Fans were treated to a pulsating skirmish between the Dallas Cowboys and the Las Vegas Raiders on Thursday night at the AT&T Stadium, as the game went down to the wire. In the end, the Raiders escaped with the victory in overtime, 36-33 to improve to 6-5.

The Raiders needed some “help” as Cowboys cornerback Anthony Brown was whistled for a fourth pass-interference penalty in the dying moments, one of the dozens of penalties they incurred. This kept the drive alive for the Raiders, with kicker Daniel Carlson making a 29-yard field goal to seal the W.

As expected, after the game, the Cowboys weren't too happy with the officiating. Brown said the Raiders got an unfair advantage with how the game was called (via Dallas Morning News' Michael Gehlken).

“Almost every third down, after I got the first two, (Raiders QB Derek Carr) just kept throwing it up on third down. If he feels like it’s going to be easy to get a call, he’s going to keep doing it.”

Cowboys wide receiver Michael Gallup, meanwhile, lamented the 166 penalty yards handed to them.

“That is tough, especially in our own stadium. You’re playing two teams. You’re playing the refs and the other team.”

Cowboys rookie Micah Parsons, who's been playing sensational all season long, was more succinct with his take. But clearly, it had more bite (via The Athletic's Jon Machota).

“I think we should play football. We’re not here to play tag.”

All in all, the Cowboys and Raiders were called for not one, not two, but 28 penalties. If our math is correct, that's a lot.