Tuesday, November 11, 2025

Jacobs Lugs the Leather Against the Eagles

 By Eric Goska

(photos by Eric Goska)

What adjective best describes Josh Jacobs?

Productive? Durable? Talented?

As he has done more often than not, Jacobs again led the Packers in yards gained from scrimmage, this time against the Eagles Monday night. He also scored Green Bay’s only touchdown in the team’s 10-7 loss to Philadelphia at Lambeau Field.

Jacobs has been producing yards from scrimmage at a near record pace. He amassed 107 versus the Eagles to push him over 2,500 in his Packers career.

Jacobs became the 49th Packer to surpass that total, doing so in his 26th regular-season game. Only Ahman Green (23 games) got there faster.

Since coming to Green Bay as a free agent ahead of the 2024 season, Jacobs has been a force to be reckoned with. His 2,516 yards from scrimmage lead the team over that span and are more than the total of second-place Tucker Kraft (1,205) and third-place Jayden Reed (1,196) combined.

In addition, Jacobs has a nose for the end zone. No. 8 has pushed across 27 scores while wearing the Green and Gold. Kraft is second with 13 since the start of the 2024 season.


Against the Eagles, Jacobs rushed 21 times for 74 yards. He caught five passes for 33 more.

The busy running back accounted for five of his team’s eight first downs rushing. He also moved the chains with a six-yard reception on the second offensive play of the game.

For Jacobs, this was the 13th time he has surpassed 100 yards from scrimmage as a Packer. Green Bay is 8-4-1 when the 27-year-old hits or surpasses that mark.

Jacobs did more than score on Green Bay’s TD drive. He chipped in 17 yards on the ground and 13 through the air.

Since making his Packers debut against the Eagles in Sept. 2024, Jacobs has been nothing if not durable. He hasn’t missed a start in 26 games and has played more than half the offensive snaps in 24 of those contests.

For all the yards Jacobs stockpiled Monday night, he was not at his best on at least two plays. The back-turned receiver appeared out of position on a failed screen pass in the final two minutes, and he coughed up the football on fourth down three plays later.

The fumble was Jacobs’ sixth as a Packer. Four of those were recovered by the opposition.

Extra Point

Williams Henderson (158 games) and Aaron Rodgers (141) are the Packers who required the most games to attain 2,500 yards from scrimmage.

Racing to 2,500
Packers who amassed 2,500 yards from scrimmage in the fewest number of games.

G         Player                              Total       Rush    Receive        TDs
23       Ahman Green                     2,708         1,856            852           17
26       Josh Jacobs                         2,516         1,937             579           27
27       Eddie Lacy                           2,557         1,948           609           20
29       John Brockington              2,557         2,205            352           15
32       Bill Howton                         2,509                0         2,509          19
33       Ryan Grant                          2,555         2,266            289          15
35       Eddie Lee Ivery                  2,536         1,720            816           18
36       Jim Taylor                           2,645         2,318           327           28
36       Gerry Ellis                           2,541         1,055         1,486           15

TUESDAY TIDBITS: "Driving a Milk Wagon is a Quiet Life Compared to Driving a Football Team to Slaughter"

By TJ Troup 
First, Congratulations to DeMarcus Lawrence for joining three other men by returning two fumbles for touchdowns in the same game! 
DeMarcus Lawrence
From Al Nesser's opening day in 1920 for the Akron Pros to Lawrence this past Sunday, this is an amazing achievement! Few can put it on their NFL resume.
Al Nesser, shown here with the 1925 New York Giants
Matt Stafford has now completed 69 of his last 101 passes for 743 yards with 13 for scores, and nary an interception! Can the future Hall of Famer maintain his accuracy as the Rams take on the Seahawks for first place in the NFC West? Read that Washington has lost four straight games by at least 20 points, tying the mark of the 1954 'Skins. For those of you who have never seen film of that Washington defense in '54, they were --  a.) pathetic, b.) soft & slow, c.) abysmal, d.) all of the above. 

Maybe going to Madrid, Spain, will help coach Quinn and his team? When a team returns an interception for a touchdown, historically, they win 80% of the time. This season, 9 of 11 times an interception has been returned for a touchdown, that team has won; some things just don't change. 

