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Dallas Cowboys vs Los Angeles Rams Match Player Stats (Aug 9, 2025)

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — A year ago, Stetson Bennett threw four interceptions against these same Dallas Cowboys and barely survived the night. On August 9, 2025, at SoFi Stadium, he answered that performance with one of the cleanest preseason outings of his professional career.

Bennett went 16-of-24 for 188 yards, two touchdowns, and posted a 100.7 passer rating as the Los Angeles Rams handled Dallas 31-21 in Preseason Week 1. The Rams outgained the Cowboys 364-297 in total yards and held a 160-1 advantage in first-quarter yardage — a gap that told the whole story of how lopsided the opening half really was.



Game Snapshot

DetailInfo
DateSaturday, August 9, 2025
VenueSoFi Stadium, Inglewood, CA
Attendance70,655
BroadcastABC7 (KABC)
Final ScoreRams 31, Cowboys 21

Final Score

TeamQ1Q2Q3Q4Final
Dallas Cowboys0601521
Los Angeles Rams14031431

How the Game Unfolded

Los Angeles wasted no time. Blake Corum punched in a 2-yard touchdown run on the Rams’ opening drive, then did it again from four yards out to cap a second consecutive scoring march. Both drives were methodical — 11 and 13 plays respectively — and left Dallas without a single yard of total offense through the first quarter.

Dallas responded with a pair of Brandon Aubrey field goals in the second quarter to make it 14-6 at halftime, but the Cowboys never fully closed the gap. Joshua Karty’s 37-yard field goal in the third extended Los Angeles’ lead to 17-6, and Bennett put the game away in the fourth with touchdown passes to Cody Schrader and Brennan Presley.

Dallas did show some life late. Joe Milton connected with Rivaldo Fairweather on a 7-yard score with 8:48 remaining, then Will Grier capped a final drive with an 8-yard rushing touchdown with 2:31 left to make it a two-score game. It was too little, too late.


Bennett’s Night: A Statement Performance

The context matters here. In last year’s preseason opener against Dallas, Bennett was erratic and mistake-prone. On Saturday, he was neither.

He spread the ball to ten different receivers, avoided pressure well, and made only one real error — a deep ball that Cowboys cornerback Israel Mukuamu picked off with an exceptional individual play. Everything else was controlled and precise.

“I thought I played pretty well. I was just glad I didn’t try to force anything,” Bennett said afterward. “It went pretty well, but there’s things I’m going to clean up.”

With Matthew Stafford on the sideline managing a back injury and Jimmy Garoppolo sitting out per Sean McVay’s standard preseason rotation, Bennett had the full first-team spotlight. His 100.7 passer rating and two scoring drives in the fourth quarter were the clearest sign yet that his roster spot was secure heading into the 2025 regular season.


Los Angeles Rams — Full Offensive Stats

Passing

PlayerC/ATTYDSAVGTDINTRTG
Stetson Bennett IV16/241887.821100.7
Team16/241837.621

Rushing

PlayerCARYDSAVGTDLG
Cody Schrader55911.8025
Jarquez Hunter11413.7011
Blake Corum9323.629
Jordan Waters4215.306
Stetson Bennett IV3113.708
Ronnie Rivers294.505
Brennan Presley11515.0015
Dresser Winn2-3-1.50-1
Drake Stoops1-4-4.00-4
Team381814.8225

Receiving

PlayerRECTGTYDSAVGTDLG
Xavier Smith335518.3039
Britain Covey223115.5026
Drake Stoops232814.0015
Konata Mumpfield252412.0018
Davis Allen22178.5013
Brennan Presley22115.516
Cody Schrader1199.019
Mark Redman1299.009
Blake Corum1244.004
Mario Williams0100
Team162318811.8239

Milton and the Dallas Offense

Joe Milton III entered Saturday as the leading candidate to back up Dak Prescott in 2025. His performance was a mixed bag — solid enough to keep that competition open, but not without problems.

