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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Cowboys’ offense scorches Raiders

Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Miles Austin, right, fights off Oakland Raiders cornerback Stanford Routt. (Associated Press)
Associated Press

ARLINGTON, Texas – Tony Romo and the Dallas Cowboys had their way with the Oakland Raiders, piling up their most yards of the season and getting another solid performance from the defense.

Now comes the big challenge for the NFC East leaders: Keeping it up.

Dallas beat Oakland 24-7 on Thursday for its sixth win in seven games, guaranteeing it will remain atop the division going into the final month. Because Decembers have been such disasters for the Cowboys over the past decade-plus, they can only hope this performance indicates things will be different this season.

“I think we have a lot to prove — just for this season, though,” Romo said. “I don’t think any other season has any bearing whatsoever. For us, it’s strictly about right now and this next game. We’ll go from there.”

Despite a back injury sustained four days before, Romo threw for 309 yards. He got more than 100 yards receiving from each of his two favorite targets, Miles Austin and Jason Witten, and threw a touchdown to his highest-paid receiver, Roy Williams.

Dallas (8-3) also had nice balance with more than 60 yards each from running backs Felix Jones, Tashard Choice and Marion Barber.

The defense kept Oakland (3-8) from crossing midfield in the first half, crushing whatever good vibes the Raiders generated by a victory over the division-leading Bengals on Sunday. They got within 17-7 early in the second half on the first career touchdown catch by top draft pick Darrius Heyward-Bey, then hardly threatened again.

“Trying to win two games for us has been like trying to climb Mount Everest,” cornerback Nnamdi Asomugha said. “We haven’t been able to get any momentum going.”

Coming off two lousy offensive performances, the Cowboys more than made up for it.

They gained 494 yards, sparked by lots of big plays — five of at least 40 yards, and eight of at least 25; no NFL team had done that since New Orleans in October 2006.

Still, there were things to worry about, like turning all that into only 24 points because of penalties and converting only four of 12 third-down attempts.

“We still have a lot of work to do,” said Choice, whose big run came out of Dallas’ version of the wildcat formation. “A lot of things that we’ve messed up on we have to get better. We have to stay focused coming into December.”

The defense remains an overshadowed strong point. They went from giving up 68 yards rushing in the first quarter to just 56 the rest of the game, and linebacker Anthony Spencer had his first two sacks of the season.

Cowboys 24, Raiders 7

Oakland 0 0 7 0 7
Dallas 3 14 0 7 24

 Dal—FG Folk 36

Dal—Jones 46 run (Folk kick)

Dal—Austin 9 pass from Romo (Folk kick)

Oak—Heyward-Bey 4 pass from Gradkowski (Janikowski kick)

Dal—R.Williams 6 pass from Romo (Folk kick)

Oak Dal
First downs 14 18
Total Net Yards 305 494
Rushes-yards 24-124 25-195
Passing 181 299
Punt Returns 3-10 5-36
Kickoff Returns 2-26 0-0
Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0
Comp-Att-Int 18-35-0 18-29-0
Sacked-Yards Lost 3-19 2-10
Punts 9-54.8 6-41.8
Fumbles-Lost 1-1 1-0
Penalties-Yards 7-70 6-48
Time of Possession 28:46 31:14

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

RUSHING—Oakland, Fargas 12-63, Gradkowski 3-30, McFadden 6-23, Bush 3-8. Dallas, Jones 7-68, Choice 3-67, Barber 14-61, Romo 1-(minus 1).

PASSING—Oakland, Gradkowski 18-35-0-200. Dallas, Romo 18-29-0-309.

RECEIVING—Oakland, Z.Miller 5-73, McFadden 4-43, Schilens 2-32, Murphy 2-22, Heyward-Bey 2-21, Fargas 1-4, Stewart 1-4, Lawton 1-1. Dallas, Austin 7-145, Witten 5-107, Barber 2-41, R.Williams 2-15, Jones 2-1.