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Monday, October 31, 2022
Mike Fanning—Rest in Peace
Running Behind, Packers Fall Short in Buffalo
By Eric Goska
Aaron Jones rushed for 143 yards against the Bills. (screen capture from NFL Game Pass) |
Those pundits who believe the Packers tend to abandon the run too early or too often must have been pleasantly surprised by what unfolded in Buffalo Sunday night.
Not by the final score, mind you, although Green Bay did avoid
a blowout. Rather, those who prefer an earth-moving type of approach must have taken
some satisfaction in the Green and Gold’s decision to continue to run the ball regardless of the score.
Propelled by Aaron Jones and AJ Dillon, Green Bay amassed a
season-high 208 rushing yards in the team’s 27-17 loss to the Bills in prime
time. Only once previously have the two running backs combined for more real estate than what they
amassed at Highmark Stadium in Orchard Park.
Dillon and Jones have been sharing carries since 2020. The
two have combined for 100 or more rushing yards 14 times in the regular season.
They topped the century mark again in Buffalo. Jones piled
up 143 yards on 20 trips and Dillon added 54 on 10.
That’s 197 yards worth of togetherness, second behind only
the 218 they snapped off against the Titans in December 2020.
The difference Sunday night? Just about everything they earned
came with the Packers behind on the scoreboard.
The Bills, owners of an AFC-best 6-1 record, average 29
points a game. They pulled ahead 7-0 late in the first quarter and never lost
the lead.
The Packers had the ball for only one possession before
falling behind. They gained 34 yards on nine plays to reach the Buffalo 38
before losing the ball on downs.
On that drive, Jones carried twice for eight yards. Dillon
lugged the leather once for two yards.
Those three attempts for 10 yards occurred with the score
0-0. Everything else Green Bay rushed for came with the team in arrears.
Despite being behind for the final 48 minutes, 34 seconds,
the Pack stayed grounded. They gained 198 yards on 28 attempts (7.1 per carry).
Jones and Dillon accounted for it all, with the exception of
an 11-yard scramble by Aaron Rodgers in the fourth quarter.
In the second quarter, Green Bay ran 12 times (73 yards)
against four pass plays. In the third, it ran 12 times (108 yards) against four
pass plays.
Staying with the run, of course, is easier when it is
producing dividends. Twelve of those 20 runs in the middle quarters yielded seven
yards or more.
Yet even with this windfall, the Packers fell further behind. Down
7-0 at the end of the first quarter, the team lagged behind 27-10 heading into
the fourth.
And so in the final 15 minutes, Green Bay threw 15 times
against four runs.
AJ Dillon rushed 10 times for 54 yards. |
Amassing 198 yards on the ground when trailing is no small feat. Only twice before in the regular-season (since 1923) has the team gained more.
On Oct. 8, 1950, Gene Ronzani’s team compiled 312 soil yards
in a 44-31 loss to the Yanks. Approximately 274 were produced with the team in
arrears.
Five years later, Lisle Blackbourn’s club overran the 49ers
27-21 while staking out 251 yards on the ground. Most (233) were earned while rallying
to pull ahead of San Francisco.
Historically, getting to 200 usually spells victory. Since
1923, the Packers are 115-10-5 (.904) in the regular season when doing so.
In today’s game, of course, reaching that plateau is not often
done. For Green Bay this century, it happens about once a year.
That makes getting there and coming away with a loss that
much more frustrating. What it doesn’t mean is shying away from pounding the ball
in the second half of 2022.
Running from Behind
Since 1923, the eight regular-season games in which the
Packers gained more than 180 yards rushing while behind on the scoreboard. Yardage totals for the games prior to 1985 are unofficial.
