The Dallas Cowboys delivered a Week 3 nightmare at Soldier Field, and team owner Jerry Jones couldn’t hide his frustration. Cameras caught the 82-year-old billionaire fuming after Dak Prescott threw his second interception.Dallas entered Sunday hoping to build momentum after a shaky 1-1 start, but the matchup with Caleb Williams and the Chicago Bears turned into an embarrassing 31-14 blowout. Prescott’s late pick sealed the Cowboys’ fate, erasing any chance to cut the deficit to one score.Jones looked livid in his owner’s box as Fox cameras zeroed in following Prescott’s miscue.The loss stings even more considering Jones’ offseason gamble. He failed to extend Micah Parsons and ultimately traded the All-Pro pass rusher to Green Bay right before Week 1. Ben Schottenheimer's team has now dropped to 1-2; meanwhile, the Bears celebrated their first win of the 2025 season.Also read: "I wasn't naive": Dak Prescott addresses Jerry Jones stirring up soap opera via Micah Parsons trade to PackersBears proved too much for Jerry Jones' CowboysThe Chicago Bears showed Jerry Jones’ Dallas Cowboys exactly who was in charge on Sunday. The Cowboys entered Week 3 riding high after beating the New York Giants, but Caleb Williams and the Bears tore that confidence to shreds.The Cowboys’ secondary looked lost from the start, which has been a recurring issue that’s haunted the team this season. Williams threw four touchdown passes before the fourth quarter, exposing every coverage gap. The same problem plagued Jerry Jones' team a week earlier against the Giants.On offense, the Cowboys didn’t help themselves. Javonte Williams’ fumble in the first quarter set the tone for a bad day. After that, Dak Prescott’s fourth-quarter interception and an end-zone pick were the icing that sealed the Cowboys' demise.Prescott lost CeeDee Lamb to an early ankle injury and never found rhythm. Dallas trailed 31-14 by the fourth quarter, and Schottenheimer benched Prescott for Joe Milton, who didn't take long to throw his late-game interception.The pass rush, once Dallas’ trump card, was gone after Micah Parsons was traded to the Green Bay Packers in a preseason trade. Sitting at 1-2, the Cowboys don't necessarily face a full-blown crisis, but a leaky secondary, a missing pass rush and a quarterback whose turnovers are proving costly.Also read: Lil Wayne exposes long-running feud between Micah Parsons and Jerry Jones