The Cardinals have had many discouraging and losing seasons in their history (this season will probably add to that), yet there have been years where the Cardinals actually did win, and will end today's historical saga by going back in time to the November 16th games of the Cardinals in '47, '75, and '08! 

Slowly, coach Jimmy Conzelman has built his team into contenders entering the '47 season, and the title of today's saga comes from him. Reading Joe Ziemba's superb book ("When Football was Football")will give you plenty of insight into this extraordinary man! 
Jimmy Conzelman
art credit: Gary Thomas
Rookie star Charlie Trippi has been added, and he is the final piece to the Conzelman/Cardinal puzzle, yet they must win at home at Comiskey Park over the Packers to keep pace with their hated crosstown rivals, the Bears! Trippi plays very little in this game, but the Cardinals will find a way to win! 

Chicago's first possession is a 61-yard drive with Paul Christman pitching to Mal Kutner for 20 yards and the first salvo of the game. Green Bay moves 55 yards, and Ted Fritsch kicks a field goal to put the Pack on the scoreboard. Late in the first quarter, Fritsch intercepts Christman and on the first play of the second quarter punches over from the one. Green Bay 10, Chicago 7. 

The teams either punt or give the ball away on turnovers the rest of the quarter, with the exception of Fristsch's 44-yard field goal at 9:08 of the quarter! Twice, Green Bay had a chance to add to their lead but Fritsch missed field goal attempts of 35 & 42 yards! Half-time Green Bay 13 Chicago 7! Linebacker Ken Keuper pilfers an errant throw by Christman on the first drive of the 3rd quarter, and Indian Jack Jacobs delivers a strike to Bob Forte for 22 yards to up the lead to 20-7! 

Can Conzelman rally his boys? Christman struggles finding the mark as he completes 2 of 5 and another interception; and additionally, twice he is taken to the turf by the Packers' pass rush. Red Cochran returns Jacobs' punt 11 yards early in the 4th quarter to his own 43. Chicago drives 57 yards in nine plays to score as Pat Harder pounds into the end zone. 

Green Bay goes three and out, and here come the Cardinals to score and take the lead. Christman finds his favorite receiver, fleet All-League receiver Mal Kutner, for 27 yards and the go-ahead touchdown. Ray Mallouf punts to Canadeo with just 1:30 left with the Packers on their own 27-yard line. Twice, Jacobs delivers strikes to Nolan Luhn to gain 45 yards, and veteran clutch kicker Ward Cuff will attempt from the twenty-three. His kick is wide left! Chicago escapes 21-20 and goes on to win their only Championship. 
Don Coryell
The St. Louis Cardinals, under the guidance of Don Coryell, earned a playoff berth in 1974. Having already lost to the a resurgent Dallas Cowboys team, and the Redskins on the road in '75 to have an even slate at 2-2, the Cardinals win four straight. They must beat Washington at home to stay in the race for the a playoff berth and again possibly win the NFC East. 

Watching the highlights from "This Week in the NFL" and listening to Pat Summerall's narration for the game of November 16th was a joy. Randy Johnson, filling in at quarterback for the 'Skins, has averaged 18 yards a completion as Washington is ahead late in the game. 
Though Jim Hart has been able to get the ball to speedy Mel Gray enough to keep the Cardinals in the game, they trail 17-10 and face 4th down and goal on the Washington seven-yard line with just 25 seconds remaining. Gray darts to the endzone covered by left corner Pat Fischer as Jim Hart fires on target. One official rules incomplete, another completes and the field is a wild melee as players rejoice, despair, until the play is ruled a touchdown. 

Overtime; and here come the Cardinals with Jim Otis pounding away on inside runs (he gains 109 on 23 carries for the game). Veteran Jim Bakken, who has already missed twice today, splits the uprights; thus, St. Louis with the victory, will go on to again win the NFC East. 

The Cardinals have been in Arizona for 21 years, with very little success, but the season of 2008 is "magical" for veteran gunslinger Kurt Warner. 
Kurt Warner
November 16th, the 6-3 Cardinals travel to Seattle as Warner is again decisive & accurate in pitching the pigskin. Outstanding receivers Anquan Boldin & Larry Fitzgerald latch onto 23 passes for 337 yards during the victory! This will be Warner's 4th of five consecutive games gaining over 300 yards passing. He engineers four scoring drives in the first half as Arizona leads 16-7. 

Warner completed 22 of 28 in the first half for 257 yards. The Cardinals add to their lead in the second half to lead 26-7, with the final being 26-20. 

During the season, Warner is quoted "If you're willing to put yourself and your dreams on the line, at the very least you'll discover an inner strength you may not have known existed". Having to win on the last day of the season to earn a wild-card berth, the Cardinals again beat Seattle. 

Arizona scores 95 points in winning all three NFC playoff games (at least 30 in all three)and leads the Steelers late in the Super Bowl before the clock strikes midnight for the "Cinderella Cardinals."

The Cardinals this Sunday play a 49er team that needs to rebound after the loss to the Rams; can the Cardinals add to their success in November 16th games in their history?

Thursday, November 6, 2025

We Got It "Generally Right" but "Precisely Wrong"

 by Nick Webster

A week back we published a piece about Denico Autry blocking his 12th kick in the NFL, and lo and behold, he blocked another one this past weekend.  This caused us to go back and look across Autry's career to see about any interesting streaks.  What we found is that we missed a blocked kick in 2021 - actually on 1/2/2022 - in the 2021 season.

What's our process?  We go in every Sunday night (and Monday night following MNF) and scour the Gamebooks for Sacks, Tackles, PD's, Stuffs, Blocked Kicks, Ejections, all the fun stuff and then update our records weekly.  However, there are occasional adjustments made mid-week, a solo sack becomes shared, a PD is added, etc.  The NFL publishes these post-game changes usually on Wednesday after further film review.  In this circumstance, we missed one.

So, Denico Autry now stands at 14 career blocked kicks - and rather than this last one tying him with the great Julius Peppers it puts him one clear and all alone at 14 blocks in 10th-place all-time.  Nobody currently has 15, so his next block - if he has one - won't move him up the leaderboard, and he sits behind Wahoo McDaniel and Irv Cross who each have 16.  Given the spotty history in the 1960's (particularly in the AFL) it's possible Wahoo has one or two more than have been identified, but as best we know Denico is #10 in NFL history as a kick blocker.

Review—Warfare: Pro Football of the 1990s a book by Tom Danyluk

 By John Turney  
This fall, veteran football scribe Tom Danyluk delivers "Echo Warfare: Pro Football of the 1990s", a sweeping chronicle of the NFL's most chaotic and transformative decade, published a month-and-a-half ago on September 20.

Danyluk, whose prior works like The Super '70s (published in 2016) and 2022's "Majesty and Mayhem" (on the decade of the 1980s) have cemented his reputation for vivid, insider-driven histories, resurrects an era defined by labor battles, rapid expansion, and the rise of gladiatorial stars who redefined the game. So, a book on the 1990s was a must.

From the 1987 players' strike that reshaped free agency and the 1990s to the four-team bloodbath in Super Bowls XXVII–XXX—where the Buffalo Bills suffered their infamous quartet of defeats against the Dallas Cowboys and San Francisco 49ers—Tom captures the decade's raw intensity. He bootstraps readers through the league's growth from 28 to 30 teams, spotlighting the debut of the Carolina Panthers and Jacksonville Jaguars, while chronicling the twilight of legends like John Elway and the dawn of Brett Favre's gunslinging reign.

What sets this apart from rote recaps is Danyluk's signature mosaic of voices: over 40 interviews with coaches, executives, and players, rendered in his Q&A style. These aren't sanitized soundbites; they're gritty confessions, like former commissioner Paul Tagliabue on navigating the TV rights wars that ballooned broadcast deals to $4.4 billion, or ex-Cowboys lineman Erik Williams dissecting the "Triplets" era's locker-room bravado amid off-field scandals. There are overlooked threads, such as the 1993 "Black Monday" firings that toppled coaches like Rich Kotite, and the cultural ripple of Nike's swoosh invasion on uniforms and endorsements.

The narrative pulses with the decade's dualities: the brutal physicality of the pre-concussion-awareness grind—evident in the 1994 NFC Championship's infamous "Body Bag Game"—juxtaposed against the sport's commercialization, from Michael Strahan's gap-toothed charisma to the Fox Network's upstart $1.5 billion grab of NFC rights. Danyluk excels at humanizing the machinery, detailing how Art Modell's Cleveland Browns relocation in 1995 ignited fan fury and league reforms, or how the 1999 merger talks with the XFL foreshadowed today's media behemoth.

