CANTON, Ohio | Terrell Owens chatted amiably with his former Cowboys teammates. Chad  Ochocinco wore gold shoes for his few plays. Otherwise, the Cincinnati Bengals barely were noticeable Sunday night as Dallas won 16-7 in the Hall of Fame game. In  a game that might have made Class of 2010 inductees Emmitt Smith and  Jerry Rice wince, the offenses generally sputtered and there were eight  sacks. Neither team could get going with the ball in a sloppy affair.  Clearly, none of the aura of the NFL’s career leaders in rushing and  receiving rubbed off. At least some of Saturday’s other inductees —  the ones who played defense, Dick LeBeau, John Randle and Rickey  Jackson — could appreciate the lack of scoring and the takeaways. Dallas  picked off three passes and recovered a fumble; Cincinnati also  recovered a fumble. Nobody could be impressed by the slew of  penalties, 16 overall, 12 by Cincinnati for 90 yards. Then again, it was  the preseason opener. The Cowboys hope this is the opening step,  small as it was, toward becoming the first team to play in a Super Bowl  in its home stadium. That goal will take months before it can be  achieved, of course, and the most memorable item this weekend for them  will remain Smith’s entry into the Hall of Fame. “Having Emmitt  inducted into the Hall of Fame is special,” All-Pro linebacker DeMarcus  Ware said. “For us now playing for the Cowboys, it does make it extra  special.” Most of the regulars worked short shifts. At least the Cowboys’ starters looked sharp during their minimal stints. Tony  Romo led them to the Cincinnati 2 with a steady opening drive before  they stalled and David Buehler kicked a 20-yard field goal. Romo was 5  for 10 for 59 yards. “You just have to continue to work on the  things we’ve been doing through the offseason and in training camp,”  Romo said. “You’re never sure until you get into a game-like mode, and  some of the new stuff, it was nice to see it work out really well. It’s a  start. We have to build off of it, but we still have a ways to go, and  we’re on the way.” Dallas certainly needs better protection for  its quarterbacks after Cincinnati had five sacks, including two by  linebacker Michael Johnson. The Bengals made plenty of offseason  news with the additions of Owens and Pacman Jones, who was not signed by  any teams last year because of his previous off-field issues and missed  the season. Neither former Cowboy had much impact, although Owens  caught two passes for 18 yards and was thrown to four times by Carson  Palmer. “We’re a work in progress,” Owens said. “We’re getting there. It felt just like practice.” It often looked like it, as well. Buehler  added field goals of 34 yards in the second quarter and 23 yards in the  third. The last kick was set up when linebacker Brandon Williams  returned an interception of Jordan Palmer — Carson’s younger brother and  Cincinnati’s third-string quarterback — 36 yards to the Bengals 9-yard  line. Dallas capped the one-sided victory when Brandon Sharpe  picked off Jordan Palmer’s fourth-quarter pass and dived untouched into  the end zone for a 6-yard score. Bengals rookie Jordan Shipley ran  back a punt 63 yards in the final minutes, and Jordan Palmer hit rookie  tight end Darius Hill for a 1-yard TD with 51 seconds remaining. Cincinnati’s best player was punter Kevin Huber, who averaged 46.4 yards on 10 punts.
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