EAST RUTHERFORD, New Jersey (WABC) -- The New York Giants won, and then they waited - hoping for a key win from a bitter rival.
"We'll be pulling for Philly, no doubt," quarterback Daniel Jones said.
They won't be singing "Fly, Eagles Fly" in the Big Apple any time soon.
Far from .500 but still full of hope, the six-win Giants got to the brink of an unprecedented playoff berth with a 23-19 victory over the Dallas Cowboys on Sunday, locking things up when rookie Xavier McKinney intercepted Andy Dalton in the end zone with 1:15 remaining.
New York's postseason chances hinged on Philadelphia beating Washington later Sunday, but the Eagles flopped in a 20-14 loss.
The Giants (6-10) would have made the playoffs for the first time since 2016 and earned their first NFC East title since 2011 if it had gone the other way. They also would have been the first team to qualify for the playoffs with six victories in a 16-game regular season and the first to do so after starting 1-7.
Hardly how first-year coach Joe Judge planned it, but there were no complaints about extending the season for at least a few more hours.
"It shows we've had a lot of growth as a team throughout the year in terms of their wherewithal and fortitude," Judge said. "I mean, I think that showed up throughout the entire year. And I keep saying I found out a lot more about our team when we were 0-5, 1-7 than I did down the stretch."
Dallas (6-10) nearly ripped the satisfaction away. Dalton rallied the Cowboys with a bloody left hand after being stepped on by defensive tackle Leonard Williams in the third quarter, and he had Dallas on the doorstep when Williams got close again.
Dalton scrambled around on a broken play, avoided being sacked by Williams for a fourth time, but ended up floating one into the middle of the end zone. McKinney caught it easily, his first career interception.
Jones was efficient and surprisingly mobile after slumping with left ankle and right hamstring injuries during a three-game losing streak. He was 17-of-25 passing for 229 yards and two touchdowns, ending Dallas' seven-game winning streak in the rivalry.
Dalton was 29 of 47 for 243 yards and had a gash on his hand stitched up after the game. He was sacked six times, and the Cowboys ended a three-game winning streak that nearly propelled them to the playoffs despite star quarterback Dak Prescott's season-ending injury in Week 5.
"It's been obviously a year of a lot of ups and downs," first-year coach Mike McCarthy said. "Trials and tribulations. In some ways, this game's a bit of a microcosm of our season."
Dalton and the Dallas offense had just 34 total yards midway through the second quarter but began moving the ball just before halftime. They drove 56 yards in the third quarter to set up Ezekiel Elliott's 1-yard TD run, and Dalton overcame the hand injury on the next drive to set up Greg Zuerlein's 36-yard field goal that trimmed New York's lead to 20-19.
Graham Gano made a 50-yard field goal for the Giants on the next possession. Gano passed Josh Brown for the franchise record with his 30th consecutive made field goal.
Limited to 26 points over its previous three games, the Giants' 31st-ranked offense busted out with 239 yards and 20 points in the first half. Jones had TD passes of 10 yards to Sterling Shepard and 33 yards to Dante Pettis.
Shepard also scored his first career rushing TD, a 23-yard reverse on the game's opening drive. After grinding through injury to practice this week, he finished with eight catches for 112 yards.
Dalton and the Dallas offense were a mess early but got in position for a pair of second-quarter field goals by Zuerlein, including a 57-yarder on the half's final play.
New York's Wayne Gallman Jr. appeared to fumble after picking up a game-clinching first down in the final minute, but officials ruled he was down before the ball came loose. The ruling was upheld via replay.
"I'm sorry I caused drama," Gallman said.
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