The 49ers host the Cowboys on Sunday night in their biggest test so far this season.

San Francisco has beaten Dallas in each of the last two postseasons, and they are two of the favorites to represent the NFC in Super Bowl LVIII next February in Las Vegas.

Here is our live blog from the game:

4Q, 13:59 – 49ers 42, Cowboys 10: After Fred Warner picks off a tipped pass from Dak Prescott, Jordan Mason takes a pitch off left tackle 26 yards for a touchdown. It’s the 49ers’ second touchdown in 20 seconds.

4Q, 14:19 – 49ers 35, Cowboys 10: Brock Purdy finds Kyle Juszczyk in the right flat for a play-action touchdown from one yard out. The Niners marched down the field after a Tashaun Gipson interception with a physical run game and a 19-yard Purdy pass to Jauan Jennings on third down. Purdy has four touchdowns and 252 yards on 17-of-24 passing.

3Q, 7:20 – 49ers 28, Cowboys 10: The Niners again complete a drive with a Brock Purdy pass caught by George Kittle as the tight end now has three scores. This one came from 10 yards out on a third-and-2 play-action pass. Catches from Brandon Aiyuk and Deebo Samuel helped bring the ball down the field on the 75-yard drive.

3Q, 11:54 – 49ers 21, Cowboys 10: Dallas drives into 49ers territory on its first possession after halftime, but stalls after a third-and-4 run from the 31-yard line goes for a one-yard loss. Brandon Aubrey, the Cowboys’ 28-year-old rookie kicker, knocks it through from 50 yards out.

2Q, 2:36 – 49ers 21, Cowboys 7: The Niners respond to Dallas’ scoring drive with one of their own, capped by a 1-yard touchdown run from Christian McCaffrey. The running back was involved in two key plays earlier on the drive: A third-down incompletion in which he drew an unnecessary roughness penalty, and a 19-yard screen pass on second-and-12.

2Q, 7:45 – 49ers 14, Cowboys 7: Dallas picks up its initial first down of the game, then establishes some offensive rhythm before Dak Prescott found the speedy KaVontae Turpin at the goal line for an athletic catch and a 26-yard touchdown.

2Q, 13:16 – 49ers 14, Cowboys 0: A handoff to Christian McCaffrey turns into a Deebo Samuel reverse and pitch back to Brock Purdy, who hits George Kittle down the right sideline for a 38-yard touchdown. The score, Kittle’s second of the game, came on the first play of the 49ers’ possession after forcing another three-and-out.

2Q, 14:56 – 49ers 7, Cowboys 0: Christian McCaffrey rushes eight yards up the middle, running over Dallas CB Jourdan Lewis to finish the run. But Lewis ripped the ball out as McCaffrey landed on top of him, then recovered the fumble at his own 2-yard line.

1Q, 0:46 – 49ers 7, Cowboys 0: Fred Warner punches the ball out of Tony Pollard’s grasp deep in Cowboys territory and it rolls improbably along the sideline until Kevin Givens grabs it to give the 49ers possession at the Dallas 16-yard line.

1Q, 11:10 – 49ers 7, Cowboys 0: Brock Purdy found George Kittle on a deep cross for the tight end’s first touchdown of the 2023 season. Purdy was 4-of-4 on the opening drive, and the Dallas defense assisted the 49ers with two penalties for 20 yards, then again jumped offside on the PAT.

Below are our notes from pregame. 

SANTA CLARA — Two hours before kickoff, Trey Lance was back on the field at Levi’s Stadium, throwing warmup passes as the Cowboys’ No. 3 quarterback, and doing so from about the same spot where he sustained a fractured ankle in last season’s home opener.

Then it was reunion time.

Once Lance was done throwing, he visited at the midfield logo with several ex-teammates, including 49ers backups Sam Darnold and Brandon Allen, before Brock Purdy emerged for his warmups and stopped for a minute-long chat with Lance.

Lance is officially the Cowboys’ No. 3, emergency quarterback behind Dak Prescott and Cooper Rush, as has been the case throughout the season for Dallas (3-1).

GREGORY AMONG INACTIVES

Unlike Christian McCaffrey suiting up two days after his official trade to the 49ers a year ago, pass rusher Randy Gregory is not being rushed into action following his acquisition Friday from the Denver Broncos, as expected.

Gregory is among the 49ers’ deactivated players for tonight’s game against the Dallas Cowboys, Gregory’s initial team from 2015-21 before he joined the Broncos.

Also out for the 49ers are running back Elijah Mitchell (knee), tight end Jalen Graham, defensive tackle Kalia Davis, offensive lineman Nick Zakelj, tight end Brayden Willis and Allen, the No. 3 quarterback.

Offensive lineman Jon Feliciano (concussion) and wide receiver Jauan Jennings (shin) are cleared to return. This is Mitchell’s second game out, so McCaffrey’s backups at running back are Jordan Mason and Ty Davis-Price, the latter of whom has not had a carry this season.

The 49ers elevated Austin Bryant from the practice squad to add depth on the defensive line, which saw Kerry Hyder Jr. released in Friday’s corresponding roster move. Bryant also came up for the season-opening win at Pittsburgh, delivering one pressure and one hurry in 16 snaps.

Also summoned from the practice squad Saturday was cornerback Kendall Sheffield, who also came up a week ago and played well on special teams (16 snaps) and had three tackles on defense (11 snaps).

McCAFFREY LOSES LEAD, FOR NOW

For the first time this season, McCaffrey fell out of the NFL’s lead in rushing, albeit before kickoff against the Cowboys.

The Miami Dolphins’ Devon Achane ran for 151 yards Sunday, pushing his season total to 460 yards — one more than McCaffrey’s production in the 49ers’ 4-0 start. Achane has just 38 carries (to McCaffrey’s 80) and has five rushing touchdowns in a Dolphins backfield he shares with ex-49er Raheem Mostert, who on Sunday scored his seventh rushing touchdown this year, one better than McCaffrey.

McCaffrey has scored in a franchise-record 13 consecutive games.

Third among the NFL’s rushing leaders is the Indianapolis Colts’ Zack Moss, whose 165 yards in their win Sunday pushed his season total to 445; Jonathan Taylor had 18 yards in a six-carry season debut.

COWBOYS’ INACTIVES

Deactivated by the Cowboys were safety Israel Mukuamu, cornerback Eric Scott, offensive tackle Asim Richards, wide receiver Jalen Brooks, tight end Peyton Hendershot and former San Jose State defensive lineman Viliami Fehoko.

Dallas will have for the first time this season its preferred five offensive linemen in the starting lineup, including the return of left tackle Tyron Smith from a two-game absence.

Source: www.mercurynews.com