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Dak Prescott celebrates 10 years and demands glory for Dallas

Dak Prescott leads the Cowboys toward the Lombardi Trophy

Dak Prescott keeps his eyes on the playoffs, even as the schedule tightens
Dak Prescott keeps his eyes on the playoffs, even as the schedule tightens

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Dak Prescott has now spent 10 seasons with the Dallas Cowboys. Over that time, the quarterback has carried the expectations of a demanding fan base and the weight of one of the league’s most storied franchises. Add to that the looming absence of a Super Bowl win, which the Cowboys haven’t claimed since 1995.

Now, in his tenth year as quarterback, the Texas-born leader doesn’t care about stats or personal accolades. Dak Prescott is crystal clear—he wants rings. And he hasn’t sugarcoated it. “I’m here to win the Super Bowl,” Prescott declared from training camp.

More than just stats

For Dak Prescott, this season transcends the numbers. After an up-and-down 2024 campaign marked by injuries and tactical misfires, the quarterback arrives refreshed. He’s also backed by a revamped coaching staff led by Brian Schottenheimer.

There’s a growing sense of cohesion in the locker room, and the whole squad seems locked on the same prize: winning it all. That urgency, according to Dak Prescott, is pure fuel. It’s what drives him to train harder, make sharper decisions on and off the field, and push everyone in the building to focus on the ultimate goal.

A defining season

As BolaVip noted, Dak Prescott has racked up more than 29,000 passing yards, over 200 touchdowns, multiple division titles, and two Pro Bowl selections in his first nine seasons. But the Cowboys still haven’t broken through the emotional and competitive wall of postseason play. Prescott isn’t dodging that fact—he’s turning it into a rallying cry for the entire locker room. This season isn’t transitional; it’s defining.

With contract talks still unresolved and the rumor mill churning about whether or not he’ll get an extension, Prescott is playing for more than just numbers. At 32 years old, the clock is ticking. And the Cowboys need to make choices that go beyond locker room speeches. The NFL waits for no one—and Dak Prescott knows it.

“I want to play ten more years, but first I want that championship,” said Dak Prescott, sounding like a man who’s made peace with what must come first. And if the Cowboys fail to hoist the Lombardi this season, the narrative around Prescott is bound to shift. From steadfast leader to unfinished story. From promise to unresolved legacy.

This could be redemption—or a restart. But in 2025, Dak Prescott isn’t just throwing passes. He’s throwing down the gauntlet. And time is running out.

 

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