Monday, September 29, 2025

Packers Start Strong, Settle for a Tie in Dallas

 By Eric Goska

The 1940 Packers

If a football game consisted solely of first quarters, your Green Bay Packers would be undefeated.

For the fourth time this season, the Packers dominated early. But in Dallas, as in Cleveland, Green Bay could not sustain that effort and had to settle for a 40-40 overtime tie with the Cowboys Sunday night.

In the spirit of “if you can’t say something nice …,” we’ll focus on Green Bay’s historic first-quarter run. We’ll leave the unpleasantries that played out in the heart of Texas for others to sort through.

Historic, when invoked here, is not hyperbole. The Green and Gold have outgained their competition in first quarters by a wide margin, breaking a record that had stood for 85 years.

Green Bay’s early-bird ways were on display for all to see at AT&T Stadium. Jordan Love and his offensive mates posted 149 yards on 17 plays in the first quarter. The Cowboys managed 26 on eight snaps.

The Pack possessed the ball for 10 minutes, two seconds. They earned six first downs to the Cowboys’ one. They ran six plays beyond the fifty to zero for Dallas.

And, of course, Love hit Romeo Doubs with a 2-yard TD pass that put Green Bay up 7-0 heading into the second quarter.

The first quarter in Dallas was typical of what the Packers did against the Lions, Commanders and Browns in Weeks 1 through 3. Here’s how Green Bay fared in the first quarter against those teams – in order – in the opening 15 minutes.

   Offensive yards:              104 to 46; 151 to 11; 51 to 46
   Time of possession:        8:28 to 6:32; 10:10 to 4:50; 8:28 to 6:32
   First downs:                     6 to 2; 7 to 0; 3 to 2
   Plays beyond the 50:      11 to 0; 9 to 0; 7 to 3
   Score:                                10 to 0; 7 to 0; 0 to 0

Let’s pretend these first quarters made up one game. How would that look statistically?

   Offensive yards:              455 to 129
   Time of possession:        37:08 to 22:52
   First downs:                     22 to 5
   Plays beyond the 50:      33 to 3
   Score:                                 24 to 0
Packers coach Matt LaFleur

Pretty heady numbers. And the type that, posted over the course of an entire game, one would expect to result in victory.

Much of Green Bay’s early superiority has come through the air. Love has 29 completions in 39 attempts for 385 yards and three touchdowns (130.8 rating). His counterparts – Jared Goff, Jayden Daniels, Joe Flacco and Dak Prescott – combined for 14 completions in 17 attempts for 70 yards (83.8).

Love’s favorite targets have been Doubs (6-68-2) and Tucker Kraft (5-109-1). No. 10 has connected with 10 different receivers in the first quarter.

In clamping down on those it has faced while running rampant itself, Green Bay has amassed 326 more yards in the first quarter than its opponents. That differential is a team record, 35 better than the 1940 squad that previously held the mark.


First and Foremost
The six seasons in which the Packers outgained their opponents by more than 200 yards in the opening quarters of their first four games.
 
     Difference      Year      GB Yards    Opp Yards
           +326              2025           455                 129
           +291              1940            497                 206
           +284              2015            461                 177
           +256              1995            364                 108
           +206              1947            399                 193
           +206              2019            421                 215
 
Note: Numbers from 1940 and 1947 are unofficial. Numbers from 1921, 1922 and 1941 are unavailable.

2 comments:

  1. Thank you, Eric. I always enjoy your weekly Packers rundown.

    Do you think the Pack's first quarter success is due to being very well prepared coming into a game? And that, by extension, as adjustments are made in-game they don't adapt as efficiently?
    Is the Green Bay staff significantly better at pre-game planning than on-the-fly adjustments?

    ReplyDelete
  2. BW ...

    The Pack butchered the clock at the end of overtime. Should have scored a TD but threw short instead ... where were the endzone passes?

    ReplyDelete