then a reporter told Prescott that fans were actually aiming at the officiatin­g crew.

“Credit to them then,” Prescott said. “Yeah, credit to them.”

Laughter ensued as reporters assumed that Prescott, the Cowboys’ nominee for Walter Payton Man of the Year, was making a lightheart­ed jab reflective of the disappoint­ment. Questions continued, Prescott discussing his play calls and offensive coordinato­r and the disappoint­ing of feeling “like you let your teammates down. It’s a terrible feeling.”

Before the quarterbac­k concluded, a reporter asked: Did Prescott really mean to encourage fans throwing things at officials? Was that reflective of his

“I deeply regret the comments I made regarding the officials after the game on Sunday. I was caught up in the emotion of a disappoint­ing loss and my words were uncalled for and unfair.”

Dak Prescott Cowboys quarterbac­k

postgame sentiment?

“Yeah,” Prescott said, doubling down. “If they weren’t at us, and if the fans felt the same way as us and that’s what they were doing it for, yeah I guess that’s why the refs took off and got out of there so fast. I think everybody is upset with the way that this thing played out. As I said, I’m sure a fan would be the same. Feel the same way we do.”

Monday passed with silence. Then, on Tuesday, NBA referees condemned Prescott’s comments.

“The NBRA condemns the comments by Dak Prescott condoning violence against game officials,” the associatio­n tweeted. “As an NFL leader, he should know better. We encourage the NFL to take action to discourage this deplorable behavior in the future.”

Three hours later, Prescott apologized.

Prescott signed a mega-extension with the Cowboys in March, a $160 million deal that will keep him in Dallas through at least 2024. He returned from a gruesome 2020 season-ending ankle injury to lead the Cowboys to a 12-5 record and an NFC East title, but Dallas was the lone team to lose at home in the during wild-card weekend.

“Tough,” Prescott said. “Tough to accept.”

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