It's a strange record and it has been a very strange season so far for the Pack. In Week 1 and Week 2, they looked like Super Bowl contenders after beating the Detroit Lions and Washington Commanders, respectively.
In Week 3, the Packers were humbled by Joe Flacco, Myles Garrett and the Cleveland Browns, and in Week 4, the Packers played to an unsatisfying tie with Dak Prescott and the Dallas Cowboys,
Then came the Week 5 bye, when everyone was supposed to get healthy and get their minds on straight after two weeks of iffy football.
And the good news? The Packers got back on track by beating the Bengals. The bad news, 40-year old Joe Flacco once again haunted the Packers as he threw for 219 yards and two touchdowns just days after being traded to Cincy.
Still, a win is the win. This is the NFL, after all, and they don't count any less if you had to work a bit harder than everyone thought you'd have to in order to get it.
It's also extremely hard to come away with two-score wins in the NFL. This is a league that lives on the margins and often-times games come down to one or two vital possessions. When it mattered most, it matters that the Packers were able to get it done.
Ultimately, Josh Jacobs had a tremendous game. Jordan Love, outside of one really bad decision, looked like a Top 10 NFL quarterback. Why does he keep making those bad decisions, though? That's a question that may haunt Packers fans in 2025.
Rookie wide receiver Matthew Golden continues to look like a star in the making, and speaking of stars, Tucker Kraft found the endzone again on a rumbling, tumbling touchdown catch and run.
That man is a YAC machine.
Ultimately, perhaps this is a case of a fanbase spoiled by Hall of Fame quarterback play since the early 90s as well as the expectations, and (admitted) snobbery, that comes along with attaching oneself to a city known as "Title Town".
Andrew Kulha of PackersRoundtable and Anthony Moeglin of RoundtableSports break all that done and more on the latest episode of the PackersRoundtable podcast: