Tuesday, January 6, 2026
TUESDAY TIDBITS: "Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity"
Monday, January 5, 2026
Sunday, January 4, 2026
Packers Fall in Minnesota; Finish Regular Season 0-4
By Eric Goska
Oh for four.
That’s the wrap on the Packers who finished the
regular season Sunday in Minnesota. In falling 16-3 to the Vikings, Green Bay closed
with four straight losses, something it hasn’t done in decades.
No matter. The Packers are playoff bound, just the fourth
team in NFL history to head into the postseason on a four-game (or more) losing
streak.
Locked in as the No. 7 seed in the NFC playoffs well before
kickoff, the Packers rested many starters in Minneapolis. Clayton Tune opened
at quarterback. Jakobie Keeney-James and Drake Dabney started at wide receiver
and tight end, respectively.
In all, eight Packers made their first NFL start: TE Dabney,
LG Lecitus Smith, C Jacob Monk, WR Keeney-James, DE Barryn Sorrell, DL Nazir
Stackhouse, DE Brenton Cox Jr. and LB Jamon Johnson.
That makeshift lineup made for an interesting afternoon. On
the offensive side of the ball, Green Bay posted lows not seen in years.
- In the opening two quarters, the Packers did not run a play from the 50-yard line or beyond for the first time since a 38-14 loss to the Lions on Oct. 9, 1983.
- The Green and Gold amassed 12 first-half yards, the team’s lowest total in the opening two quarters since coming away with minus-4 (unofficially) in a 31-14 setback to the Steelers on Oct. 24, 1953.
- Green Bay wound up with minus-7 yards passing, the fewest since the franchise low of minus-35 was set against the Bengals in 1976.
- The Packers produced one first down passing, the fewest since they had one in a 14-10 win over the Colts in 1991.
So inept was Green Bay that it risked being shutout. Brandon
McManus finally ended that possibility with a 24-yard field goal as time
expired.
Dropping four straight – Broncos, Bears, Ravens and Vikings –
is not how the Packers expected to ride into the playoffs. Such a woebegone
finish is out of character for a team that often plays its best ball as fall
turns to winter.
Since the arrival of Mike Holmgren in 1992, Green Bay is the
league’s winningest team when only the last four regular-games of a season are
considered. From 1992 through 2024, the Green and Gold won 95 of 132 games, a 0.720
winning percentage. It’s one reason the club reached the playoffs a league-high
24 times during that 33-year span.
Another reason for that
gaudy record had been the teams’ avoidance of the ‘oh-for-four’ finish. Prior
to this season, Green Bay last closed out with four consecutive regular-season
losses in 1990. Only the Bills (1985) and Bengals (1969) have steered clear
longer.
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| Keisean Nixon (25) and Isaiah McDuffie (58) were two of the regulars to start for Green Bay in Minneapolis. |
So the Packers head into the playoffs having dropped four straight. Perhaps it might be instructive to take a glance at how the other three ‘oh-for-four’ playoff teams fared in the postseason.
1986 Jets (10-6) — New York was outscored 61 to 183 in
losing its final five regular-season games. The Jets bounced back to defeat
Kansas City 35-15 in a wild card game before falling to Cleveland 23-20 in a
marathon divisional playoff contest (two overtimes).
1999 Lions (8-8) — With Barry Sanders retired, Detroit is
outrushed 486 yards to 206 in its final four games, all losses. Washington knocks
out the Lions 27-13 (wild card round), outrushing its visitors 223 yards to 45.
2024 Steelers (10-7) — Pittsburgh loses its last four
regular-season games to the Eagles, Ravens, Chiefs and Bengals as Jalen Hurts,
Lamar Jackson, Patrick Mahomes and Joe Burrow torch the Steel City 11 for a
combined 1,094 passing yards and nine touchdowns. Baltimore dispatches the Steelers 28-14
(wild card round), amassing 464 yards to Pittsburgh’s 280.
Teams with the best record in the final four games of the regular season (1992-2024).
Packers 95-37 24
Patriots 85-47 22
Steelers 82-50 22
Eagles 79-53 20
Colts 78-54 18
Chiefs 76-56 18
49ers 76-56 16
Chargers 71-61 12
Tuesday, December 30, 2025
TUESDAY TIDBITS: "But That Didn't Mean Shit To Us"
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| 1975 Steelers vs Oilers |
| Chuck Drazenovich |
Sunday, December 28, 2025
Malik Willis: A One-man Show at Lambeau
By Eric Goska
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| Malik Willis in 2024 (photo by Eric Goska) |
Malik Willis stands just a shade over six feet tall. But in one regard, he towers over every passer in Packers history.
