The Packers' thrilling 34-31 win over the Cowboys on Sunday was in the same building where Green Bay won the Super Bowl six years ago.
But that's only where the similarities begin.
In fact, Sunday's victory was eerily similar to the Pack's 31-25 victory over the Steelers in Super Bowl 45, when the Packers wore the same green jerseys they wore Sunday. In both games, the Packers jumped out to a 21-3 lead.
After Dallas grabbed a 3-0 lead on its opening drive Sunday, Green Bay rattled off 21 straight points as quarterback Aaron Rodgers caught fire.
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Rodgers is probably the best in the league at catching teams with too many men on the field when they try to substitute. Green Bay's first possession was kept alive thanks to Rodgers getting the Cowboys with 12 men on the field.
He then drew the Cowboys offsides and hit tight end Richard Rodgers on the free play for a perfectly placed 34-yard touchdown pass.
But similar to the Steelers climbing back from their 21-3 deficit with a pair of touchdowns, the Cowboys scored 10 straight points before halftime to make it a one-score game. The big play was a 40-yard touchdown pass from Dak Prescott to Dez Bryant with 5:59 remaining in the half.
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After Pittsburgh got back in the game in Super Bowl 45, Rodgers gave Green Bay a two-score lead with a touchdown pass to Greg Jennings. He did the same thing Sunday, opening the second half by leading a six-play, 75-yard drive that ended with a 3-yard pass to tight end Jared Cook. The drive began with Rodgers scrambling out of the pocket to find Randall Cobb, who caught a 25-yard pass up the sideline and stayed in bounds thanks to a remarkable toe drag.
The Steelers weren't done in Super Bowl 45, though; they responded with a TD and two-point conversion to cut their deficit to 28-25. Rodgers came back with his best pass of the game, a 31-yard pass to Jennings that set up Mason Crosby's 23-yard field goal with 2:07 remaining for the game's final score.
The Cowboys clawed back Sunday, capitalizing on a Rodgers interception with a 6-yard touchdown pass from Prescott to tight end Jason Witten with 11:39 remaining in regulation. It was the first postseason touchdown of Witten's 14-year Hall of Fame career. The Cowboys then one-upped the Steelers by tying the game with 4:08 remaining. Prescott and Bryant hooked up again, this time from 7 yards out. Prescott ran in the two-point conversion to make the score 28-28.
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Prescott was 24 of 38 for 302 yards and became the first rookie quarterback with three touchdowns in a postseason game.
But Rodgers showed his MVP form with a go-ahead drive that ended with Crosby's record 56-yard field goal with 1:33 remaining. After the Cowboys tied it up on Dan Bailey's 52-yard field goal, the Packers got the ball back with 35 seconds remaining and Rodgers again worked his magic.
An incredible 35-yard pass to Cook on a third-and-20 got the Packers in position for Crosby's game-winning 51-yard kick as time expired to send the Packers to next Sunday's NFC championship game at Atlanta.
"It was a great catch by Jared," Rodgers told Fox Sports. "It's just kind of schoolyard at times. Jared just kept on coming and make a hell of a catch.
"We're going to enjoy the heck out of this game."
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Rodgers finished 28 of 43 for 356 yards and two touchdowns. He threw for 304 yards and three touchdowns in the Super Bowl victory six years ago.
Sunday's win helps erase years of pain from Packers divisional playoff losses to the Cowboys in 1993 and 1994, and in the NFC championship game in 1995. This time it was the Packers winning in Texas and ending the Cowboys' hopes for a Super Bowl.
One other eerie similarity: The Packers went through Atlanta to reach the Super Bowl six years ago and will have to do the same again this year to get to Houston.