Danyluk's archival sleuthing shines through in unearthed box scores from forgotten preseason skirmishes and the Oilers' Houston-to-Tennessee odyssey, culminating in the Titans' near-miss in Super Bowl XXXIV. Post-decade, he traces echoes into the 2000s, like how the 1990s' salary cap innovations stabilized the salary explosion that now pays quarterbacks like Patrick Mahomes nine figures.

At 412 pages, including a robust index and endnotes, the paperback lists for $24.99. Lavishly illustrated with era-specific action shots—from Emmitt Smith's stiff-arms to Steve Young's scrambling scrambles—the volume timelines the NFL's evolution from blue-collar brawl to billion-dollar spectacle.

In an age of highlight-reel posts on X and fantasy leagues, "Echo Warfare" is a trenchant reminder of the 1990s' unfiltered ferocity, where parity was forged in fire and icons were minted in mud. Danyluk's new book isn't just history; it's also for appreciating the warriors who echo through every snap today. Essential reading for any gridiron aficionado hungry for the unvarnished roar of pro football's pivot point.

I loved Danyluk's previous works and this one is on par with those. Cough up the $25, it's worth it.

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Book—Grange & Chicago Bears 1925-1926 Barnstorming Tour: 100th Anniversary Scrapbook

By John Turney

Eternal Flame: Grange's Barnstorming Odyssey Ignites a Century of Gridiron Glory
Historians Chris Willis and Darin L. Hayes—authors of eight and five prior volumes on early pro football, respectively—have crafted a masterful scrapbook that doesn't just tell the tale of the NFL's inaugural superstar, Red Grange, and his legendary barnstorming blitz; it resurrects it back to life.

The work entitled "Red Grange & Chicago Bears: 1925-1926 Barnstorming Tour–100th Anniversary Scrapbook" and it is outstanding, with excellent writing, visuals, and perhaps most importantly: Unwavering accuracy. Willis and Hayes see to that. 

In the pantheon of American sports icons, few burn as brightly or endure as steadfastly as Harold "Red" Grange, the humble halfback from Wheaton, Illinois, whose audacious leap to the pros catapulted the fledgling league from obscurity to national frenzy. Some, including Willis, believe that Grange was the NFL's first superstar and took the professional grid game to a higher level, much like Babe Ruth did for baseball.

This 2025 centennial tribute doesn't merely recount history; it resurrects it with the roar of sold-out stadiums, blending vivid biography, cultural snapshot, and financial forensics into an appreciative letter to the game's scrappy, Roaring '20s dawn, the Wild West days, if you will.

At its heart, the book chronicles Grange's whirlwind odyssey: a 22-year-old phenom, fresh off a Heisman-caliber senior season at the University of Illinois, signs with George Halas's Bears and launches a 19-game, cross-country gauntlet spanning two blistering months. 

From the frozen mud of Cubs Park to the sun-baked expanse of the L.A. Coliseum (drawing a record 75,000), the "Galloping Ghost"—Grantland Rice's poetic coinage after Grange's five-TD evisceration of Michigan in 1924—hauled the nascent NFL into the spotlight. Hayes and Willis frame this not as rote athletics but as the blueprint for modern celebrity: early college exit, agent wrangling, endorsement windfalls, Hollywood flirtations, and a rookie payday eclipsing era norms.

What catapults this scrapbook beyond nostalgia is its archival alchemy. Sourcing from private troves—Sternaman family ledgers, Coolley's contracts, even Pyle's curt telegrams—the authors dismantle myths with surgical precision. 

The book explains how Grange wasn't a solo act; he boasted three managers (the flamboyant promoter C.C. "Cash and Carry" Pyle; "Doc" Coolley, his college confidant; and theater maven Byron Moore), a bombshell substantiated by a full facsimile of their six-page 1925 "power of attorney" pact. The initial cut: Grange at 40%, Pyle 25%, Coolley and Moore 17.5% each—until post-tour haggling shrank the latter pair's share, ending in a "divorce" where Pyle shelled out $25,000 to buy them out. 

Gate stubs (e.g., $49,669 from Grange's Thanksgiving pro debut) and expense tallies morph the narrative into a ledger of greed, exposing how Pyle's avarice (eight games in ten days) nearly felled his golden goose with the breakneck speed tour, one in which Grange did get injured.