Willis opened at quarterback for Green Bay against Baltimore
Saturday. The 26-year-old right hander—filling in for Jordan Love (concussion)—lit
up the night sky at Lambeau Field in a game in which the Ravens overran the
Packers 41-24.
That the Packers dropped their third in a row should not
take away from Willis’ performance. From his first pass, a 40-yard sideline
shot to Romeo Doubs, to his last, a 7-yarder to Christian Watson for a first
down, Willis was dialed in.
In making his first start of the season, Willis produced the
first fail-safe 100 game of his career (minimum 20 attempts); that is, his passer rating never fell
below 100. From his first throw to his last, his rating remained in triple
digits.
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| Willis in action against the Ravens Saturday night. (photo by Colin Schmenk) |
Here is a snapshot of Willis’ evening as a passer:
- Willis started hot. He completed his first 11 passes for 195 yards and a touchdown. Only four other Packers—Aaron Rodgers (12 on Sept. 26, 2021; 13 on Oct. 23, 2011), Brett Favre (14 on Sept. 10, 2000; 13 on Oct. 23, 2005; 11 on Nov. 15, 1992), Don Majkowski (14 on Nov. 26, 1989) and Lynn Dickey (18 on Sept. 4, 1983)—have equaled or exceeded such a dead-on start. Willis’ streak ended when Chris Brooks dropped a short throw early in the third quarter.
- Willis went deep. He fired five passes of 30-plus yards to four different receivers: Watson (39; 31), Doubs (40), Jayden Reed (30) and Bo Melton (34). In doing so, the four-year veteran joined Rodgers (Nov. 30, 2014), Matt Flynn (Jan. 1, 2012), Favre (Dec. 22, 2003), Dickey (Oct. 17, 1983), Babe Parilli (Oct. 19, 1958) and Cecil Isbell (Nov. 1, 1942) as the only players in team history to complete five passes of 30 or more yards in a game.
- Willis was accurate. His completion percentage (85.7) was the fourth highest in team annals. Only Dickey (90.5; 87.1) and Rodgers (86.4) had higher marks (minimum 20 pass attempts).
Clearly, Willis was effective through the air. But No. 2
used his legs as well.
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| (photo by Eric Goska) |
Willis led the team with 60 yards (nine carries) on the ground. He gained 55 on four runs that accounted for all four of the Green and Gold’s rushing first downs.
The native of Georgia scored twice on runs of 22 and 11
yards. In doing so, Willis joined the aforementioned Isbell (Sept. 29, 1940) as
the only players in club history to have thrown a touchdown pass, run for two scores
while leading the team in rushing.
Willis kept humming into the fourth quarter. His team down
10, the mobile mover and shaker pushed the Packers to the Baltimore 35 on a
7-yard connection with Watson. Unfortunately, the throw aggravated the shoulder
injury he had suffered a week earlier in Chicago, and Green Bay’s most dynamic
player on offense was done for the evening.
Clayton Tune took over at quarterback for the Packers’ final
eight plays.
Willis’ performance was no aberration. He’s been nothing
short of excellent since coming to Green Bay, having completed 70 of 89 passes
for 972 yards and six touchdowns. His passer rating of 134.6 is far superior to
that of any other Packer passer at the same point in their career.
He has not been intercepted during his time in Green Bay.
Unfortunately, Willis’ stay in the NFL’s smallest city is
likely at an end. He’s played too well not to be signed by some other team in
the offseason.
Losing Malik will hurt. Almost as much as the 307 rushing yards
Green Bay surrendered to the Ravens, a total so abominable as to almost overshadow
Willis’ last hurrah on the Frozen Tundra.
The 10 passers who compiled a passer rating greater than 70 on their first 90 pass attempts as a Packer. Thirty-five players have thrown at least 90 passes for Green Bay. Willis will become the 36th to do so should he attempt at least one pass in the season-finale in Minnesota.
