Solid performance
On the field, Micah Parsons delivered a solid outing. He recorded eight pressures, one sack, and a 34.5% win rate on pass rush attempts. Not dominant, but effective. His presence was steady, though not game-changing. The contest itself was a rollercoaster. Jordan Love opened the scoring for the Packers, Dak Prescott answered with two touchdowns, and both teams traded blows until the final seconds. Brandon McManus tied the game with a 53-yard field goal with four seconds left, then did it again in overtime with a 34-yarder.
Micah Parsons in his return to Dallas
8 pressures
1 sack
34.5% pass rush win rate pic.twitter.com/IFqnGqbrlC— PFF (@PFF) September 29, 2025
The draw left the Cowboys at 1-2-1 and the Packers at 2-1-1. Beyond the scoreboard, the spotlight stayed on Micah Parsons, who avoided any interaction with Jerry Jones and focused strictly on his role. His reunion with Dak Prescott was polite, but the silence between Parsons and the front office was deafening.
Crossfire and closure
Micah Parsons wasn’t chasing redemption. He was chasing respect. And while the scoreboard didn’t hand him a win, his return made one thing clear: the wounds with Dallas haven’t healed. The linebacker didn’t falter, but he didn’t shine either. And on a night full of crossfire, his story didn’t end—it just paused.
All love between Micah Parsons and his old Cowboys teammates ❤️ pic.twitter.com/I9OKvlj4Tn
— NFL (@NFL) September 29, 2025