Yards |
Date |
Opponent |
Result |
274 |
Oct. 8, 1950 |
Yanks |
GB lost, 31-44 |
233 |
Nov. 20, 1955 |
49ers |
GB won, 27-21 |
198 |
Oct. 30, 2022 |
Bills |
GB lost, 17-27 |
196 |
Nov. 3, 1957 |
Giants |
GB lost, 17-31 |
196 |
Sept. 29, 1985 |
Cardinals |
GB lost, 28-43 |
185 |
Dec. 6, 1987 |
49ers |
GB lost, 12-23 |
184 |
Nov. 6, 1949 |
Bears |
GB lost, 3-24 |
183 |
Oct. 23, 1949 |
Rams |
GB lost, 7-35 |
Sunday, October 30, 2022
Judgements VIII
Dak Prescott Credit: Fox Sports/NFL Game Pass |
Yes. The Dallas Cowboys.
I know, I know, they already lost to Philadelphia. In fact,
they lost a couple of weeks ago. But that was with Cooper Rush at quarterback,
not Dak Prescott. And while Rush is 5-1 as an emergency starter, the difference
between the two was apparent in Sunday’s 49-29 beat down of Chicago.
Prescott was back to being Dak, running and throwing with
confidence, and the Cowboys were back to being a team that can bury you a
myriad of ways. They ran for 200 yards. They threw for another 242. They
converted nine of 11 third downs, scored a defensive touchdown and sacked
Chicago’s Justin Fields four times.
In short, they looked a lot like … well, a lot like the
Philadelphia Eagles.
Now, keep in mind, this was on an afternoon when running
back Zeke Elliott didn’t suit up. So the Cowboys had to rely on backup Tony
Pollard, and all he did was shred the Bears’ defense for 147 scrimmage yards
and three TDs.
Yet Pollard was the sidebar. Dak was the story.
In rhythm throughout, he led the Cowboys to four successive
scoring drives to open the game and catapult them to a 28-7 lead. The rest you
know: Dallas wound up scoring more points than any game this season. Its
third-down conversion rate of 81.8 was its best in at least 30 years. And things
went so smoothly that even the Cowboys’ punter made news. Bryan Anger nailed an
83-yard punt, with a 63-yard net after the touchback.
See what I mean? All its bases were covered.
Now, where the Eagles and Cowboys diverge is the schedule.
The Cowboys’ next three games are vs. Green Bay, Minnesota and the New York
Giants. The Eagles’ next three are vs. Houston, Washington and Indianapolis.
Nevertheless, at some point, someone will emerge to push Philadelphia.
It may be Minnesota. It may be San Francisco. It may even be
a longshot like the Giants who, at 6-2, are tied with Dallas, or Seattle. But
if you ask me which team I’d choose to push the Eagles to the finish line … give
me the Cowboys, and not just because they can beat you with the run and pass;
but because they have a Top-5 defense, too.
The last time that happened with a Mike McCarthy-coached team
was 2010. And that team (Green Bay) won the Super Bowl.
SUNDAY SCHOOL: FIVE THINGS WE LEARNED
1. Jalen Hurts is making an MVP case. He
just threw four TD passes of 25 or more yards, the first time in 53 years of Eagles’
history that happened. But here’s the clincher: The guy’s thrown 10 TD passes,
run for six more scores and has only two turnovers all year. Two. And no lost fumbles. Then there’s
this: Hurts quarterbacks the league’s only unbeaten team and won his last 10
regular-season starts. Look in your rear-view mirror, Josh Allen: That image
that’s larger than it appears? It’s Jalen Hurts.
2. Mike Tomlin is doomed. He hasn’t had a
losing season in 15 years as the Steelers’ head coach, but that streak ends
this season. The Steelers are 2-6 and going nowhere with a rookie quarterback learning
on the fly. Hard to believe, but the Steelers might be sellers this week.
3. We were wrong about Seattle. When the
Seahawks traded away Russell Wilson, it seemed to signal they were in a tear-down
mode. Not true, said Pete Carroll. He insisted they were good enough to make a
run at a division title with … Geno
Smith? We don’t make ‘em up. Critics scoffed, but look where we are eight weeks
into the season: The Seahawks … with Geno Smith as their quarterback … are in
first place in the NFC West, for Pete’s sake, ahead of the defending Super
Bowl-champion L.A. Rams.
4. Green Bay is in deep doo-doo. A week
ago, Aaron Rodgers said that going to Buffalo “might be the best thing for us.”