The chronicle races through the tour's triptych—frenetic East (injury-riddled), sunny South (sparsely attended), triumphant West—with per-game vignettes fusing play-by-plays, crowd fervor, and epochal vignettes. 

Rain-lashed Shibe Park swells to 35,000 in Philadelphia; Miami's half-built Coral Gables draws a mere 8,000 sweat-soaked souls. Yet Hayes and Willis infuse humanity amid the havoc: Grange's boyish blush at the White House with Calvin Coolidge, his raccoon-coat bravado, or the Bears' equine escapades in California. (Read the book for details)

Celebrities abound—Babe Ruth dispensing fame's hard truths; Douglas Fairbanks mid-huddle—evoking an era when Grange eclipsed Dempsey and Ruth as a media leviathan. Yes, he was that popular.

The authors' prose crackles with wry understatement—"Pyle's motto: 'Let's get the money, boys'"—debunking some exaggerations, such as: the tour didn't "save" the NFL (post-Grange dips proved that), but it validated pro football's star-powered viability, luring All-Americans like Ernie Nevers into the fray.

Visually, this volume treasure trove, full of things I love: Facsimile tickets, reproductions of game program covers, yellowed clippings (e.g., Rice's "Galloping Ghost" poem), team photos, and even a 1926 "divorce" contract adds tactile heft. One standout: a telegram from Pyle to Coolley, curtly settling scores. It's a hoarder's delight, being one myself, I'd know.

More than a biography, the book doubles as a legacy and review of Grange's accomplishments later in life—as coach, broadcaster, charter Hall of Famer, and pension crusader—prefigures today's polymaths. 

The emotional apex: a 1985 missive from Halas anointing him the "Eternal Flame of Professional Football," a sobriquet that underscores the thesis: enduring greatness lies not in stats but in unassuming grace. 

Willis and Hayes don't merely commemorate; they rekindle the pulse—the Polo Grounds' 70,000-strong thunder, press-box clatter, a Wheaton iceman forging football's inaugural icon. Grange feared oblivion, but this luminous scrapbook will ensure the Ghost gallops into the consciences of younger NFL fans. 

As far as structure, it's basically logical and chronological, with each chapter covering one of the 19 games of the tour, going from Chicago to St. Louis, then the northeast -- Philly, the Big Apple, D.C., etc. Then the what is now called "Rust Belt" cities, followed by dates in Florida and the Big Easy. And finally, the major West Coast cities from San Diego north to Seattle. For me, that makes it particularly enjoyable. 

At under 200 brisk pages, including an exhaustive bibliography, it is a page-turner for NFL diehards, Illinois faithful, Bears fans, or Roaring '20s romantics, all for about $20.

I give it 5/5 stars: A gridiron gospel of grit, gall, and grandeur—fire up the grill, pop a cold one, and hear the roar of fedora-clad gents and Panama-hatted swells, flappers draped on their arms, cheering the Ghost's eternal gallop.


Tuesday, November 4, 2025

TUESDAY TIDBITS: "No Matter What You Do, It's Gonna Grab Ahold On You"

By TJ Troup 
John Brodie
There are weeks when writing this column feels more inspired than others, and this is one of those weeks. When you get to write about your favorite rivalry in all of sports, in this case the Rams vs. 49ers, Yippee! Gonna start with the passing of Bob Trumpy. Purchased his book at a flea market for a dollar, and found his insightful and at times comedic book a joy to read. 
His formative years in high school in both track & field and basketball to being teammates with Butkus at Illinois, to being drafted by the expansion Bengals in '68 and the success he had with different quarterbacks under the guidance of Bill Walsh. Enjoyed him as an analyst on broadcasts since he really understood the game and would not shy away with his cryptic comments. RIP Bob! 

Since the Bengals were mentioned, for a moment lets take a look at the 2025 Cincinnati Bengals and more specifically the direction they are headed? I would relish it if any of you could share your thoughts on whether you believe this porous defense will allow more than 500 points this year. 

Watching the Bears rally? Well that's the word I'll use, and win in the Queen City on Sunday was amazing. How so, you ask? Everyone who has ever played defensive back can share stories about pursuit and tackling in a game; and most importantly, tackles made and tackles missed. 

