An Ugly Loss…Have We Hit the Quota?

Now that the dust has settled a bit, the anger from Packer Nation hasn’t. Many are calling this the worst loss since the NFL merger (1970). This isn’t even the worst loss in the Matt LaFleur era…it’s not even the worst loss this season! If you’ve been following the Packers for some time (or the NFL for that matter), you should’ve noticed that Green Bay loses 2 games every single season that they have no business losing. Now, the Packers have 2 losses this season and both fit that category. Does that mean they won’t lose another game the rest of the season? No. It means they likely will beat the teams they should beat the rest of the year…or if they do lose to Chicago, maybe they’re not as good as we all think. The Packers losing to Cleveland is far worse than a loss to the, now, 5-3 Carolina Panthers. I’m not making excuses – should they have lost? Yes, based on their red zone offense and the play of the offensive line (more on that later). However, coming into the game, Green Bay should’ve won the game comfortably. The stats bear that out.

When you’re the underdog, much like Carolina, you want to shorten the game. This gives the better team less opportunities/time to prove they’re the better team. The Panthers did that, and just like all upsets the favorite must be compliant. Looking at just the stats, Green Bay outgained Carolina 369 to 265, averaging a full yard more per play (5.9 to 4.9). The Packers were even good on 3rd down efficiency (7/13) while the Panthers were 4/10. The main culprit of this game was LaFleur’s decision to go for it on 4th & 8 from the Panthers’ 13-yard line with 11:00 left in the game, down 7. In any scenario, that’s a must-kick the Field Goal situation. Regardless of the outcome, even had Green Bay scored a touchdown, they’d still need to hold Carolina to 3 or less on their next drive. The turnovers played a part, but that decision essentially cost the Packers the game – well that, and the awful OL play, which has turned into an epidemic this season.

Josh Jacobs is averaging 0.7 yards before contact and is getting hit behind the line of scrimmage on 45% of his carries. That’s not sustainable for a team with Super Bowl victory aspirations. Other than the OL “figuring it out,” the play-caller/designer must incorporate more quick throws and play action to help the OL create space for Jacobs and the ground game. The side effect to this would be giving Jordan Love more time to throw on passing plays and likely more room for Jacobs to do damage…sign me up!

In the grand scheme of things, it was an ugly loss, at home, to a team in your conference, but again with the tie to Dallas, won’t have any impact on tiebreaking scenarios (unless a team you’re tied with in the standings also has a tie down the road) – this fan base is calling for the firing of Matt LaFleur and believes the Packers won’t make the playoffs and they’re sitting at 5-2-1 and in 1st place of the (arguably) best division in football. This is not to say that LaFleur is innocent or shouldn’t be on the hot seat, but he’d be hired in a heartbeat should he lose his job, regardless of when/how. My personal idea would be for him to take a page out of McCarthy’s playbook and give up play-calling (not because he’s bad) because that’s 2 full time jobs he’s conducting and Head Coach is the priority. Allow your Offensive Coordinator to takeover playcalling so you can get a better handle on gameday scenarios and situations rather than concerned with specific play calls/designs that’ll work in those specific situations.

Possible Trap Game?

Carolina (4-4) heads to Lambeau in Week 9 to face Green Bay (5-1-1).

The Packers Were Able to Finish

After garnering just 7 points in the 1st half, Green Bay exploded for 28 following half time. Green Bay’s first half drives left a lot to be desired:

  1. 3 & out – PUNT
  2. TOUCHDOWN
  3. Missed FG
  4. 3 & out – PUNT
  5. 3 & out – PUNT
  6. Missed FG

Coming out of half time, Pittsburgh started with the ball and the Packers’ D held them to a 3 & out…enter Tucker Kraft. The Packers put together their best half of football since the Thanksgiving game last year.

2nd Half Drives:

  1. TOUCHDOWN: 9 plays; 90 yards; 5:13
  2. TOUCHDOWN: 10 plays; 78 yards; 5:39
  3. TOUCHDOWN: 4 plays; 45 yards; 2:01
  4. FIELD GOAL: 8 plays; 47 yards; 3:28
  5. FIELD GOAL: 5 plays; 19 yards; 1:08
  6. END OF GAME: 4 plays; 10 yards; 2:07

Totaling: 40 plays; 289 yards; 19:36 and scoring 28 points. That comes to 4.67 points/drive, or 5.6 points/drive on drives they were attempting to score considering the last drive’s goal was to get a 1st down to ice the game.