Wrong. The Packers didn’t just lose. They were flattened. Rodgers couldn’t make
plays. The offensive line couldn’t protect. The defense couldn’t make stops. There
were injuries, an ejection, too much Josh Allen, too little Aaron Rodgers … I
think you get the picture. The Packers got drilled. Again. Now 3-5, they’re 3-1/2
games behind front-running Minnesota in the NFC North and looking less and less
like a team that will … or can … make a playoff run.
5. Beware Miami. The Dolphins don’t play
an opponent with a winning record until Dec. 11 (the Chargers), and you can
look it up. Their next three opponents are a combined 6-15-1.
THIRD AND 20
1. Let’s
be honest: Atlanta didn’t win that game. Carolina lost it. Attention, D.J.
Moore and Eddy Pineiro: Pick up your game balls in the Falcons’ locker room. Atlanta
couldn’t have survived without you.
2. Another
reason to like what’s going on in Buffalo: The Bills have beaten four opponents
that were 2021 division winners (Kansas City, Green Bay, Tennessee and the L.A.
Rams).
3. It
doesn’t matter where you go in the NFL East. You can’t lose. The NFC East is
23-8. The AFC East is 20-7. Put them together, and you have eight clubs at
43-15, a 74.1 winning percentage. Better yet, there isn’t anyone in either
division with a losing record. By contrast, four other divisions have no more
than one team above .500, while the NFC South has none.
4. Fright
Night came early to L.A. Bad enough that the Rams dropped their eighth straight
regular-season game to arch-rival San Francisco. What’s worse is that they lost
All-World wide receiver Cooper Kupp to an ankle injury late in the game. Stay
tuned.
5. How
much do the Jets miss rookie Breece Hall? We just found out. Zach Wilson can’t
carry this team. He was 1 for 14 when pressured, with three interceptions.
Halfway through the season, the Jets still have a quarterback problem.
6. It’s
time to worry about Trevor Lawrence. In 25 starts, the guy has 22 TD passes, 23
interceptions and a 5-20 record. Once upon a time, you could blame his shortcomings on Urban
Meyer. Not anymore.
7. More
evidence that it’s not so much parity as it is mediocrity that rules today’s
NFL: The Seattle-N.Y. Giants game was the only one Sunday involving two teams
with winning records.
8. Forget
accuracy. Justin Fields needs to work on tackling, too. Rewind Micah Parsons’
fumble return for a TD, and you’ll see what I mean.
9. Philadelphia
isn’t going 16-0. We know that. But who’s going to beat the Eagles? They don’t
face an opponent with a winning record until Dec. 4 when Tennessee comes to
town.
10. Derrick
Henry owns the Texans. In his last four
starts vs. Houston, King Henry has 892 yards rushing (an average of 223 per), nine
rushing TDs and over 200 yards rushing in each contest. No need to remind
rookie quarterback Malik Willis. Making his first NFL start, he won by throwing
just 10 times. How? Easy: Derrick Henry had 32 carries.
11. If
you’re shopping in New Orleans, the price for Alvin Kamara just went up. He put
up 158 scrimmage yards and scored three times.
12. That
didn’t take long. Christian McCaffrey just demonstrated why he’s the difference
maker that could (should?) make San Francisco – not the Rams or Seattle -- the
team to beat in the NFC West. With 183 yards, he was responsible for 51 percent
of the 49ers’ 362. He also became the first player since Hall-of-Famer
LaDainian Tomlinson in 2005 to score a touchdown by running, another by
receiving and a third by passing. “The guy can just do it all,” said NBC analyst Jason Garrett. Bingo.
13. Miami
is 5-0 when Tua starts and finishes a game this season. Just sayin.’
14. Just
a hunch but … no talk this week about a quarterback controversy in Foxboro.
15. Sorry,
but I still don’t get why coaches line up in shotgun with a yard or less to go.
Case in point: It’s third-and-goal at the Washington three-inch line, and Frank
Reich has rookie quarterback Sam Ehlinger in -- what else? – the shotgun. Why? Beats
me. Result: A run up the middle gains nothing, the Colts kick a field goal and
lose by one.
16. The
more I see Kenneth Walker III, the more I see a young Derrick Henry.
17. No
surprise that Indianapolis lost. The Colts started a rookie quarterback. Since
1970, Colts’ quarterbacks making their first career starts are 1-16.
18. Buffalo
should demand more Sunday Night exposure. Since Sean McDermott took over in
2017, the Bills are 4-0 on Sunday Night Football, the only team with multiple
victories and no defeats on Sunday Night the past six years.
19. Just
when you think it can’t get worse for Vegas and Josh McDaniels, it does.
Sunday’s 24-0 loss was the 22nd defeat in McDaniels last 29 games as
a head coach. A year ago the Raiders went to the playoffs with Rich Bisaccia.
They’re going nowhere now with McDaniels. Draw your own conclusions.
20. Coming
soon to Pay Per View” Jaire Alexander vs. Stefon Diggs.
SUNDAY’S GOLD JACKET STATS
Courtesy of NFL
Research: The Broncos’ Latavius Murray is the first player in league
history to score a rushing TD for two different teams in London in the same
season.
Geno Smith has six games this season with multiple touchdown
passes. He had seven in his first nine NFL seasons.
Tyreek Hill’s four games with 150 or more receiving yards
tie him with Mark Duper (1984) for the most in one season in Miami history.
Stefon Diggs has at least one touchdown in his last eight
games vs. Green Bay. That’s the longest such streak by any opponent in Packers’
history, bettering Randy Moss (7) by one game.
SUNDAY’S GOLD JACKET QUOTES
“We never can allow somebody to score that many points on
us. That’s embarrassing.” -- Chicago
linebacker Roquan Smith.
“I need to play better.” – N.Y. Jets’ quarterback Zach Wilson.
“Obviously, that wasn’t good enough in any way, shape or
form.” – Denver coach Josh McDaniels.
“We don’t have to do anything, but if it’s right we’ll do
something.” – Dallas owner Jerry Jones on
a possible trade this week.
“It hurts. I know this is not going to define me as a
kicker. Everybody misses kicks. Unfortunately, my time was today” – Carolina kicker Eddy Pineiro on his
misses.
Christian McCaffrey—'One Bourbon, One Scotch, and One Beer'
Roy Zimmerman |
Friday, October 28, 2022
Fran Tarkenton, Still All-time Leader in Being Sacked
By John Turney
It was everywhere. Social media, news and sports websites, sports telecasts, and so on. They all agreed that Tom Brady was "the most sacked QB in NFL history."
The details are as follows: Brady had been sacked 555 times and which surpassed Ben Roethlisberger who had been sacked 554 times.
What if someone in NFL history had been sacked more than Roethlisberger?
Someone was.
Frank Tarkenton was sacked 570 times in his eighteen-year career. Eighty-seven of them were prior to 1963 when the statistic became official but we are sure those two seasons are part of "all-time" as it pertains to the NFL.
Minnesota Viking Quarterback Fran Tarkington by Thomas A. Needham (18 x 12 inches) acrylic on illustration board. Source: |
Tuesday, October 25, 2022
TUESDAY TIDBITS: "Roll Tide"
Ken Stabler and Richard Todd |
Bert Coan |
Jim Keane |
Sunday, October 23, 2022
Judgements VII
A year ago, they finished 1-2 in the league MVP voting, with
Rodgers winning it and Brady a distant second. But now? Well, now each is in
the midst of a miserable season that has conversations taking an unexpected
turn.
Instead of their successes, we’re talking about their
failures.
Each is 3-4, with Brady dropping four of his last five and Rodgers
his last three. But that’s just the beginning, people. One week Brady and the
Bucs lose to Mitch Trubisky. The next, they can’t find the end zone with a
Sherpa and lose to P.J.Walker.
Not to be outdone, Rodgers just lost to Taylor Heinicke and the
Washington Commanders. Worse, they failed to convert a third down. The last
time that happened in Green Bay? Try Week 6 in 1999 when Rodgers was 15.
So there’s concern, and there should be. This just doesn’t
happen to two of the most accomplished and decorated quarterbacks in NFL
history. But it has, and, suddenly and unexpectedly, we’re left to ask: What’s
going on? Or, more to the point: Is this the beginning of the end?
They look old, and they are. Brady is 45, and Rodgers is 38.
But they’re coming off two of their best seasons ever, so we can cut them some
slack. Plus, let’s be honest: This isn’t just about age or Brady and Rodgers
making all the wrong moves. There have been dropped passes, offensive-line
issues, a lack of intensity, questionable play calling and defensive failures.
But Rodgers and Brady are captains of their ships, and where
they could cover for shortcomings in the past they can’t now.
Maybe it’s a lack of confidence in their supporting cast.
Maybe it’s a change in coaching (Rodgers has a new offensive coordinator; Brady
a new head coach). Maybe it’s the loss of Davante Adams in Green Bay and Gronk
in Tampa. Or maybe it’s just time catching up to two guys who seemed ageless.
Whatever it is, it bears watching.
Neither admits concern, and maybe they’ll be proven right.
After all, Kansas City was sitting at 3-4 at this time a year ago and wound up
one win from the Super Bowl. But the Chiefs had a pulse. Tampa Bay and Green
Bay don’t. Not now, they don’t. Both look broken and lifeless, but both have
quarterbacks who can make fixes.
They’ve done it before. I just know that they can do it
again.
SUNDAY SCHOOL: FIVE THINGS WE LEARNED
1. Cincinnati is back.
The Bengals just won for the fourth time in five tries, and, OK, it was Atlanta.
But look closer: Joe Burrow threw for three TDs, scored a fourth and had 481 yards
passing, including 325 in the first half. He also had nine completions of 20 or
more yards. So what’s happening now that wasn’t before? Protection, that’s
what. After he was sacked 13 times in the first two games this season (both
losses), Burrow has been dropped 11 times the past five games. He’s thrown 12
TDs and one interception in those starts. Connect the dots.
2. Seattle is
exceeding expectations. No Russell Wilson, no chance. That was the word on
this year’s Seahawks. Then the season started, Gino Smith stepped in under
center and the Seahawks took off. Granted, until Sunday they hadn’t beaten an
opponent with a winning record. But then they went to L.A., embarrassed the
Chargers and, suddenly, they’re where they aren’t supposed to be: On top of the
NFC West. You can look it up.
3. Ron Rivera was
right about Taylor Heinicke. He said he chose Henicke over rookie Sam
Howell because he gave the Commanders their best chance to be successful. Smart
move. In his first start this season, Heinicke knocked off Green Bay and Aaron
Rodgers. Memo to Carson Wentz: Take your time recuperating from finger surgery.
4. It’s Tennessee and
everyone else in the AFC South. Indianapolis was supposed to be the Titans’
only concern in the division, but it’s not. The Titans are playing solitaire.
They just beat the Colts for the fifth straight time and are the only team with
a winning record in the South.
5. The Chiefs don’t
miss Tyreek Hill. Three times they’ve scored 40 or more points. Three times
Patrick Mahomes put up 300 or more yards passing, including a season-best 423
vs. San Francisco on Sunday Twice they’ve had two receivers each produce 100 or
more yards in catches. A year ago, the Chefs were 3-4 with 188 points. This
season they’re 5-2 with 223. “I know this sounds crazy,” said NBC analyst Chris Simms, “but they’re a
better offense without Tyreek Hill.:” I don’t know that I’d go that far. But I
do know they don’t seem to miss him.
THIRD AND 20
1. The
49ers don’t need Christian McCaffrey as much as they need Aaron Donald. Or Micah
Parson, Trevon Diggs or Xavien Howard. Maybe all of them. Their defense was
supposed to be one of the backbones of this team. Then Kansas City came to town
and shredded it for 529 yards, 44 points and eight gains of 20 yards or more. Consider that a wake-up call.
2. There’s
no place like home for Tua Tagovailoa. That was his seventh straight victory in
Miami.
3. I’m
with Cris Collinsworth. I winced every time Tua put his head down and took on
tacklers. Memo to Tua: There’s a reason the league allows quarterbacks like you
to slide. So do it.
4. I
thought Carolina was supposed to be in Full-Tank mode. Apparently, Tampa Bay
did, too. Add Carolina’s Steve Wilks to the Coach of the Year cast.
5. When
can a victory be a crushing defeat? When it’s the New York Jets losing rookie
Breece Hall to an injured knee in a 16-9 win over Denver. The early diagnosis
is “not good,” said coach Robert Saleh – for Hall or the Jets. Signs point to a
torn ACL, and that could be a crippling blow to one of the league’s feel-good
stories. As ESPN.com’s Rich Cimini
described him, Hall was the Jets’ “identity.” \
6. Now
America knows what those in and around the Steelers have for months: Rookie
wide receiver George Pickens is a star waiting to happen.
7. More
evidence that the NFC East is the NFC Beast. All three teams in action Sunday
won, running the division record to 20-7. No other NFC division has fewer than
14 losses.
8. Headline
from last week’s San Francisco Chronicle:
“Trading for McCaffrey, 49ers’ brain trust bets on its own genius.” Genius? Under Kyle Shanahan, the 49ers
are 46-48, including 42-46 in the regular season. Granted, they reached Super
Bowl LIV, but they also have two winning seasons in Shanahan’s six years there.
9. How
in the world does Austin Ekeler go undrafted? Someone? Anyone?
10. I
knew I should have started Mecole Hardman at running back.
11. Wait
a minute: The Raiders didn’t pick up the fifth-year option on Josh Jacobs? Lovie
Smith would like an explanation, and he’s not alone. In his last three games,
Jacobs has 523 scrimmage yards and six TDs.
12. Dan
Campbell is wrong. His Lions aren’t better than their record, as he claimed
last week. “You are what your record says you are,” Bill Parcells once said, and
the record says the Lions are 1-5 this year and 4-18-1 under Campbell. They’ve
also been outscored 53-6 the past two losses.
13. This
was the 10th time that Tom Brady and Aaron Rodgers lost on the same
weekend. The last time was last week.
14. P.S.
-- The last time Tom Terrific was under .500 this late in a season was 2002, or
the last time he failed to reach the playoffs when he finished a season.
15. I
swear, the more I see Denver coach Nathaniel Hackett the more I think I’m
looking at Major League third baseman Matt Williams. At this point, Broncos’
fans might settle for Williams.
16. To
those who predicted that the Broncos would be hamstrung by Russell Wilson: Pick
up your check at the door.
17. Aaron
Rodgers after Green Bay’s latest loss: “Nobody’s going to give us a chance going
to Buffalo on Sunday Night Football with a chance to be exposed. Shoot, this
might be the best thing going for us.” No, it won’t. Trust me.
18. Two
reasons I can’t see the Chargers as a serious playoff factor: 1) The analytics
of coach Brandon Staley and 2) a defense that’s sprung too many holes and just
lost cornerback J.C. Jackson. Look, they play in the same division as Patrick
Mahomes, right? They’ve been torched for 38 by Trevor Lawrence and 37 by Geno
Smith. Check, please.
19. When
the World Series is over, maybe the Houston Texans can hire the Astros’ Jose
Altuve and Alex Bregman as defensive consultants. They should. Their defense
was so atrocious vs. Las Vegas that CBS
analyst Adam Archuleta said, “It really doesn’t matter what play is called. To
say they’re on their heels is an understatement.”
20. Critics
say refs protect Tom Brady. Officials say they don’t. Now we have another RTP penalty
to support the refs. It didn’t involve Brady. It was Jacksonville’s Trevor
Lawrence, whose jersey was tugged by the Giants’ Dexter Lawrence as he reached
for him. Yes, tugged. Result:
Roughing the passer. Reality: You gotta be kidding. “That’s roughing the
jersey,” said FOX broadcaster Chris
Myers. “Not roughing the quarterback.”
GOLD JACKET STATS
Per ESPNStatsInfo,
the Packers failed to convert a third down for the first time since 1999 vs.
Denver. Aaron Rodgers was 15 years old.
Dallas Cowboys’ coach Mike McCarthy has had only one Top
Five defense in his career. It was 2010 with Green Bay, or the last time the
Packers won a Super Bowl.
