When Jordan Love, quarterback of the Green Bay Packers launched a 337‑yard passing attack on Sunday, September 28, 2025, the whole stadium at Lambeau Field seemed to hold its breath. Across the field, Dak Prescott, quarterback of the Dallas Cowboys answered with a barrage of plays that left the scoreboard ticking faster than a clock in a kitchen timer. By the end of regulation, both teams had piled up 80 points, forcing an overtime that culminated in a 40‑40 deadlock – one of the highest‑scoring ties in NFL history.
The game erupted early. Love connected three times with rookie wideout Romeo Doubs, who turned six catches into 58 yards and three touchdowns. Meanwhile, Prescott orchestrated a balanced attack, mixing short‑range throws with a wildcat formation that saw running back Javonte Williams plunge from the one‑yard line with just under five minutes left in the fourth quarter.
Both sides swapped leads at a breakneck pace. The Cowboys nudged ahead 30‑27 with 4:50 on the clock, only for the Packers to respond with a two‑yard rush by Josh Jacobs, who finished the day with 157 total yards from scrimmage and two rushing touchdowns. The back‑and‑forth continued until the final minute, when each team punched in a late touchdown to send the contest into overtime.
Special teams added drama. The Cowboys’ Brandon Aubrey and the Packers’ Brandon McManus traded short field goals in the extra period. McManus nailed a 53‑yard kick described by the announcers as "right down the middle," forcing the game into a second overtime chance that ultimately ended with the 40‑40 final tally.
Packers head coach Matt LaFleur was visibly frustrated after the clock‑management hiccup that left the team with just a sliver of time on the final drive. "I think that just goes to the level of detail where we're not where we need to be. The operation was just way too slow," he said in the post‑game interview.
Cowboys' new leader Brian Schottenheimer – recording his first tie after 25 years as an NFL assistant – admitted the locker room felt "empty" but still expressed pride. "No one in that locker room is happy. No one is fulfilled. We didn't win. I would be remiss if I didn't say how proud I was of them and their fight," he added.
The game wasn't without its darker side. Dallas safety Malik Hooker left the field after a left‑toe injury in the second quarter, and running back Miles Sanders limped off with an ankle twist just before halftime. Left tackle Tyler Guyton was evaluated for a concussion after a hard hit.
Those injuries could shape the Cowboys' next matchup against the New York Jets, a game that now carries extra weight for a team that lost key defensive pieces just weeks ago.
Historically, ties are rare – this one is only the third 40‑plus tie in NFL history and the highest‑scoring tie of the 2025 season. For both franchises, the result is a statistical anomaly that can affect playoff tiebreakers, especially in a division where every point matters.
Analysts at ESPN noted that the combined 80 points ranks among the top‑ten scoring games of the decade, underscoring a league‑wide trend toward high‑octane offenses. If the Packers keep their aerial firepower, they could challenge the reigning champions at the season’s midway point. The Cowboys, meanwhile, will need to iron out defensive lapses to stay competitive.
Next Sunday, Dallas travels to MetLife Stadium to face the New York Jets. The Jets’ defensive coordinator Mike Greulich hinted his unit will scheme aggressively against Prescott’s arm, hoping to force the Cowboys into a low‑scoring grind.
Green Bay’s schedule remains uncertain in the public reports, but the Packers likely host a mid‑week divisional showdown that could determine their playoff positioning. In any case, fans can expect both teams to lean heavily on their star quarterbacks as the season unfolds.
The tie adds a half‑win to Green Bay's record, which could be decisive in a tight NFC North race. If they win their upcoming games, the extra point may secure a higher seed, but a loss could drop them to a wildcard spot.
Dallas is without safety Malik Hooker (toe injury), running back Miles Sanders (ankle), and potentially left tackle Tyler Guyton (concussion evaluation). Their return timelines are still unclear, which means the Jets will face a thinner defense next week.
Overtime rules favor sudden‑death scoring, so most games end with a winner. A tie requires both teams to fail to score in the allotted overtime period, which becomes unlikely when offenses are as explosive as Green Bay’s and Dallas’s were on September 28.
Packers kicker Brandon McManus nailed a 53‑yard field goal in overtime, the longest of the night and the kick that forced the tie.
The 80‑point total underscores the NFL’s shift toward pass‑heavy, high‑tempo offenses. Teams that can sustain long drives and convert short-yardage situations, like the Packers’ fourth‑and‑6 conversion, are setting the new benchmark for success.
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