| Gino Marchetti Credit: Merv Corning |
Tuesday, December 23, 2025
TUESDAY TIDBITS: "We're World Champions"
Sunday, December 21, 2025
Packers Blow Lead in Windy City
By Eric Goska
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| DJ Moore's 46-yard TD reception in overtime lifted Chicago past Green Bay 22-16. |
How about this for a morning-after football head-scratcher: Would you rather your team trail for most of the game and lose, or would you prefer your team hold the upper hand for much of the game and succumb at the end?
The correct answer, of course, is neither. Who wants to lose?
The Packers chose the second option in the hypothetical
above, sitting atop the scoreboard for most of their contest with the Bears
Saturday night. Then, with the game on the line, they imploded, allowing Chicago
to walk off with a 22-16 overtime victory at Soldier Field.
In a matchup that determined first place in the NFC North
Division, Green Bay wilted. Up by 10 with just over five minutes remaining in
the fourth quarter, the club again demonstrated its inability to close the
door.
Here’s another question, one more practical than philosophical.
Which of the following plays contributed most to the Packers’ downfall?
- Warren Brinson draws a 15-yard penalty for grabbing Caleb Williams’ facemask, a blunder that erases third-and-20 and allows the Bears to close to 16-9 on a 43-yard Cairo Santos’ field goal at the two-minute warning.
- Romeo Doubs fails to secure Santos’ subsequent onside kick, an offering that hits him in the hands. Chicago then mounts an 8-play, 53-yard drive to knot the score at 16-all late in the fourth quarter.
- A botched, fourth-down exchange between center Sean Rhyan and quarterback Malik Willis, a miscue that paves the way for Williams’ 46-yard, game-winning scoring pass to DJ Moore four plays later.
This was a game the Packers should have won. Even losing
their starting quarterback, Jordan Love, midway through the second quarter did
not faze them. Willis filled in admirably, completing 9 of 11 passes for
121 yards and a touchdown. He rushed for 44 yards on 10 carries.
Green Bay struck first in this encounter, with Brandon
McManus kicking a 26-yard field goal to put the Packers ahead with 12:45
remaining in the second period. By tacking on two more McManus field goals and
a 33-yard TD pass from Willis to Doubs, the Green and Gold remained in
front for the next 42:21.
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| Williams passed for 250 yards and two TDs. |
Not until Williams tied the score with a 6-yard TD pass to Jahdae Walker with 24 seconds remaining in regulation did the Packers relinquish the lead.
Playing with the lead for so long – 40-plus minutes – has
usually worked in Green Bay’s favor in this series. Until Saturday, the Packers
were 56-2 when doing so against the Monsters of the Midway.
In fact, Green Bay had won its last 28 games against Chicago
when it led for at least 40 minutes. It last slipped up on Nov. 8, 1987, when
Kevin Butler’s 52-yard walk-off field goal lifted the Bears to a 26-24 win at
Lambeau Field and tore the hearts out of Packers fans.
“Butler’s boot leaves Packers numb,” read the headline above Green Bay Press-Gazette’s Bob McGinn’s analysis. The kick, only the second success from 50 yards and beyond by the third-year kicker, rendered useless Green Bay’s 44:27
with the lead.
In Chicago, as in Denver, the Packers struggled in the red
zone. After going 1-for-4 against the Broncos, they struck out (0-for-5) in
Chicago.
Green Bay ran a season-high 19 plays in the red zone. It went
1-for-5 on third downs, and Love failed to connect with Christian Watson on
fourth down early in the first quarter.
The team’s biggest slip-up inside the 20 occurred midway
through the third quarter. Josh Jacobs ended a promising 9-play drive with a
fumble at the 3-yard line. Tremaine Edmunds recovered to end the threat.
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| Swift led Chicago with 58 yards rushing. |
Saturday was the second time this season that the Packers have led for more than 40 minutes and come away empty-handed. They were out front of the Browns for 41:52 only to lose 13-10 on Andre Szmyt’s 55-yard walk-off field goal on Sept. 21.
Since 1921, the three regular-season games in which the Packers lost despite leading the Bears for more than 40 minutes.
TWL* Date Location Result
48:10 Oct. 4, 1953 City Stadium GB lost, 13-17
44:27 Nov. 8, 1987 Lambeau Field GB lost, 24-26
42:21 Dec. 20, 2025 Soldier Field GB lost, 16-22
*TWL = time with lead
Tuesday, December 16, 2025
TUESDAY TIDBITS: "It Was Won Yesterday in Philadelphia"
| Johnny "Zero" Clement |
Monday, December 15, 2025
Bo Nix Sizzles in Win Over Green Bay
By Eric Goska
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| Neither Xavier McKinney (above) nor any other Packer could intercept Bo Nix Sunday at Empower Field at Mile High. (photos by Eric Goska) |
Four touchdown passes and no interceptions beats four field
goals and no misses any day of the week.