The second-year quarterback finished 17-of-29 for 143 yards, one touchdown, and one interception. He also added 22 rushing yards on five carries before taking a shot to his elbow in the fourth quarter that ended his night early. Milton said afterward he could have returned if the situation required it.

New head coach Brian Schottenheimer acknowledged the bumpy start: “It’s definitely not a storybook beginning, that’s for sure. I think Joe was throwing some fastballs out there early. I’m proud of our guys the way they settled down.”

Malik Davis was Dallas’ most productive ball carrier with 63 yards on 7 carries. Phil Mafah added 36 yards on 10 attempts. The Cowboys finished with 148 rushing yards as a team — competitive numbers that were overshadowed by their inability to move the ball at all in the opening quarter.


Dallas Cowboys — Full Offensive Stats

Passing

PlayerC/ATTYDSAVGTDINTRTG
Joe Milton III17/291434.91168.6
Will Grier2/3144.70077.1
Team19/321494.91169.4

Rushing

PlayerCARYDSAVGTDLG
Malik Davis7639.0016
Phil Mafah10363.608
Joe Milton III5224.408
Will Grier2126.018
Deuce Vaughn2115.508
Jalen Cropper144.004
Team271485.5116

Receiving

PlayerRECTGTYDSAVGTDLG
Traeshon Holden224221.0035
Jalen Brooks232613.0016
Ryan Flournoy152020.0020
Josh Kelly131919.0019
Rivaldo Fairweather33186.017
Phil Mafah22157.5011
Jalen Cropper2363.004
Tyler Neville2263.003
Malik Davis1133.003
Deuce Vaughn1222.002
Luke Schoonmaker1311.001
Jalen Tolbert12-1-1.00-1
Jonathan Mingo0100
Team19321578.3135

Full Scoring Summary

QuarterTimeScorePlayDrive
Q19:44LAR 7–0Blake Corum 2-yd rush (Karty kick)11 plays, 79 yds, 5:16
Q12:47LAR 14–0Blake Corum 4-yd rush (Karty kick)13 plays, 64 yds, 6:23
Q28:04LAR 14–3Brandon Aubrey 35-yd FG11 plays, 55 yds, 6:14
Q20:00LAR 14–6Brandon Aubrey 25-yd FG14 plays, 73 yds, 5:52
Q34:13LAR 17–6Joshua Karty 37-yd FG10 plays, 45 yds, 5:41
Q413:10LAR 24–6Cody Schrader 9-yd pass from Bennett (Karty kick)7 plays, 54 yds, 3:59
Q48:48LAR 24–14Rivaldo Fairweather 7-yd pass from Milton (2-pt: Milton to Kelly)9 plays, 73 yds, 4:22
Q45:57LAR 31–14Brennan Presley 5-yd pass from Bennett (Karty kick)5 plays, 59 yds, 2:51
Q42:31LAR 31–21Will Grier 8-yd rush (Aubrey kick)10 plays, 65 yds, 3:26

Team Stats

CategoryDALLAR
Total Yards297364
Total Plays6063
Yards Per Play5.05.8
Passing Yards149183
Comp / Att19/3216/24
Yards Per Pass4.57.3
Rushing Yards148181
Rushing Attempts2738
Yards Per Rush5.54.8
First Downs1922
Passing 1st Downs710
Rushing 1st Downs911
Penalty 1st Downs31
3rd Down Conv.4/115/11
4th Down Conv.1/22/2
Red Zone (Made/Att)2/44/5
Penalties11 for 83 yds8 for 104 yds
Turnovers11
Fumbles Lost00
Interceptions Thrown11
Sacks Allowed1 (8 yds)1 (5 yds)
Total Drives99
Time of Possession26:4033:20

Defense and Special Teams

Josaiah Stewart was the Rams’ most disruptive defender, recording a sack and a tackle for loss against Milton in the fourth quarter. Safety Nate Valcarcel led all players on the field with 10 total tackles, and Tony Fields II added nine. A.J. Green III broke up two passes in the secondary. Cam Lampkin’s interception came when Milton forced a throw into double coverage near the end zone.

