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Sunday, January 23, 2022

Leading Men, Packers Fall to 49ers in Divisional Round

 By Eric Goska

The Packers added yet another dismal chapter to their ever-expanding dossier of postseason failure.

And like so many of the previous entries, this one will sting for years to come.

A strong start by Green Bay did nothing more than force the visiting 49ers to work harder. Trailing for what seemed like an eternity, San Francisco hung around until pulling the plug in the closing minutes to secure a 13-10 win in a divisional playoff game at Lambeau Field.

No autopsy needed. Abysmal special teams play ended Green Bay’s season.

For years, the question has become not whether the Packers will come up short, but how. And for years, the team has invented new ways to flame out.

Consider:

  • Steve Young whistles a 25-yard TD pass to Terrell Owens with three seconds left.
  • Colin Kaepernick rushes for 181 yards and two touchdowns.
  • Raheem Mostert explodes for 220 yards and four touchdowns.

And those are merely 49ers performances that helped short circuit Green Bay. There have been far too many others, some too painful to recall.

Credit the Packers with a quick getaway. They drove 69 yards in 10 plays, never facing third down as they went up 7-0 on A.J. Dillon’s 6-yard burst with five minutes, 35 seconds elapsed.

By the end of the first quarter, Green Bay had salted away 109 yards and seven first downs. San Francisco: minus-seven and zero.

Until Saturday night, the Green and Gold had been 10-0 at Lambeau Field in the playoffs when producing more yards and more first downs than their opponent in the opening 15 minutes. Might as well toss that stat in the dumper along with the season.

Never ahead by more than seven, Green Bay continued to lead deep into the fourth quarter. It remained in front despite Marcedes Lewis’ lost fumble and Josiah Deguara’s drop. It did so despite allowing the 49ers to start three drives from their 40 or beyond.

The Packers stayed out front despite quarterback Aaron Rodgers being sacked five times, 49ers defensive back Jimmie Ward blocking Mason Crosby’s first field goal attempt and Allen Lazard being the only Green Bay receiver other than Davante Adams to catch a pass.

The team held on because its defense battled. San Francisco didn’t record a first down or pass completion until six-and-a-half minutes remained in the second quarter. The 49ers had negative yardage on third down until midway through the third quarter.

Even after quarterback Jimmy Garappolo and tight end George Kittle hooked up for 24 yards – the 49ers’ longest offensive gain of the night – Green Bay held tight. Four plays later, linebackers Rashan Gary and De’Vondre Campbell dumped running back Elijah Mitchell for a loss on fourth-and one.

The Packers held the upper hand on the scoreboard until 4:41 remained in the fourth quarter. That’s when defensive lineman Jordan Willis blocked Corey Bojorquez’s punt and safety Talanoa Hufanga ran it in from six yards out to tie the game at 10 apiece.

A lead that had held for 49:44 went poof. And San Francisco, which had never been on top, finally got there on Robbie Gould’s 45-yard field goal as time expired.

Game over.

Only once before had the Packers been out front longer in a playoff game that they lost. They led for 51:42 in a 28-22 loss to Seattle in which they blew a 16-point lead and failed to recover a late onside kick.

Just one more in a long line of blunders that cost Green Bay in the postseason. There have been so many, someone should write a book.

Packing a Lead, Handed a Loss
The 8 playoff losses in which the Packers held the lead for 20 or more minutes on the game clock.

Time      Date                         Opponent             Result
51:42     Jan. 18, 2015              Seahawks            GB lost, 22-28
49:44     Jan. 22, 2022              49ers                    GB lost, 10-13
48:06     Jan. 11, 2004              Eagles                  GB lost, 17-20
21:56     Jan. 14, 1996              Cowboys             GB lost, 27-38
21:41     Jan. 3, 1999                49ers                    GB lost, 27-30
21:33     Jan. 16, 2016              Cardinals             GB lost, 20-26
21:20     Jan. 20, 2008              Giants                  GB lost, 20-23
20:16     Dec. 26, 1960             Eagles                  GB lost, 13-17

4 comments:

  1. Yes, alot of painful losses. Fumbles and interceptions play a huge role. The Packers get a fumble recovery from Samuel but the officials give it back to SF. Later, the Packers fumble to the recovering Niners but the officials dont even look at it, they spot the ball for the Packers, who end up having their FG attempt, blocked. Then, the defense cant stop Samuel on a third down run that allows the Niners to get a first down and milk the clock for a game winning FG.

    Will Rodgers be back ?

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  2. ....this is not a prediction, but will surmise based upon how well the Rooney family treats their players, and having a head coach in Tomlin that is a true leader of men----how would Aaron R. look in black & gold?

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  3. Coach, can the Steelers afford him ? Would Rodgers take over for Jimmy Whiteshoes in SF ?

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  4. if you really want to feel pain, Eric, I suggest you consider how us Baltimore Colts fans feel about the 65 Chandler to the right, but oops, the officials blow the call playoff debacle....if you want to trade your 8 losses for that one straight up, I'm your guy!

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