The flick of an arm, not the swing of a leg, carried the day
at Empower Field at Mile High Sunday. That the Broncos reached the end zone
while the Packers split the uprights allowed Denver to soar past Green Bay
34-26 and register an 11th straight win.
In a game featuring top-tier defenses, Bo Nix shredded Green
Bay’s. The second-year player completed 23 of 34 passes for 302 yards and four
touchdowns while compiling a passer rating of 134.7, the highest allowed by the
Packers this season.
Nix fired scoring passes on his 8th, 12th, 18th and 25th
pass attempts. He threw 18 passes during that run, posting a rating of 149.8.
The second-year phenom connected on 13 passes of 10 or more
yards. His throws brought home 16 first downs.
Not once was he sacked.
For Green Bay, Brandon McManus booted field goals of 53, 26,
35 and 37 yards without a miss. His four-for-four performance was his first as
a Packer.
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| Brandon McManus didn't miss in Denver. |
But repeatedly trotting out McManus meant Green Bay underwhelmed in the red zone producing just one touchdown in four trips there. Denver was a perfect four-of-four.
Given a choice between a can’t-miss kicker or a lights-out
quarterback, always go with the hot hand.
Nix became the 13th player this season to launch four or
more scoring passes with no interceptions. Like the others – with the exception
of one outing by Patrick Mahomes – he came away a winner.
Throughout its history, Green Bay has wilted on the road
when confronted by a quarterback who can sling four TD passes and not get
picked. Nix became the ninth to do it and the first since Jameis Winston uncorked
five in New Orleans’ 38-3 demolition of the Packers to start the 2021 season.
Nix inflicted the most damage during the heart of the game.
During the second and third quarters combined, he completed 16 of 22 passes for
237 yards and four scores (147.2 rating).
Not surprisingly, Denver piled up 289 of its 391 yards and
16 of 21 first downs during those two periods. The yardage is the most Green
Bay has allowed in consecutive quarters in one game all season.
The 25-year-old romped on second down. He completed 10 of 13
throws for 161 yards and three scores (157.4 rating).
Nix utilized four different receivers – Michael Bandy, Lil’Jordan
Humphrey, Courtland Sutton and Troy Franklin – to reach the end zone. Franklin’s grab on the last play of the third
quarter put Denver ahead for good.
Franklin’s touchdown could have been prevented had Xavier
McKinney intercepted Nix on the drive. The veteran defensive back had two opportunities
– one on a pass intended for Evan Engram on the second play of the advance and
one on a deep ball for Marvin Mims Jr. three plays later – but came up short
both times.
That Nix riddled Green Bay even with Micah Parsons, on the
field, was disconcerting. That the Packers will be without their top defensive
player for the remainder of the season – Parsons tore his ACL two plays before
Nix orchestrated his final TD throw – is cause for alarm.
In the next two weeks, Green Bay will face Chicago’s Caleb
Williams and Baltimore’s Lamar Jackson. Both quarterbacks have already thrown
four TD passes with no interceptions in victory this season. Both would like
nothing more than to duplicate their efforts against a Packers team that lost
more than a game in Denver.
The nine QBs who threw 4 or more TD passes and no interceptions against a Packers team on the road.
Tommy Kramer 25-16-241-6 135.2 Vikings Sept. 28, 1986 GB lost, 7-42
Chad Pennington 24-17-196-4 134.7 Jets Dec. 29, 2002 GB lost, 17-42
Peyton Manning 40-28-393-5 140.9 Colts Sept. 26, 2004 GB lost, 31-45
Donovan McNabb 43-32-464-5 147.8 Eagles Dec. 5, 2004 GB lost, 17-47
Drew Brees 26-20-323-4 157.5 Saints Nov. 24, 2008 GB lost, 29-51
Marcus Mariota 26-19-295-4 149.8 Titans Nov. 13, 2016 GB lost, 25-47
Cam Newton 31-20-242-4 128.0 Panthers Dec. 17, 2017 GB lost, 24-31
Jameis Winston 20-14-148-5 130.8 Saints Sept. 12, 2021 GB lost, 3-38
Bo Nix 34-23-302-4 134.7 Broncos Dec. 14, 2025 GB lost, 26-34
Friday, December 12, 2025
Remembering Bobby Ply's 1962 Season
by Jeffrey J. Miller
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| Bobby Ply, 1965 |
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| Buffalo's DB Christian Benford returning an intercepted Joe Burrow pass for a touchdown at Highmark Stadium, December 7, 2025 |
Benford’s exploits brought my mind back to a moment in time I had referenced in a Pro Football Journal article a few years ago. In one of my “AFL Defensive Players of the Week” series of articles, I spotlighted a two-week performance by a little-known Dallas Texan defensive back named Bobby Ply. It inspired me to turn the spotlight back on Mr. Ply, who in back-to-back games right around this very time in December of 1962, pilfered a record seven (yes, 7!) enemy aerials.
Tuesday, December 9, 2025
TUESDAY TIDBITS: The Day of the Halfback
| Gale Sayers |