Stone & Battle complete abject failure on the winning touchdown pass to Loveland will be replayed many times. Out of position? Poor tackling? Wrong pursuit angle? or d) all of the above. Which takes me back to Mike Brown and Bengal management, as Mike Brown was 15 years old when the Browns won the title in 1950, and 40 when the Bengals with Trumpy earned a playoff berth in 1975. Will Joe Burrow seek a trade? 
Dick Nolan, 49ers' coach
The San Francisco 49ers, under the direction of Dick Nolan, made progress in 1968 in the Coastal Division, and after seven games in 1969, have won only one game. Kermit Alexander earned a Pro Bowl berth in 1968 and paired with Jimmy Johnson at left corner the Niners should be able to play rock-solid pass defense, but with Alexander injured, second-year man Johnny Woitt starts the November 9th game in the Coliseum against the undefeated Rams. Since Randolph & Phillips, the two starting safeties lack speed, the Niners trade excellent guard Howard Mudd to the Bears for Roosevelt Taylor (another George Allen favorite who was in "Dooley's Dog House". 
Taylor will start late in the season and earn the Len Eshmont award in 1970, but that is a story for another time. Back to November 9th. First offensive play for the Rams, Wendell Tucker is wide open, and I mean wide damn open and scores on a 93-yard play from Roman Gabriel. San Francisco, led by veteran "gun slinger" John Brodie, takes the Niners on a nine-play 79-yard drive to score as Brodie reads right linebacker Jim Purnell's blitz and delivers a pass to a wide-open Ken Willard. Merlin Olsen blocks the extra point attempt. 

The Rams advance 89 yards in just six plays to score on a 35-yard pass from Gabriel to Les Josephson on a circle route and increase the lead to 14-6 (key play was Gabriel to Snow for 57 yards). Niners can't move and punt, and here come the white & blue clad Rams down the field with the Los Angeles running game pounding away for 42 yards, and on 4th and five from the San Francisco seven, Gossett kicks a 15-yard field goal. Second and seven at his own twenty-seven and Brodie finds rookie Gene Washington open and rifles a pass to him, which gains 52 yards. 
Gene Washington
When the drive stalls, Gavric splits the uprights from 32 yards. Rams 17--49ers 9. Gabriel again moves the Rams on a sustained march to Niner twenty-three and on 4th and sixteen, Gossett drills home a 39-yard field goal. Brodie will not be deterred today, even against a defense as strong as the Rams. San Francisco is finally stopped at the Los Angeles seventeen-yard line when David "Deacon" Jones deflects Brodie's pass and veteran strong safety Richie Petitbon intercepts. 
Richie Petitbon
There is no further scoring in the first half, and as the teams head to their respective locker rooms in the Coliseum, the Rams lead 20 to 9. San Francisco has gained just 27 yard rushing in the first half (Rams gained 55), but the key to this game is going to be which quarterback can be the best "gunslinger" as Gabriel gained 209 passing, and Brodie 190 with the strong offensive line of the Niners protecting the veteran passer so well, nary a sack by the Ram pass rush. 

San Francisco goes three and out first possession of the 3rd quarter, but so do the Rams. Second down and three to go when Brodie's errant pass is pilfered by Eddie Meador, and the veteran All-Pro safety weaves, twists and fights his way into the end zone to up the ante to 27-9. No doubt the Niners are finished. No team can come back against a George Allen defense down by 18, right? Oh, John Brodie can? 

Here come the Niners advancing 80 yards in eight plays. Tight end Bob Windsor gains 30 before Petitbon can knock him out of bounds. Willard scores from the three going off right tackle. Rams 27-- 49ers 16. Late in the quarter, Los Angeles begins another touchdown march which culminates on an 8 yard strike to Snow who easily beat Johnny Woitt's coverage on a square-in. Rams 34-49ers 16. 

Brodie has the hot hand today and twice in the 4th quarter led the Niners into the end zone with short touchdown tosses to Windsor & running back Bill Tucker. Los Angeles 34 San Francisco 30. Can the Niners get the ball back for Brodies one more time, and pull off the road upset at the hands of the undefeated Rams? 