Malik Willis 89-70-972-6-0 134.62
Brett Favre 90-57-657-4-2 90.83
Anthony Dilweg 90-52-625-5-2 88.43
Aaron Rodgers 90-60-565-2-1 86.57
Jordan Love 90-54-637-4-3 82.50
Irv Comp* 92-46-662-7-4 80.98
Blair Kiel 90-53-547-4-2 74.63
Mike Tomczak 90-53-685-5-6 73.61
Babe Parilli 90-40-680-7-5 73.38
Lamar McHan 90-43-702-8-7 71.62
Friday, December 26, 2025
The 1962 Denver Broncos - the Team's Last, Best Hope (for quite a while) ...
by Jeffrey J. Miller
The Denver Broncos of the American Football League do not get much love. Rightly so. They are the only one of the original eight AFL franchises which never made it to the post-season in the league’s ten-year existence. The Oilers, Chiefs/Texans, Chargers, Bills, Raiders and Jets all won league championships, while the Patriots at least made it to the post-season once. But the Broncos? Bupkis.
The sad-sack Broncos would, of
course, go on to win three Super Bowls after the AFL-NFL merger in 1970, taking
home the Lombardi trophy after the 1997, 1998 and 2015 seasons. But the 1960s were not kind to Denver fans, as
the Broncos posted nine seasons of sub-.500 ball in the league’s ten years. There was one year, however, that gave
football fans in the Mile High city hope, a year in which the club actually
held a winning record going into the final game of the season.
The year was 1962, a season in which
the AFL and many of its teams were still trying to find their footing. Broncos management were determined to improve
their team’s on-field performance after going 4-9 and 3-11 in their first two
seasons. The first step toward respectability
was discarding the hideous vertically striped socks the players had worn during
those first two years. The second was
hiring Jack Faulkner, the former defensive backfield coach of the Los Angeles
Rams and San Diego Chargers, as their head coach.
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| Denver Broncos first-year head coach Jack Faulkner, pictured during his time with the Los Angeles Rams, late 1950s. |
The changes appeared to work, at
least initially. The Broncos season got
off to a very fast start, going undefeated after to weeks of action with wins
over San Diego and Buffalo. After a Week
3 loss at Boston, the Broncos relit the fuse and won their next four, knocking
off the Titans, the Raiders twice and, most impressively, the Houston Oilers
(the previous year’s champions). Standing at 6-1, the Broncos then hosted the Bills and lost in a
shootout, 45-38. They bounced back the
following week, defeating the tough Chargers for a second time this year to
improve to 7-2.
But here is where the saddle fell
off the horse, as the Broncos lost the final five games of their season to
finish 7-7. It turned out to be the team’s
only .500 record in the entire decade. It was also to be the latest in any season the
Broncos would still be in contention for a playoff berth. Sadly, it would be another 11 years before
they posted an actual winning record (7-5-2 in 1973) and 15 seasons before Denver fans felt
the thrill of real success as their beloved boys in orange finally made the playoffs
AND the Super Bowl (though they lost to the Cowboys in SBXII).
So what happened? Why the collapse? How could a team starting with a 6-1 run end
with a 1-6 mudslide? It doesn’t appear
to have been the personnel. Most of the
team’s star players, such as split end Lionel Taylor, flanker Bob Scarpitto, tackle
Eldon Danehauer and defensive back Goose Gonsoulin played in all 14 games. Taylor even led the AFL in receptions with
77.
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| Lionel Taylor, 1961 |
The team’s biggest star, however, was 35-year-old quarterback Frank Tripucka. On paper, Tripucka appears to have had a fine season, leading the league in passing attempts and completions, total passing yards and average passing yards per game. Those numbers earned Tripucka a trip to the AFL All-Star Game.
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| Broncos quarterback Frank Tripucka, 1962. |
Tripucka started 13 of the
Broncos’ 14 games that year, finishing with a 6-7 record. In the first eight games he started before
the team’s collapse, Tripucka averaged 284 passing yards, throwing 14
touchdowns (1.75 per game) and 16 interceptions (2.0 per game). However, in the final five games (all
losses), Tripucka’s passing-yards-per-game fell to128 (a 55% drop!), while he
threw just three TDs (an average of just .6 per game) and nine interceptions
(1.8 per game).
This is not to place all of the
blame on Tripucka. It says here the team’s
overall on-field performance also fell sharply after Week 9. In those first nine games, the offense averaged
nearly 28 points while the defense gave up 20. They averaged 371 yards of total offense in
the first nine games while allowing 293. In the last five games, however, the Broncos
managed just under 21 points per game while surrendering almost 31. Their total yardage-per-game fell by nearly 100
(273) while yardage allowed ballooned by almost 90 (381).
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| Frank Tripucka on a quarterback keeper versus the New York Titans, September 30, 1962. |
Tuesday, December 23, 2025
TUESDAY TIDBITS: "We're World Champions"
| Gino Marchetti Credit: Merv Corning |












