Although Carson Wentz was the quarterback everyone was talking about throughout the week of Senior Bowl practices, Mississippi State's Dak Prescott stole the show in Saturday's game.

The dual threat QB was named Senior Bowl Most Outstanding Player after completing 7 of 10 passes for 61 yards and a touchdown, leading the South team to a 27-16 win.

The Cowboys coached the North team, but Prescott and the three other South team quarterbacks got a chance to spend about an hour with offensive coordinator Scott Linehan and quarterback coach Wade Wilson last Friday.

"We just watched film," Prescott said. "We all four met in the same room with the OC and the quarterback coach. It went real well. They just interviewed us, talked about ourselves and just watched a little film together."

If the Cowboys don't draft a QB early, Prescott could be an option in the middle rounds.

During his senior year, Prescott completed 66 percent of his passes for 3,793 yards, 29 touchdowns and five interceptions. He also ran 160 times for 588 yards and 10 touchdowns as MSU went 9-4. The 6-2, 226-pound Prescott led the Bulldogs to a 10-3 season in 2014.

Here are some other highlights from Prescott's time with reporters after Saturday's game in Mobile, Ala.

On staying in school for his senior year:

"I knew waiting until my senior year could only help me. I was able to have a good senior season from the pocket, making a lot of throws, doing things I think the NFL scouts wanted to see. Just to come in and have a good week and get this trophy capped it off the right way."

On what he wanted to show scouts during the Senior Bowl week:

"More than anything, I guess, just who I am, the person I am, the intangibles I have, the way I lead other guys. And I have fun when I'm playing this game. I got a love. As well as being able to take snaps from under the center. I haven't been asked to do that in high school or college, so being in it this week was a great opportunity for me."

On how much the Senior Bowl was different from the college game:

"I mean, it's all football. It's just different terminology more than anything. At the end of the day, it's all about football and having fun while you're doing it, making those relationships and just enjoying the game."

On the feedback he received:

"Nothing but positive stuff. They just obviously wanted to see me get in the huddle, take snaps from under the center and I think I did a good job."

On if he feels like he has all the tools to immediately start Week 1 in the NFL:

"I'm a very confident guy, so I'm going to say yes. But obviously there's a lot of work to be done. I'm not going to say I'm going to go in there and just be the best automatically. I know there's a lot of hard work getting in the system, but with my work ethic paying off I could do it, definitely."

On what he has left to work on:

"Just reps from under the center. I wasn't asked to do that in high school or college. This was my first time, my first live opportunity to do that was in this game and practice. That more than anything, just continuous reps. I think I'm athletic enough that I can get it done and just get comfortable at it."