One of my favorite boxscores comes from a Steelers-Texans game in 2002. The Jets played at 4:15 that day, and I was living in Pennsylvania at the time, so I got to watch that game in its entirety. And the game was baffling on every level.

The expansion Texans had just three first downs the entire game. Three! David Carr completed 3 of 10 passes for 33 yards, with all three going to tight end Billy Miller. He was sacked four times, so Houston had 10 net passing yards on 14 dropbacks.

The Texans weren’t much better on the ground, running 26 times for 37 yards. That’s 47 total yards of offense with no touchdowns! In an entire game! And when you hear that the final score was 24-6, one would have to assume that Houston lost. But the didn’t. They won! They won 24-6!! In a game where they had 47 yards of offense and no touchdowns! That remains the fewest yards ever gained by a team in a winning effort. Steelers linebacker Joey Porter said it best:

Hold a team to under 50 yards offense, you’d think you’d have a chance to win at least….To get blown out when that happens, it’s tough.

Houston, of course, scored three defensive touchdowns, including two by former Jet Aaron Glenn. But what made watching the game even more confusing was that the Pittsburgh was pretty productive on offense, with 422 yards. Then again, the Steelers also had 15 drives and a whopping 95 plays, thanks due Houston recording eight 3-and-outs.

So why am I bringing that game up now? After watching the crazy Seahawks/Cardinals game last week, I was stunned by how Arizona was somehow kept out of the end zone all night. The Cardinals ran a whopping 90 plays, but the game ended in a 6-6 tie.

So I ran the numbers, and guess what? The only time in NFL history that a team ran more plays and failed to score a touchdown was Pittsburgh in that game against Houston.

The table below shows every game in NFL history where a team had 80 plays and zero offensive touchdowns:

Team Year Opp Wk Boxscore Plays W/L PF PA PIT 2002 HOU 14 Boxscore 95 L 6 24 ARI 2016 SEA 7 Boxscore 90 T 6 6 IND 2012 BAL 18 Boxscore 87 L 9 24 NYG 1977 CHI 14 Boxscore 87 L 9 12 BAL 1974 DEN 9 Boxscore 87 L 6 17 NYG 2003 NWE 6 Boxscore 85 L 6 17 ARI 2002 DAL 7 Boxscore 85 W 9 6 KAN 1997 JAX 11 Boxscore 85 L 10 24 NYG 1987 BUF 6 Boxscore 85 L 3 6 CLE 2011 SEA 7 Boxscore 84 W 6 3 SDG 1999 GNB 7 Boxscore 84 L 3 31 NWE 1995 SFO 3 Boxscore 84 L 3 28 WAS 1985 SFO 13 Boxscore 84 L 8 35 KAN 1989 CLE 11 Boxscore 83 T 10 10 BUF 1979 DEN 14 Boxscore 83 L 16 19 CIN 2004 BAL 3 Boxscore 82 L 9 23 NWE 1999 PHI 15 Boxscore 82 L 9 24 ATL 1977 WAS 2 Boxscore 82 L 6 10 PIT 1975 GNB 6 Boxscore 82 W 16 13 CHI 2016 GNB 7 Boxscore 81 L 10 26 NYJ 2010 MIA 14 Boxscore 81 L 6 10 NWE 1994 CLE 10 Boxscore 81 L 6 13 BUF 1993 NYJ 8 Boxscore 81 W 19 10 BUF 1987 NYG 6 Boxscore 81 W 6 3 SFO 1986 WAS 11 Boxscore 81 L 6 14 CLE 1981 HOU 2 Boxscore 81 L 3 9 BAL 2000 TEN 8 Boxscore 80 L 6 14 NWE 1995 DEN 6 Boxscore 80 L 3 37 SFO 1981 CLE 11 Boxscore 80 L 12 15 NOR 1975 SFO 10 Boxscore 80 L 6 16 DET 1975 HOU 6 Boxscore 80 L 8 24 CLE 1975 DEN 5 Boxscore 80 L 15 16 CRD 1942 WAS 9 Boxscore 80 L 0 28

Believe it or not, Arizona wasn’t the only offense from week seven to make the list: Chicago ran 81 plays against Green Bay on Thursday night, but none of those ended in with the Bears in the endzone.