Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones vowed changes on Sunday night after his team fell to 1-7 following a 45-7 loss in Green Bay.

Jones, who has consistently expressed shock each week recently as his team has fallen further out of the playoff hunt, did not indicate that anyone would be safe.

"There are a lot of people here who are certainly going to suffer and suffer consequences," Jones said, via ESPN. "I'm talking about within the team -- players, coaches who have got careers. This is certainly a setback."

LEBRON JAMES: Says Cowboys 'officially the worst team in NFL'

The Cowboys entered the season as a team many analysts saw as a Super Bowl contender. And Jones admitted those aspirations have made the fall to 1-7 especially sour.

The owner, who said as recently as Friday that coach Wade Phillips would remain in place all season, held off specifically targeting Phillips' job after the loss to the Packers.

"We have so many things that we need to correct and address, as this game so vividly exposed and previous games have," Jones said. "I've got a lot of work to do, got a lot of decisions to make.

"And it's not just one, two, three or four. There are several decisions. I think everybody in this country would agree that there's a lot wrong with this team that we've got to address, and I'm certainly the one to address it."

Phillips didn't speculate on whether he could be fired.

The Cowboys have in-house candidates -- such as offensive coordinator Jason Garrett or and secondary coach Dave Campo, the team's former head coach -- they could turn to if Jones fires Phillips.

-- Sean Leahy