Cowboys owner and general manager Jerry Jones has expressed regret for publicly second-guessing coach Jason Garrett's play calling late in Sunday's loss to the Patriots. The Cowboys, whose previous two losses in large part were due to late interceptions by quarterback Tony Romo, had three running plays and a penalty on the series before punting to the Patriots with 2:31 remaining. Tom Brady responded by engineering a 10-play, 80-yard drive for the game-winning touchdown. Following the loss, Jones said Garrett's conservative play calling late in the game "bit us." He made several comments indicating he wished Garrett had been more aggressive while protecting a three-point lead in the final four minutes. "I would say that probably if I had that to do over again, I wouldn't comment, period," Jones said Tuesday on KRLD-FM, admitting that emotion got the best of him. "I wouldn't even answer a question about it. I was asked the questions and you can always say, 'No comment.' "But I did [comment], and I was real clear that this was a flip of the coin. That's what Jason frankly is paid to do, is make those decisions, and there's no one that I'd rather have make the decisions regarding our football team right now on an offensive play call."