The NFL has never experienced a playoff weekend quite like this.
The first four games of the 2025 postseason featured a combined 12 lead changes in the fourth quarter, topping the record for the most in an entire playoffs.
The previous high for an entire postseason, according to the Elias Sports Bureau, was 10 in the 2007 playoffs, including three in the Super Bowl when the New York Giants ended New England's bid for a perfect season. The four winning touchdowns scored in the final three minutes of regulation also set a record for an entire postseason.
The weekend started with a back-and-forth game between Carolina and the Los Angeles Rams that wasn't decided until Matthew Stafford's 19-yard TD pass to Colby Parkinson provided the record-tying fourth lead change of the fourth quarter.
Before this season, there had been only four playoff games featuring four fourth-quarter lead changes, with the most recent coming in New England's overtime win over Kansas City in the 2018 AFC title game.
The wait for another lasted just one day as Buffalo and Jacksonville traded leads in their game before the Bills prevailed 27-24 on Josh Allen's 1-yard run with 1:04 left for the fourth lead change in the final quarter.
The next game that day featured three more, with San Francisco topping Philadelphia 23-19 in a win capped by Brock Purdy's 4-yard TD pass to Christian McCaffrey with 2:54 left.
The other fourth-quarter lead change came Saturday night when Chicago became the fourth team in NFL history to win a playoff game after trailing by at least 15 points at the start of the fourth quarter. The last time that happened came in Super Bowl 52 when New England rallied from 28-9 down at the end of the third quarter — the game had been 28-3 — to beat Atlanta 34-28 in overtime.