Tuesday, January 7, 2025
TUESDAY TIDBITS: Which Team Earns the Label "Road Warriors"
Monday, January 6, 2025
2024 Pro Football Journal All-Rookie Team
Straight from Heaven: The 2024 All-Madden Team
Penei Sewell (left) and Lane Johnson (right) |
Joe Burrow |
Saquon Barkley (left) and Derrick Henry (right) |
Cam Heyward |
Michael Hoecht |
T.J. Watt |
Sunday, January 5, 2025
Up, Up and Good, Bears Defeat Packers
By Eric Goska
(photos by Eric Goska) |
Who thought the latest
installment of Packers-Bears would come down to a kicking competition in the final
two minutes?
If so, raise both arms. You,
clairvoyant one, and the kicks are good!
Green Bay and Chicago placed
the outcome of their latest meeting in the legs of their kickers. Both men delivered,
but Chicago prevailed 24-22 at Lambeau Field because its special teams unit had
last wraps.
The longest-running rivarly
in the NFL is often defined by a seemingly endless roster of iconic players: Nagurski,
Nitschke, Butkus, Taylor, Singletary, Favre. Rarely, if ever, do those who apply
foot to pigskin merit a mention.
Yet Sunday, the stage was all
theirs. When 58 minutes of blocking and tackling failed to separate winner from
loser, out trotted Brandon McManus of the Packers and then Cairo Santos of the
Bears.
McManus was summoned after
Emanuel Wilson was dumped for a 2-yard loss on third down by DeMarcus Walker and
Tremaine Edmunds at the Chicago 37. Matt Orzech snapped the ball to holder
Daniel Whelan and McManus blasted a 55-yard bomb that put Green Bay ahead 22-21
with 58 seconds remaining.
The kick was the longest
successful field goal in the final two minutes by any player in Packers
history.
Cue the Bears.
Starting from the Chicago 20,
Caleb Williams marshaled his team to the Green Bay 33 in five plays. The rookie quarterback's
last act was to spike the ball with two seconds remaining.
Santos’ turn. Scott Daley
snapped the ball to holder Tory Taylor and No. 8 drilled a 51-yard field goal
as time expired.
And just like that, the Packers’ 11-game winning streak over the Bears went pfttt!
Green Bay has played more
than 1,400 regular-season games since joining the professional ranks in 1921. Sunday’s
kicking duel was only the 10th time the Packers and their opponents both connected
on a field goal in the final two minutes of the same game.
Surprisingly, perhaps, the
Bears have been involved in three of those contests. The first, won by Chicago
26-24, took place on Nov. 8, 1987. Al
Del Greco hit from 47 yards out with a minute left and Kevin Butler came
through from 52 as time expired. The second, won by Green Bay 30-27, occurred
on Dec. 18, 2016. Connor Barth was good from 22 with 1:19 to play before Mason
Crosby nailed a 32-yarder at the buzzer.
For McManus, his 55-yard
parting shot was his 15th successful field goal in a row. This season he was
good on 20 of 21 field goal attempts (95.2 percent), the highest percentage in
team history by a player with a minimum of 20 attempts.
For Santos, he atoned for his last-minute failure against the Packers, a 46-yard effort deflected by Karl Brooks on Nov. 17. He finished 2024 having made his last seven field goal attempts and 21-of-24 for the season.
Since 1921, the 10 games in which the Packers and their opponent each made a field goal in the final two minutes of the same game.
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|
|
|
|
|
Comb. |
Date |
Opp. |
GB
Kicker |
Dist. |
Opp. Kicker |
Dist. |
Dist. |
Jan. 5, 2025 |
Bears |
B. McManus |
55 |
C. Santos |
51 |
106 |
Nov. 8, 1987 |
Bears |
A. Del Greco |
47 |
K. Butler |
52 |
99 |
Oct. 23, 2005 |
Vikings |
R. Longwell |
39 |
P. Edinger |
56 |
95 |
Sept. 20, 2009 |
Bengals |
M. Crosby |
45 |
S. Graham |
40 |
85 |
Dec. 3, 1989 |
Bucs |
C. Jacke |
47 |
D. Igwebuike |
36 |
83 |
Oct. 20, 2024 |
Texans |
B. McManus |
45 |
K. Fairbairn |
35 |
80 |
Oct. 11, 1987 |
Lions |
M. Zendejas |
45 |
M. Prindle |
27 |
72 |
Oct. 14, 1996 |
49ers |
C. Jacke |
31 |
J. Wilkins |
28 |
59 |
Dec. 18, 2016 |
Bears |
M. Crosby |
32 |
C. Barth |
22 |
54 |
Oct. 13, 1985 |
Vikings |
A. Del Greco |
22 |
J. Stenerud |
18 |
40 |
Tuesday, December 31, 2024
TUESDAY TIDBITS: "There's a Battle Outside and It Is Ragin'"
Dan Campbell |
Michael Hoecht—Blocking Kicks Among Other Things
No, the unofficial record is four and it's a four-way tie and they are:
Irv Cross, 4, 1966 (four field goals)Eddie Meador, 4, 1962 (four field goals)John LoVetere, 4, 1960 (two punts, one field goal and one extra point)Bob Reinhard, 4, 1950 (three pints and one field goal)
John LoVetere |
Bob Reinhard |
Monday, December 30, 2024
Darn! Old No. 14 Riddles Green Bay
By Eric Goska
Sam Darnold as pictured in the Vikings media guide. |
Sam Darnold stands alone.
