Football is a game of numbers, but a 24-20 final score doesn’t tell the entire story of Thursday night’s regular-season opener for the Cowboys. Nor does CeeDee Lamb’s career-worst four dropped passes. Not even the 0-1 start in Brian Schottenheimer’s inaugural year is the number that matters most, especially with 94% of the season still to play.

Dallas will be searching for things to build on, and a deeper dive into the box score provides plenty: both positives to reinforce as well as opportunities for growth. While the team can look to Dak Prescott’s mostly-clean uniform, Javonte Williams’s touchdown two-fer, and some uncharacteristic red-zone success as Week 1 bright spots, there’s still concern for the defense’s well-documented Achilles’ heel and some snap distribution disparities that could stand to be evened out.

Time of possession, penalty counts, and big-play prevention: they’re all stats that are trending in the right direction for the Cowboys, even if it’s been just one game.

Let’s take a look inside some of the other numbers that help put the first game of 2025 season into a different perspective.

0: Sacks taken by Dak Prescott

The Dallas offensive line, revamped in the offseason with rookie Tyler Booker taking over for retired perennial All-Pro Zack Martin, kept Prescott mostly clean. The final stat sheet shows zero sacks for the vaunted Eagles D-line and only one QB hit on the night.Looking for a free mini puzzle? Play the USA TODAY Quick Cross now.

But Prescott deserves a significant amount of the credit for that; he used his legs (and that rehabbed hamstring) to buy time in the pocket and get himself out of a lot of trouble. Philly logged 13 pressures, and while Prescott recorded just three yards on his lone rushing attempt, he completed 75% of his passes thrown while under enemy fire.

1: Plays of 20+ yards allowed

Last year, the Cowboys defense was gashed for 52 plays of more 20 yards over the course of the season, an average of three per game. Against the defending Super Bowl champs Thursday, though, they allowed just one.

Hard to fault new Cowboys cornerback Kaiir Elam for Jahan Dotson’s 51-yard pickup late in the second quarter; it came on a picture-perfect bucket drop where the former first-rounder was providing step-for-step coverage. Dallas was concerned about their CB corps coming in; they’ll only get better as Trevon Diggs ramps back up and reinforcements Caelen Carson, Josh Butler, and Shavon Revel Jr. arrive.