Packers head into bye week seeking
to correct costly mistakes from their past two games
[September 30, 2025]
By STEVE MEGARGEE
After they played as well as any team in the NFL through their first
two games, the Green Bay Packers got a reality check the past two
weeks.
Now they head into their bye week facing a crossroads after a 13-10
loss at Cleveland and a 40-40 tie at Dallas, causing them to fall
behind the Detroit Lions in the NFC North.
“We can go home and put our heads down, and we are just blaming each
other and point the finger,” said Micah Parsons, who made a
potential touchdown-saving sack in overtime to highlight the former
Cowboys’ pass rusher’s return to Dallas.
“Or we can be men and say, ‘This is where I’m coming from. This is
where you are coming from. And how do we fix it?’ I think we have to
be adults here. We have to be professionals. We have to find a way
to be positive.”
There’s plenty of blame to go around for the Packers’ issues these
past two Sundays.
The offense that struggled in Cleveland a week earlier was resurgent
Sunday at Dallas. Green Bay scored on all five of its possessions
after halftime.
But a defense that entered Sunday having given up the fewest points
of any NFL team allowed Dallas to score touchdowns on five of its
last seven drives, even though the Cowboys were missing two starting
offensive linemen and four-time Pro Bowl receiver CeeDee Lamb
because of injuries.
The Packers (2-1-1) hadn’t allowed as many as 40 points in a game
since a 40-33 loss at Philadelphia in 2022.

“I take ownership,” Parsons said after the game. “Coach and them
take ownership. But ownership is one thing, and doing something
about it is another. Tomorrow, let’s all watch this film together as
a team. Let’s break it down. Let’s talk about it. I think that’s the
tough conversation that we have to have all together.”
The Packers will spend their bye week having those talks as they
figure out how they can recapture the form they showed in their
earlier victories over the Lions and Washington Commanders.
“There’s just a lot of little areas that if we clean them up and
execute better, we’ll be the team we want to be,” quarterback Jordan
Love said.
“I have no doubt. We’re still a really good team. But it comes down
to Sundays, coming out here and performing, executing at a high
level. Yeah, there’s some disappointment in these past two weeks.
We’ve got some things to clean up and there’s a long season ahead of
us.”
What’s working
One week after the Browns limited them to 81 yards on 31 carries,
the Packers rushed for 164 yards on 35 attempts. ... The Packers
went 10 of 14 on third down and 1 of 1 on fourth down. ... An
offensive line missing two starters allowed only one sack, though it
was a big one — a strip-sack that led to a Dallas touchdown just
before halftime.
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Green Bay Packers defensive end Micah Parsons (1) rushes after
getting past Dallas Cowboys offensive tackle Tyler Guyton (60) in
the first half of an NFL football game Sunday, Sept. 28, 2025, in
Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Jessica Tobias)

What needs help
The special teams breakdowns continued Sunday as an extra-point
attempt got blocked and returned to the end zone. That three-point
swing proved critical in a game that ended in a tie. ... Green Bay's
poor clock management in overtime nearly prevented the Packers from
attempting a tying field goal to end the game. There were about 22
seconds left when Emanuel Wilson was tackled for a 1-yard loss after
making a catch. Green Bay snapped the ball with about 6 seconds
left, and a single second remained after Love threw an incomplete
pass to Matthew Golden in the end zone.
Stock up
Romeo Doubs had a career-high three touchdown catches. He has four
touchdowns this season to match his 2024 season total. ... Josh
Jacobs rushed for 86 yards and two touchdowns. ... Brandon McManus
kicked a tying 53-yard field goal at the end of regulation and a
34-yarder on the final play of the game. ... Golden made a
game-saving, 14-yard catch on fourth-and-6 late in the fourth
quarter.
Stock down
LT Rasheed Walker appeared to get beaten on James Houston's
strip-sack late in the second quarter. ... CB Carrington Valentine
struggled in pass coverage.
Injuries
DT Devonte Wyatt left with a knee injury and CB Nate Hobbs was
evaluated for a concussion. OT Zach Tom (quadriceps), G Aaron Banks
(groin) and OT Anthony Belton (ankle) didn't play.
Key number
6-0-1 — The Packers' record at AT&T Stadium following Sunday's tie.
The Packers had won each of their first five meetings with the
Cowboys at A&T Stadium. Their most recent Super Bowl victory also
came in that stadium.
Next steps
The Packers don't play again until an Oct. 12 home game against the
Cincinnati Bengals. Then they head back on the road to face Arizona
and Pittsburgh.
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