Much of the outside blame for the Cowboys' last two blowout losses is being directed at Jason Garrett and his coaching staff.

A lack of second-half adjustments tops the list of concerns.

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones doesn't see it exactly that way. Jones stuck up for the coaching staff during his Tuesday morning radio appearance.

He says there were second-half adjustments made during the 37-9 loss to the Eagles. They changed some offensive blocking schemes, Jones said.

The Cowboys have been outscored 47-0 in the second half of the last two games.

"I've seen these coaches to a man make some outstanding adjustments in their time with the Cowboys, so I know that they adjust," Jones said on 105.3 The Fan's Shan and RJ show [KRLD-FM]. "They might not adjust at the right time in a series, they might not adjust at the right time in a ballgame, and obviously they can lose ballgames.

"But this is a really outstanding coaching staff. I'm really proud to have them."

Garrett was asked Monday if second-half adjustments are a real thing or just a talking point after games.

"I think the biggest thing we try to do focus on is adjustment throughout the game," Garrett said. "You have opportunities when you go out on offense, you have a series of plays. And then you come back when the defense is out there and what you want to do as a coaching staff is have ongoing communication and make adjustments after that first series. 'OK, what do we want to do now? What are they doing? What adjustments have they made? How can we attack it?'

"That goes on really throughout the ballgame. Halftime is the time where we have a little bit more time to kind of settle in and reset your plan in all three phases of your team. They're real, but when we're at our best is when we're making adjustments throughout the ballgame, the lines of communication are clean for 60 minutes."