The Cowboys’ glorious start has quickly turned sour on Jason Garrett.

Dallas dropped its third straight game Sunday, falling to .500 at the hands of the winless Jets after starting the season with three dominant wins. The calls for Garrett to be fired over this disappointing turn have returned, and former Cowboys wide receiver Terrell Owens is spearheading the roast.

“Hey @realjerryjones!! Still think Jason Garrett is the answer?! For a decade, A DECADE NOW, it’s the same old song and dance!” Owens wrote on Twitter Monday. “I knew they were going to @JasonWitten on the 3rd down prior to TD and knew they were going to him on the 2-pt conversion. Not too late 2 bring me back.”

Garrett, who was officially named head coach in 2011 after serving as interim head coach in 2010, has an 80-62 regular-season record and is 2-3 in the postseason. Garrett is currently in the final year of his contract, which the team opted not to extend, making him a lame duck.

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has long been Garrett’s most staunch defender, despite the team’s lack of playoff success. Jones made it clear after the 24-22 loss to the Jets that he is not pleased, but refused to put all the blame on his head coach.

“I’m going to be very trite: I was a lot happier with what he had done the first three games than what’s happened the last three games,” Jones said of Garrett, according to ESPN. “But the big thing I want to say is it’s not just him. This is across the board. That had a lot of input out there tonight to get in that spot.”

The Cowboys’ opening three wins against the Giants, Redskins and Dolphins (combined record: 3-14) look less impressive by the week. The Cowboys now head into a crucial Sunday night battle with the 3-3 Eagles with the two teams tied atop a mediocre NFC East.

“If you really look at it, you can’t take one thing. It can be a list of 15 things, with some having more of an emphasis on maybe the player, the execution, mistakes, breaks — all of those kinds of things,” Jones said. “Across the board, we did not play well enough to win. Had we been able to tie this thing up, or win that thing at the end, it wouldn’t be because we played well. You guys would be writing about a team that did not play well that won a game. Instead, you’re writing about [what] usually happens to you when you don’t play well.

“Am I thinking that this is what we are going to be or what we can do with our 10 games that we have remaining, here we are leading the NFC East? Not at all,” Jones continued. “I want to look at the things that we’re doing right, and we’ll give a good look at making the adjustments or whatever the things that haven’t gone good here.”