“It’s a team achievement and, overall, for myself, it’s just good to be back on the right track,” said Lamb. “… It’s how it goes. No one can really guard me. It was just me dropping the ball, and I don’t do that often, so it’s just a series of events. It was a great experience for me.
“I learned a lot, and we move forward.”
That means turning the page fairly quickly from their three-game win streak, amassed in only a 10-day span and against two of the league’s previous two Super Bowl winners, for a meeting with the now-desperate Lions, and at Ford Field in Detroit; but Lamb and the Cowboys are now finding ways to win, and that’s something that’s completely flipped over what they endured during the first half of the 2025 season.
“That’s just showing how serious we are about our business,” he said of the post-bye success and complementary football being played. “[It shows] how serious we are about our business, man. Shout out to those guys [on defense]. They did a great job … We’re trying to build something this year and continue to make strides and overall put our best football out there.”
From an individual standpoint, it’s not the first time this season Lamb has snapped back like a rubber band that’s stretched to its limit. His previous rash of drops occurred against the Eagles in Week 1, and he mounted a 112-yard outing (literally the same amount of yards as he hung on the Giants in his Week 2 redemption game).
There was a lot of talk outside of the building, in the few days leading into the Thanksgiving matchup, about Lamb having somehow lost his ability to break open games, but that was never true and, after those detractors saw what he did against Trent McDuffie — one of the best cover corners in the NFL — and the Chiefs defense, Lamb has but one thing to say.
“This game ain’t the only game I’m about to do this in,” he said. “I can promise you that. So do what you want with that info. … Keep talking. I see y’all. That’s my message. I see it.”