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Micah Comes Home, Cowboys and Packers Leave Stuck at 40

Hunter Tierney 's profile
By Hunter Tierney
October 3, 2025
Micah Comes Home, Cowboys and Packers Leave Stuck at 40

If you tuned in to this one expecting closure, you got a four‑hour football fever dream that refused to pick a side. The Packers and Cowboys traded haymakers for 3 hours and 47 minutes at AT&T Stadium and still walked out with a 40–40 tie — the first 40–40 finish the NFL has ever seen. It really felt like both locker rooms misplaced a win.

Dak Prescott said it best:

I'm not satisfied… You don’t play the game for ties.

Layer on top the fact that it was Micah Parsons’ first game back in Dallas since the late‑August blockbuster that sent him to Green Bay, and you get a primetime story that didn’t just live up to the hype — it made new hype.

Parsons, in green and gold, in that stadium, in a game where both offenses caught fire, and the final chapter was a deadlock? That’s a television executive’s fever dream and a coach’s insomnia.

The Story Before the Story

Trades aren’t just transactions; they’re statements, almost like press releases without the logo at the top. This one screamed plenty—about money, leverage, and how two very different franchises see their windows.

We won’t drag you through every detail again — we did the deep‑dive right after the trade. Just know this: Jerry being Jerry meant the story never left the spotlight. Every time he opened his mouth, there was a new nugget, a new quote, or a new wrinkle to chew on, and by the time kickoff rolled around, this saga had as many subplots as the game itself. 

The Game That Wouldn’t End (and Wouldn’t Decide)

Speaking of the craziness that unfolded on the field.

Green Bay Comes Out Hot

Green Bay Packers quarterback Jordan Love (10) against the Washington Commanders on Thursday, September 11, 2025, at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wis
Credit: Wm. Glasheen USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin

The Packers landed the first clean shots and found themselves with a 13–0 lead that felt like a proof of concept for Matt LaFleur’s script. Love took the candy when Dallas offered two‑high shells, letting his guys go to work in open space, and Josh Jacobs churned through arm tackles like he was wearing truck tires. By night’s end, Green Bay piled up 239 yards after contact, and Jacobs personally accounted for 111 of those.

Then the game got weird. After the Packers’ second touchdown, Dallas blocked the extra point — Juanyeh Thomas knifed through, Markquese Bell scooped it, and two points the other way put the score at 13–2. It’s a three‑point swing that seems small until you need those exact three in the fourth quarter.

Dallas Flips the Half

End‑of‑half chaos is a Cowboys specialty, and not always in the way you want. Sometimes it blows up in their faces, sometimes it turns the whole night around. This time it helped. With Green Bay messing around in its own end with just 21 seconds left, Jordan Love got strip‑sacked, and the Cowboys punched it in on the very next snap — a 15‑yard strike — to give them a 16–13 halftime lead.

The Third‑Quarter Track Meet

This is where it really started to feel like one of those old‑school Big 12 shootouts. The offenses were trading touchdowns like kids swapping Halloween candy — no arguing, no negotiations, just “your turn, now mine.”

Romeo Doubs kept sneaking free in the red zone, and he made Dallas pay for it. Three touchdowns on just six catches isn’t a stat line you see every week, but it was exactly what it looked like: a guy winning in tight space again and again. Love stayed cool, not forcing highlight throws but calmly finding grass and leverage instead.

And on the flip side, Prescott was running an offense missing its top receiver in CeeDee Lamb and two starting linemen, but you’d hardly know it. He kept the train moving, never panicked, and kept finding answers. That’s what 31‑of‑40 for 319 yards with three passing scores and a rushing TD looks like — a quarterback playing in complete control even when the deck looks stacked against him.

The Fourth‑Quarter Whiplash

Cowboys WR1-for‑the‑night George Pickens put on the full WR1 costume — 8 for 134 and two touchdowns — and if you’re wondering how that chemistry with Dak looks a month in, the word is live. KaVontae Turpin changed things with a jolt of a kick return, and four plays later, Pickens stuck the go‑ahead TD from 28 yards out with :43 left. Dallas seemingly had all the momentum.

