Dan Quinn's defense was absolutely dominated in the Green Bay Packers' 48-24 beatdown of the Dallas Cowboys in the Wild Card Round of the playoffs on Sunday at AT&T Stadium.
Green Bay's 48 points are the most Dallas has allowed an opposing team to score in the franchise's playoff history. The previous record was 38, which occurred twice in the team's playoff history (49ers in 1995, Browns in 1969).
The 48 points are the most Dallas has allowed in a game this season. The Cowboys allowed a season-high 42 points to the San Francisco 49ers in Week 5.
In what was his first career playoff start, Packers quarterback Jordan Love was on fire all afternoon. Love was 16-20 for 272 yards and three touchdowns. Wide receiver Romeo Doubs accounted for 151 of those air yards, six receptions and a touchdown.
The Packers' passing attack didn't do all of the damage, as running back Aaron Jones was arguably the biggest thorn in the Cowboys' side, rumbling for 118 yards and three touchdowns.
Dallas was on the end of some even more disappointing history on Sunday, as they become the first team since the league instituted the new 14-team playoff format in 2020 to lose to a No. 7 seed in the postseason. The previous No. 2 seeds were 6-0 against the final Wild Card team.
Dallas is also the first team since the AFC-NFC Merger in 1970 to win 12 games in three straight seasons and not make the conference championship, according to ESPN's Ed Werder, via ESPN Stats and Info.