Picture it, three days ago, the state of the NFC East: The Washington Redskins were somehow in the driver’s seat after a surprise win over the St. Louis Rams; the New York Giants were on the verge of implosion and Tom Coughlin figured to be looking for retirement homes on the Finger Lakes; the Dallas Cowboys were facing 10 weeks of Brandon Weeden throwing interceptions and probably pulling Dan Orlovsky moves by running out of the end zone for safeties; and Chip Kelly’s people had to be looking toward Texas or USC, to see if any marquee college jobs would be open this year after the Philadelphia Eagles’ inevitable 3-13 record would force the coach to join Lou Holtz, Steve Spurrier, Bobby Petrino and Pete Carroll 1.0 as NCAA-to-NFL busts.

Now, 72 hours later, the landscape of NFC East is completely different and the only thing for certain is that nobody knows anything. Here are the newest NFC East power rankings, which are a complete reverse of last week:

1. New York Giants (1-2)

This is not to say New York is a good team. But the Giants had Atlanta — a team that thoroughly won over Philadelphia and Dallas — beat in Week 2. In Week 1, Eli Manning essentially engraved victory invitations for the Cowboys. Then, in one of those quirky Thursday night games in Week 3, the Giants outclassed the Redskins. In a game of inches, the Giants stumbled a few times early but are now poised to stay afloat in the NFC East, especially if/when Victor Cruz returns.

2. Philadelphia Eagles (1-2)

On Sunday, the Eagles looked like the team everyone expected at the beginning of the year, so now Chip Kelly can finally put that “genius at work” tchotchke back on his car. Because, you see, he’s a genius again! It can swing that quickly in the NFL. After two anemic offensive performances, losing DeMarco Murray turned out to be a skeleton key to the Eagles offense. A nice, Kelly-ian win on Sunday (good offense early, defense getting exhausted late) against the 2-0 Jets staunched the bleeding, quieted all those ready to send Kelly out of Philly in the Popemobile and prevented a dreaded, and mostly impossible, 0-3 start. (Only three teams since 1990 have made the playoffs after starting 0-3. Of course, most of those teams didn’t play in the woeful 2015 NFC East.) The issue: Sam Bradford is still not a good quarterback and put up Tebow-ian numbers on Sunday. But Nick Foles once threw for 27 touchdown passes and two interceptions in Chip Kelly’s system, so talent may not matter much. Suddenly, Philly is 1-2 with two tough games behind them. Bradford doesn’t look ready to win any playoff games but at Week 3, he doesn’t need to be. Proceed with caution though. The same way a win over the St. Louis Rams shouldn’t have been cause for people to get high on the Redskins, blowing out Ryan Fitzpatrick and the Jets is hardly the stuff of which contenders are made.

3. Washington Redskins (1-2)

Oh, how the mighty have fallen. The Redskins were brought back to reality on Thursday night, so much so that people were seriously discussing benching Kirk Cousins amidst rumors that Robert Griffin III would soon be moved up to backup quarterback, something that won’t cause any problems at all. None whatsoever! But should the Redskins be written off? Not when they have a stout defense, a solid running game and lost a division matchup in a short week. Cousins’ decision-making is concerning, but in a division that could be won with an 8-8 record, Washington clearly has the ability to get to that mark.

4. Dallas Cowboys (2-1)

The first place team is last in the power rankings? If you watched on Sunday, you’ll know why. Brandon Weeden is a fully acceptable NFL backup, but to suggest that the Cowboys wouldn’t lose much without Tony Romo is a slap in the face to Romo, who’s as underrated in some circles as he is unnecessarily called a choker. Same thing does for Dez Bryant. You don’t just replace those guys. The question is, can Weeden keep Dallas somewhere between 4-6 and 6-4, just good enough to keep the Cowboys in it until Romo returns? Right now, the answer looks to be “no.” But things change by the day in the NFC East, so keep your eyes open.