Except no one told Love. The Packers marched, McManus drilled a cold‑blooded 53‑yarder as time ran out, and we were onto extra football tied at 37.

Overtime: The Micah Snap

Sep 28, 2025; Arlington, Texas, USA; Green Bay Packers defensive end Micah Parsons (1) and Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott (4) embrace after the tie game at AT&T Stadium.
Credit: Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

Both teams guaranteed a possession, Dallas won the toss, and drove it to the Packers’ five. On second‑and‑goal, Parsons delivered the play: knifing through on a quarterback scramble where Dak had a real path to the endzone and chased down Prescott to force a field goal. That’s why Green Bay pushed all their chips to the middle in on him — those are the snaps they bought.

Up 40–37, Dallas handed the ball back. Green Bay’s answer was messy and effective at the same time — a fourth‑and‑six conversion to Matthew Golden to keep the lights on, then a maddening lack of urgency on subsequent snaps almost sent them home with a giant "L".

LaFleur owned it: “Way too slow.” After a wasted checkdown in bounds and a scramble to line up, Love’s end‑zone shot missed with one single second left, and McManus leveled it with a 34‑yarder as the horn evaporated. 40–40 your final score.

The Jerry–Micah Subplot, Live and Unresolved

Jerry’s handling of the whole saga feels less like a calm explanation and more like a man trying way too hard to win the press conference. He keeps going back to the Herschel Walker trade without acknowledging the obvious differences. 

After the game, he took it a step further:

It’s very simple: Dak was indispensable, in my mind. And Micah wasn’t. It’s just numbers, it’s that easy. And that’s not personal at all.

It’s not just cold, it’s pointed. He didn’t need to say it that way, but he chose to, which tells you he’s trying to convince more than just the media. It seems like he’s trying to convince himself.

Because when you look at it, who exactly is Jerry justifying this to? Fans already know he picked Dak over Micah. Unless Dak is able to bring them a championship, the fans aren't going to side with him; that's how good Micah was. The Packers aren’t listening. Parsons certainly isn’t either. The only people left are Cowboys players, Cowboys coaches, and Jerry Jones himself. And when you hear him double down again and again, it feels like he’s trying to drown out that little voice that wonders if trading away the face of your defense was a mistake.

It’s also the bias shining through. Jerry has always believed quarterbacks define franchises, and Dak has his loyalty. That loyalty is fine — Dak’s a great player and he showed it again Sunday night — but bashing Parsons to prove Dak’s worth doesn't seem necessary. 

He could’ve simply said they valued Dak, made a tough decision, and moved forward. Instead, he went out of his way to underline Micah as “dispensable.” That’s not business-speak anymore, that’s personal, and it was a crazy look from an owner who already knows every microphone in the league is pointed in his direction. 

The Tie That Tells on Everyone

Green Bay Packers defensive end Micah Parsons (1) against the Detroit Lions on Sunday, September 7, 2025, at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wis. The Packers defeated the Lions 27-13.
Credit: Wm. Glasheen USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin

Let’s be real: ties in the NFL just plain stink. Nobody walks away happy — not the players who emptied the tank for almost four hours, not the coaches who now have to spin the result like it’s somehow useful, and definitely not the fans who shelled out big money or stayed up past midnight to watch a game with no winner. The league keeps pretending ties are some acceptable compromise, but the truth is every single person involved hates it.

And here’s the kicker — the very people the NFL claims it’s protecting with ties, the fans, are the loudest ones screaming to get rid of them. Social media was wall‑to‑wall with outrage after this one.

So what’s the fix? A lot of folks want the NFL to just bite the bullet and go full college overtime — put the ball at the 25 and trade punches until someone can’t answer. I've even heard moving that back to the 50, keeping the same format. With how good the players are at this level, I think that would still make for a great product.

Others have gone as far as to suggest a two‑point conversion shootout to guarantee a winner without dragging on forever. At the very least, there are certain games where a tie just cannot happen: prime‑time showcases, division matchups, and especially games that have real playoff implications down the stretch. End them however you need to, but don’t send us all home with that empty feeling. 

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