On the Dallas side, Zion Childress and Mike Smith Jr. each finished with six tackles. Israel Mukuamu’s interception was the defensive play of the night — a sideline read on a deep ball that Bennett underthrew — and the fourth-year cornerback was direct about what it meant to him: “Just blessed. Been waiting for this moment. God put it out there for me.”

Defensive Stats — Key Performers

PlayerTeamTOTSOLOSACKSTFLPDINT
Nate ValcarcelLAR1050010
Tony Fields IILAR960000
Shaun DolacLAR720000
Josaiah StewartLAR111100
A.J. Green IIILAR110020
Cam LampkinLAR220011
Zion ChildressDAL650100
Mike Smith Jr.DAL640000
Alijah ClarkDAL550000
Darius HarrisDAL540100
Shemar JamesDAL530000
Denzel DaxonDAL211100
Israel MukuamuDAL200011

Kicking

PlayerTeamFGFG PctLongXPPTS
Joshua KartyLAR1/1100%37 yds4/47
Brandon AubreyDAL2/2100%35 yds1/17

Punting

PlayerTeamPuntsYDSAVGLGTBIn 20
Ethan EvansLAR214572.58110
Bryan AngerDAL314648.75401

Kick Returns

PlayerTeamNOYDSAVGLGTD
Brennan PresleyLAR13838.0380
Cody SchraderLAR12222.0220
Jarquez HunterLAR12121.0210
Jalen CropperDAL26231.0350
Josh KellyDAL23718.5200

Storylines Worth Noting

Matthew Stafford’s pregame workout: Stafford sat out with a back injury that had kept him out of training camp, but he completed roughly 70 throws in an extended pregame session. McVay was encouraging afterward: “It was awesome. It looked good. He threw the ball really well.”

Micah Parsons on the sideline: Despite filing a trade request days earlier amid contract talks with Jerry Jones, Parsons attended the game with his teammates. No resolution had been announced on his contract situation.

CeeDee Lamb’s sideline cameo: Lamb was in street clothes and not suited up, but still drew a second-quarter penalty when an official ran into him near the out-of-bounds paint. He got up laughing.

Robert Rochell’s injury: The Cowboys cornerback went down with a hamstring injury on the opening drive and did not return.

Brian Schottenheimer’s debut: The 51-year-old, who spent the previous two seasons as Dallas’ offensive coordinator before replacing Mike McCarthy in January 2025, acknowledged Saturday’s result without making excuses: “It’s not the result that we wanted, but first time out there as a head coach, it felt pretty good.”


What This Game Showed

The Cowboys-Rams preseason box score from August 2025 told two very different stories by the final whistle. In Los Angeles, Bennett’s night was the proof of concept the Rams needed — a sharp, turnover-light performance from their third-string quarterback that gave the coaching staff exactly what they were looking for. In Dallas, Milton’s debut left enough questions open to keep that backup race interesting well into the regular season.

The first-quarter yardage gap of 160-1 was not a fluke. The Rams were better organized, better prepared, and more physical from the opening possession. By the time Dallas settled in, Los Angeles had already built a lead that required three unanswered fourth-quarter touchdowns to claw back from — and the Cowboys came up short.

Bobby Smith
Bobby Smithhttps://thesportie.com/
Bobby A. Smith is a Senior Sports Analyst with over nine years of professional experience, specializing in forensic analysis of game strategy and player performance. His work provides a definitive lens on a broad spectrum of professional sports, delivering expert commentary on the NFL, NBA, MLB, WNBA, Soccer, Boxing, Cricket, F1, and NASCAR. Unlike surface-level reporting, Bobby’s analysis is known for identifying the critical, game-deciding patterns that raw statistics often obscure. Every article is grounded in rigorous, fact-based research and an unwavering commitment to journalistic integrity.

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