The league MVP in 1969 will be Roman Gabriel, and offensive coordinator Ted Marchibroda has schooled Gabe into using his backs as receivers and on 1st and ten from his own seventeen, he flips to Tommy Mason in the right flat (on the NFL Films weekly highlight show, the "old pro), and he dashes and weaves 55 yards to the 49er twenty-eight-yard line before a hustling Dave Wilcox hauls him down. Gabriel on a rollout right (one of his most productive plays), runs 9 yards for the final touchdown of the game. Brodie's final drive ends with him being sacked by Olsen & Brown on 4th down at his own twenty-seven. 

Three times at this point in the rivalry, the Rams scored at least 41 points against the 49ers and in all three games, a Ram had returned at least one interception for a touchdown. The compelling drama between these two teams, no matter the record, is spelled out in that going into this game, the Rams had won 12, the Niners had 11 with one tie, the last 24 times they had played. To this day, when these two teams lock horns, there is an impact on the standings. Hopefully, this will happen this Sunday the 9th of November, 2025!

Bet you can guess who will be watching the game.

Sunday, November 2, 2025

Packers Come Up Short in Low-Possession Game

 By Eric Goska

Even St. Vince couldn't help the Packers against the Panthers.
(photos by Eric Goska)

Possessions were at a premium Sunday at Lambeau Field.

In a game that boasted fewer drives than any other in the stadium’s history, Carolina outlasted Green Bay 16-13. Ryan Fitzgerald’s 49-yard field goal as time expired proved the difference.

A 13.5 point favorite, the Packers were expected to make quick work of the Panthers. Instead, they seized up in the red zone, settling for field goals or worse when more was needed.

Green Bay registered only one touchdown in its five trips beyond Carolina’s 20-yard line. That success came late as Josh Jacobs crashed into the end zone from a yard out to knot the score at 13-13 with two minutes, 32 seconds remaining.

The Panthers countered by using eight plays and the remaining clock to set up Fitzgerald’s game-winning field goal.

Early in the game, Fox color analyst Greg Olsen offered his take on what Carolina needed to do to win.

“I think the best way to stop this Green Bay offense right now with the way they’re humming is just let Jordan Love and company stand on the sidelines.”

Though Love and the Packers won the time of possession battle by 20 seconds, they, like the Panthers, only mounted seven drives. Each was of utmost importance.

Twice, Green Bay squandered possessions with turnovers. Savion Williams lost a fumble at the Carolina 16 midway through the first quarter and Love threw an interception into traffic midway through the third.

Twice, the Packers came up empty on fourth down. Brandon McManus missed a 43-yard field goal attempt in the third quarter and Love failed to connect with Romeo Doubs from the Panthers 13 early in the fourth quarter.

Carolina also failed to come away with points on four of its advances. But the Panthers fared better in the red zone with Rico Dowdle registering rushing touchdowns on two of its three trips there.

Coming out of halftime, Olsen said this of Carolina.

“The Panthers did exactly what we said they should do, right? They want to make this a low-possession game, kind of muddy it up, make it ugly, because it’s probably your best chance of hanging in there and being competitive down the stretch.”

Low-possession game indeed. The 14 combined drives by Green Bay and Carolina set the record for the fewest in any regular-season game at Lambeau Field.

This type of game is becoming more common. Fewer turnovers, better field position following kickoffs, high-percentage passing attacks, and more fourth-down conversions have paved the way for longer, more time-consuming drives.

The number of games in which the Packers have had fewer than 10 possessions has gone up from 38 between 1975 and 2010 to 43 in the last 15 years. Green Bay is 25-18 in such games since 2011.

The Packers’ next opponent, Philadelphia, knows how to limit the competition. It has held four opponents to fewer than 10 possessions this season while notching victories over the Cowboys, Chiefs, Vikings and Giants.

Dispossessed
Fewest offensive possessions by Green Bay and its opponent in a regular-season game at Lambeau Field.
No.        Date (possessions by team)              Result
14           Nov. 2, 2025 (GB 7, Panthers 7)               GB lost, 13-16
15           Nov. 1, 2020 (GB 8, Vikings 7)                  GB lost, 22-28
15           Dec. 3, 2023 (GB 7, Chiefs 8)                    GB won, 27-19
16           Sept. 10, 1989 (GB 8, Buccaneers 8)       GB lost, 21-23
16           Oct. 5, 2003 (GB 8, Seahawks 8)             GB won, 35-13