Denver hasn’t scored a single point in the last two minutes
or overtime of any game this season.
According to NFL
Research, the Jets are the first team since the 2011 Tim Tebow-led Denver
Broncos to win consecutive games with 105 or fewer net yards passing.
GOLD JACKET QUOTES
“We got to work hard to try to fix it.” – Tampa Bay quarterback Tom Brady.
“You’re G—damn right.” –
Green Bay quarterback Aaron Rodgers when asked if it’s plausible for the Packers
to make a playoff run as in past years.
“It’s about as dark as it can be right now.” – Tampa Bay coach Todd Bowles.
Packers Offense Goes AWOL in Loss to Commanders
By Eric Goska
Green Bay's offense did little in the second and third quarters of a 23-21 loss to the Commanders Sunday. (screen capture from NFL Game Pass) |
Perhaps one day the Packers will click offensively for a full 60 minutes.
But judging by what transpired in the nation’s capital, it
could be a long time coming.
Green Bay took the middle quarters off in its match-up with the
Commanders at FedExField. And while the Pack snoozed, Washington seized
control, turning an 11-point deficit into a six-point lead heading into the final
stanza.
Absent without leave? Playing hooky? The Packers’ offense
has all but checked out for major stretches this season.
Up 14-3 at Tampa, Aaron Rodgers and Co. failed to score in
the second half. Leading the Giants 20-10 in London, Green Bay’s only score
after the break came on a meaningless safety.
Sunday, the Packers took this dereliction of duty to new
heights. For two quarters – the second and the third – Green Bay ran aground
while the Commanders set sail.
During those 30 minutes of play, the Green and Gold ran 15
plays, gained 42 yards and tallied three first downs. They failed to gain more
than a single yard eight times, never reached midfield, and held the ball for
all of six minutes, 42 seconds.
With the Packers missing in action, Washington reeled off 44
plays, gained 252 yards and piled up 16 first downs. They gained more than a
single yard 32 times, ran 26 plays in Green Bay territory, and held the ball
for 23:18.
Talk about losing one’s grip. Up 14-3 in the first 17
minutes of play, the Packers found themselves behind 20-14 heading into the fourth
quarter.
So dominant were the Commanders over this span that they bettered
Green Bay’s mid-game output with a single drive. Taylor Heinicke engineered a
15-play, 72-yard advance in the third quarter that took 8:48 off the clock and
resulted in a 31-yard Joey Slye field goal.
That score finally awakened the Pack. The Green and Gold
came away with 117 yards and a touchdown in the final 15 minutes.
Too little, too late.
Mid-game slumps to the extent of what befell Green Bay have
been rare. With just 15 offensive plays in the second and third quarters
combined, the Packers tied the team low over the last 68 years.
Such was the length and breadth of the drought that Green
Bay totaled a meager 232 yards on 47 plays (4.9 average) for the afternoon. It’s
just the sixth time in the regular season since Matt LaFleur became head coach
in 2019 that the team has been held below 250.
And that’s far too few. The Packers are 1-5 when so limited.
Their only win came in LaFleur’s debut when Green Bay (213 yards) beat the
Bears (254) by a score of 10-3.
Since 1954, the fewest offensive plays run by the Packers in
the second and third quarters combined of a regular-season game.
No. |
Date |
Opponent |
Result |
15 |
Nov. 17, 1957 |
Rams |
GB lost, 27-31 |
15 |
Nov. 23, 1958 |
49ers |
GB lost, 12-33 |
15 |
Dec. 3, 2017 |
Buccaneers |
GB won, 26-20 |
15 |
Oct. 23, 2022 |
Commanders |
GB lost, 21-23 |
16 |
Oct. 23, 1955 |
Browns |
GB lost, 10-41 |
16 |
Oct. 19, 1969 |
Rams |
GB lost, 21-34 |
16 |
Oct. 22, 1972 |
Falcons |
GB lost, 9-10 |
16 |
Oct. 31, 1993 |
Bears |
GB won, 17-3 |
Daniel Jones—100-yards Rushing, A Rarity for a Quarterback
Steve Owen (L) and Harry Newman (R) |
Ed Danowski |