The Dallas Cowboys opened Monday night at Allegiant Stadium with a surprise. Their two star receivers, CeeDee Lamb and George Pickens, did not take the field for the opening drive of the MNF showdown.
The decision was labelled as a coach’s decision on game night, no injury was noted, and the team offered limited detail immediately afterward. By Thursday, Lamb clarified the situation, stating that he and Pickens had missed team curfew while dining at Red Rock Casino, and he denied rumors that he was ill.
The discipline was brief; both receivers returned early in the second series, and they quickly contributed to a 33-16 road win.
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Postgame, Lamb declined to elaborate, telling reporters, “I’m not going in depth on that. Honestly, I’m not. I’m sorry, I’m not.” Day-after and midweek coverage then detailed the curfew violation that led to the one-game benching. Lamb specifically addressed circulating speculation, stating that he did not throw up at the casino and that the issue was strictly disciplinary.
Head coach Brian Schottenheimer emphasized the positive response from both players upon their return to the game.
“You look at the energy those guys play with, they literally jump-started the offense when they got back in there. They didn’t hang their heads. They didn’t do any of that stuff. And that’s why I love those guys, man,” he told reporters after the win.
After a three-and-out on the opening drive, Dallas scored 21 points in the second quarter, with both receivers finding the end zone as the Cowboys took control.
CeeDee Lamb said he & George Pickens missed curfew before the game at Las Vegas. The two were having dinner and a few drinks at @redrockcasino Lamb denied he was throwing up at the casino. He said it’s a disrespect to even suggest that. Lamb said he knows how to hold his liquor.
— Calvin Watkins (@calvinwatkins) November 20, 2025
The benching’s scope was narrow and confirmed on the broadcast as a coach’s decision; neither Lamb nor Pickens was listed with injury. Dallas started Jalen Tolbert, Ryan Flournoy, and KaVontae Turpin for the opening series, then inserted Lamb on the first play of the second possession and Pickens shortly after.
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From there, the duo combined for 210 receiving yards and two touchdowns, a production surge that helped snap a two-game losing streak and move the Cowboys to 4-5-1.
Context from game-night reporting and day-after recaps consistently framed the benching as non-injury-related, with postgame references to a coach’s decision and the strong response that followed when Lamb and Pickens returned.
A demanding schedule, including matchups against top conference opponents, means Dallas, which currently has the second-ranked offense in the league according to PFSN’s Offense Impact metric, will need the duo to be at full rhythm while maintaining adherence to team standards that, in this case, were reinforced and quickly addressed.