Darnold, the castoff who has
found new life with the Vikings, shredded Green Bay in Minnesota’s 27-25 win at
U.S. Bank Stadium. The third pick overall in the 2018 NFL draft did not miss an
offensive snap as his team extracted more yards from the Packers than any other
this season.
Let go by the Jets, Panthers
and 49ers, Darnold has ascended in the Land of 10,000 Lakes. His passer rating
of 106.5 this season is a career-high and ranks fifth best in the league.
Sunday evening, Darnold reminded
one and all that he was no Sam Howell or Spencer Rattler, two quarterbacks the
Packers schooled in wins over the Seahawks and Saints. The 27-year-old native
of California demonstrated time and time again that he’s the real deal.
Darnold completed 33 of 43
passes for 377 yards, three touchdowns and one interception. He was
particularly effective in the second quarter (12 of 14 for 156 and a TD) when
the Vikings registered 13 unanswered points to go up 13-3 at the break.
Twenty-four of Darnold’s
completions landed in the hands of Justin Jefferson (8 for 92), Jordan Addison
(6-69), Jalen Nailor (5-81) and T.J. Hockenson (5-68). Nailor, Addison and Cam
Akers each caught a touchdown pass.
Darnold completed five or
more consecutive passes on four separate occasions. His run of seven straight
in the second quarter resulted in five first downs, one touchdown and 101
yards.
So effective was Darnold that
only once did the Vikings run more than twice in succession until the fourth
quarter. Then, when Minnesota turned to the ground game in the final 15 minutes
and Green Bay rallied to get to within two, Darnold went 3-for-3 for 28 before
kneeling three times to ensure victory.
Darnold, of course, was not
perfect. He overthrew Akers on a short toss behind the line of scrimmage late
in the second quarter. He was high on a pass that Carrington Valentine
intercepted midway through the third quarter.
But far too often he had the
answer for whatever defense he faced.
Jordan Addison caught six passes for 69 yards and a TD. |
By this author’s count, the
Packers rushed four on 39 of Darnold’s 44 dropbacks. Defensive coordinator Jeff
Halfey sent five three times and dispatched six twice.
Karl Brooks registered Green
Bay’s lone sack. Aaron Mosby looked to join his teammate, but his fourth-quarter sack
and forced fumble were overturned with an expedited review that revealed Darnold’s
hand was moving forward when the linebacker collided with the quarterback.
How to best encapsulate
Darnold’s performance? Perhaps with a convoluted statistic (see Extra Point) that
the media and fans seem to love.
Here goes: Darnold is the
only quarterback to have passed for 300 yards, three touchdowns and 20 first
downs in a regular-season game against Green Bay while completing better than
75 percent of his throws.
In the last 104 years, there
have been 127 instances of a player throwing for 300 or more yards at the
expense of the Packers (regular season). In 51 of those cases, that player also
found the end zone three or more times. And on 10 of those occasions, said
player also amassed 20 passing first downs.
Darnold is the only one to
have checked all the boxes: 300 yards, three TD passes, 20 first downs, and a better-than-75-percent-completion rate all in the same game.
Call him a lone wolf. Call him a cut above the rest.
Call him what you will, but Darnold is definitely one who
could make life miserable for the Packers should they run into him in the
playoffs.
Extra Point: Here’s
a convoluted statistic from the Packers Dope Sheet. “(Jayden) Reed is the first
player in league history to post 750- plus receiving yards and six-plus
receiving TDs and 100-plus rushing yards and a rushing TD in each of his first
two NFL seasons.” String together enough qualifiers and just about anyone can
make NFL history.
300 Plus 3 Plus 20
The 10 quarterbacks who
passed for 300 yards, three touchdowns and 20 first downs in a single regular-season game against the Packers. Sam Darnold is the only one to
have done so while completing better than 75 percent of his passes.
Player |
Date |
Att |
C |
Yds |
TD |
HI |
FD |
Rate |
Sam Darnold |
12-29-2024 |
43 |
33 |
377 |
3 |
1 |
20 |
116.1 |
Ben Roethlisberger |
11-26-2017 |
45 |
33 |
351 |
4 |
2 |
21 |
106.8 |
Kirk Cousins |
9-16-2018 |
48 |
35 |
425 |
4 |
1 |
20 |
118.8 |
Drew Brees |
9-8-2011 |
49 |
32 |
419 |
3 |
0 |
20 |
112.5 |
Drew Brees |
9-30-2012 |
54 |
35 |
446 |
3 |
0 |
23 |
109.0 |
Ben Roethlisberger |
12-20-2009 |
46 |
29 |
503 |
3 |
0 |
20 |
121.9 |
Dan Fouts |
10-7-1984 |
50 |
31 |
376 |
3 |
0 |
21 |
105.1 |
Daunte Culpepper |
11-14-2004 |
44 |
27 |
363 |
4 |
0 |
20 |
117.9 |
Matthew Stafford |
1-1-2012 |
59 |
36 |
520 |
5 |
2 |
27 |
103.8 |
Philip Rivers |
11-6-2011 |
46 |
26 |
385 |
4 |
3 |
20 |
85.9 |