Sportsradio 1310 The Ticket host Bob Sturm analyzes the Dallas Cowboys' loss to the Washington Redskins in the season finale.

Did quarterback Kellen Moore show you anything in these past few games that makes you want him on the roster?

Yeah, I think I have been reasonably consistent with my Kellen Moore views. I think he can play a decent level of quarterback as a backup. And if I am going to select a quarterback high in my next draft, one of my best objectives is to keep that QB from playing. I need a dependable quarterback who understands what we're trying to do offensively and can execute on a reasonably competent level to move the team. Moore can do a lot of that. He has obvious limitations and those limitations would get bigger each week as defenses gameplan for the throws he can and cannot make. I don't want to have to find a veteran and a rookie in the off-season so I would like to retain Moore for a short term No. 2 and draft the No. 3. Moore has helped himself in the last month. He still has a very small margin for error and can't be a long-term starter. But as far as a backup and, essentially, an assistant coach, I think Moore could handle that. I would like to put him through the off-season training program to give him every opportunity.

Rank this season amongst most disappointing Cowboys seasons you've seen.

By virtue of the fact that the Dave Campo seasons had no expectations, I would have to put this at the top of the list. This is a season that the Cowboys used the Super Bowl as a motivational goal and carrot and went to Levi Stadium against the 49ers in preseason and reflected on the idea to return there (for the Super Bowl). Any season that starts with a team verbalizing its Super Bowl intentions and finishing with a Top-5 pick is a catastrophic season at any angle. 2010 was obviously very disappointing as well coming off a divisional title, but at least that gave us some optimism with the Jason Garrett era beginning and rookie season of Dez Bryant.

Should anyone be the fall man for this season?

That's a complicated question and one that is viewed from the lens of the idealistic view of hings instead of the realistic view. Realistically, no one of significance will take the fall. I expect the head coach and both coordinators are safe, so in the end it's only conversation. It's just an exercise in conversation. I'm completely fine with the Cowboys taking a drastic step or two to reexamine their offense and perhaps consider some drastic changes tactically to this rather predictable offense that has developed. I would like to see a fresh set of eyes work with Tony Romo. Even before this year, we complained about a lack of imagination and creativity in maximizing the offense. That was put on hold after a tremendous 2014. But throughout this year, it seemed the Cowboys' tendencies make them too easy to defend unless everyone is playing at the top of their game.

How good is it to have a Top 5 pick?

I think it can be fantastic. That is without question where franchises are able to alter their next decade, but so much depends on it. The next four months will reveal where the Cowboys will go. For instance, (with Sunday's loss), they secure their spot as the coaching staff for the Senior Bowl. And I know they are delighted about that, because they get a close look at the young men they will have the opportunity to draft. The key is to do well enough in this year's draft so you aren't drafting high that often.

What are the three biggest needs on this team now?

A quarterback of the future is probably the top priority. Linebacker. They need difference makers. They need defensive backs by the half dozen, whether it's one special one or a number of capable DBs. I like Byron Jones. They'll get Orlando Scandrick back, but everyone else is too ordinary.