Aaron Rodgers did it again. Just when Cowboys fans thought they had the Packers put away, he ripped their hearts out with a near-flawless two-minute drill.

Really nobody should have been surprised. This is what Rodgers does. Give him enough time to beat you, and, more often than not, he will. But where do he and the Packers rank among the best two-minute offenses in the NFL?

So glad you asked. We’ve ranked the top-10…

10. Cowboys

The team Rodgers just beat checks in at No. 10 for several reasons: The offensive line, which has underachieved this season, is usually capable of giving Dak Prescott time in the pocket to throw downfield. That’s key when you need to move the ball quickly. Prescott’s mobility also gives Dallas’ two-minute offense a jolt. Defenses have to cover the receivers and account for Prescott, who can take off at anytime. And, finally, Ezekiel Elliott’s pass catching ability gives opponents another thing to worry about late in games.

9. Panthers

Throughout his football career, Cam Newton has always been at his most comfortable when operating out of the no-huddle. Going fast simplifies the defense and gives Newton a more accurate pre-snap look at the coverage. Newton’s legs and big arm also make him the ideal two-minute weapon. Remember when he did this after leading a game-winning drive against the Giants in 2015…

8. Chargers

When things speed up, I want a quarterback who can take control of the offense if need be. That’s Rivers, who (CLICHE ALERT!) is basically a coach on the field. He may not have the arm he once did, but Rivers can still push the ball downfield when the situation calls for it. And in Antonio Gates he has a clutch receiver.

7. Saints

When you need to put up a bunch of passing yards in a hurry, you can’t do much better than Drew Brees and Sean Payton. So why aren’t the Saints higher on the list? Because their biggest deep threat is Ted Ginn, who dropped five passes in the time it took you to read this sentence.

6. Falcons

Matt Ryan’s deep ball hasn’t been great this season, but I’ll take my chances with Julio Jones, Mohamed Sanu, Tyler Gabriel, Devonta Freeman and Tevin Coleman. Atlanta would rank higher if Kyle Shanahan was still calling the plays.

5. Steelers

So Ben Roethlisberger has been pretty bad of late, but he’s proven over his career that he’s better when the game is on the line. His ability to turn broken plays into huge gains is a big reason why. His weapons aren’t too bad either. I don’t know if there’s a receiver I’d trust more to get me a first down than Antonio Brown. Le’Veon Bell is one of the better pass-catching backs in the league. And Martavis Bryant can stretch the defense.

4. Seahawks

Russell Wilson is the league’s biggest creative force. The Seahawks offense may not run smoothly all the time, but whenever they are in a two-minute situation, Wilson comes alive. No quarterback is better at extending plays and finding open receivers on scramble drills. You don’t even really need to call plays for the guy. Late in games, that puts tremendous stress on an already tired defense.

3. Lions

The numbers speak for themselves. Matthew Stafford set the single-season record for fourth-quarter comebacks in 2016 thanks to his play in two-minute situations. His late-game heroics also inspired one of the best NFL memes….

2. Packers

Rodgers is like all of the quarterbacks we’ve mentioned rolled into one. He has Newton’s arm, Rivers’ smarts, Roethlisberger’s supporting cast and Wilson’s mobility. He can pick defenses apart methodically or get it all in chunks.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zcde3yKvKe8

1. Patriots

As good as Rodgers is, he’s no Tom Brady. The only chance you have of stopping Brady in close games late is by not letting him touch the ball. Just ask Falcons fans. Each and every one of them knew how Super Bowl 51 would end once the Patriots got the ball back late and down by just one possession. He’s the GOAT for a reason.