It was Green Bay’s most complete game – and they still screwed around in the 1st half aside from 1 drive. The game would’ve felt much different heading into half had they made their 2 field goal attempts, as it would’ve been a 16-13 deficit, but it was moot in the end.

Now Enter Carolina

The Panthers enter Week 9 having won 3 of their last 4, however, they are coming off a crushing defeat at the hands of the Buffalo Bills – another Super Bowl contender. It’s easy to think the Packers could/should do the same, but we’ve seen this team and followed them for too long to know they don’t win the game from the start-to-finish. They doesn’t mean Green Bay can’t put this game away and get backup QB Malik Willis some snaps in the 4th quarter.

Matchup Matrix

The major matchup to watch – or at least what one would think be the key to the game – is Carolina’s 5th-ranked rushing attack vs. Green Bay’s 3rd-ranked rush defense. Carolina had a stretch where they ran rampant over their opponents and it was the catalyst for their 3-game win streak. The Packers have been able to hold their opponents under 100 yards rushing in each game outside of their Week 4 tie in Dallas. The Panthers are averaging close to 140 rush yards and is their primary avenue to victory. If the Packers are able to stifle Carolina’s rush attack, it sets up a scenario where Green Bay could completely dominate this game, much like the Bills did last week.

The Panthers are a middle-of-the-road defense, as you can see ranking between 10th and 20th in each category. We know that LaFleur wants to get the Packers’ ground game going and that’s been improving (slowly) since the consistency of the offensive line has improved. This would be a great game to get an early lead and have Josh Jacobs and the ground attack rack up 150+ rush yards, chewing up the clock and icing this game early in the 2nd half. It’s doable, but should Green Bay hold on to the football and not give away possessions, it’s tough to see how Carolina stays in this game.

That being said, special teams reared their ugly head last week, again (at least 1 holding penalty and 2 missed field goals). Special teams were the primary reason for both of the Packers’ non-wins this season (blocked field goal in Cleveland and a blocked extra point in Dallas).

Other than getting the ground game going, the Packers haven’t created turnovers this season, only generating 4 (ranking in a tie for 30th)…much of the reason is to the opposing offense not throwing into danger because they’re under duress, quickly, from the pass rush and rather taking sacks or throwing the ball away instead of into danger. Carolina’s QB, Bryce Young, could give Green Bay some opportunities to intercept some passes and improve that statistic as well.

This is a game where one team is far superior than the other, however, if we have learned anything by watching the NFL – never take winning for granted is it’s never guaranteed.

Prediction Time

On the season, I’m 4-2-1 and guessing wins and losses, and 111-71-1 since I began this blog…I’m fairly confident in this game…we shall see if LaFleur can get these guys to play a complete game and improve the running game while generating turnovers.

Old Friend, New Foe

We all know the BIG story going into tonight’s matchup between the Packers and Steelers on Sunday Night Football. Aaron Rodgers has the chance to join Brett Favre, Peyton Manning, Drew Brees, and Tom Brady as the only starting quarterbacks to defeat all 32 NFL franchises. Facing his old team for the first time could only be outdone by having this game take place in Lambeau Field…or if it were the Super Bowl.

The Game…

Each of these teams enter Sunday in 1st place in their respective divisions. Pittsburgh has a decent lead in their division while Green Bay sits atop the best division in football, the NFC North. A loss for either team isn’t brutal as it’s an interconference affair and has almost zero tiebreaking factors for each team. However, keeping the momentum is key and stacking wins is always tough to do in this league – it will be a big/important game for both from that aspect as well as a measuring stick for each team to see where they stand in this extremely competitive league.

While it seems that savvy veteran QBs have wreaked havoc vs. Jeff Hafley and the Packers’ Defense, it’s only situationally. While digging into it deeper, there’s plenty of room for improvement, but the Packers have been able to hold them enough to win 4 of their first 6 games this season, and credit to Love and the offense for forcing a tie when the D got shredded by Dallas giving up 40 points (37 in regulation). Entering this game, Green Bay will see the most-veteran, savviest QB in the NFL; Aaron Rodgers.

Last week the Hafley (and Nate Hobbs) were bailed out by Micah Parsons, who has been nothing short of incredible since his arrival in Green Bay. Parsons had an amazing game (covered in the recap) and will be a focal point of every opposing offense for the remainder of the season. If the Packers can adjust their coverage and play more man vs. zone, the stats say that’ll help the defense as the opposing QB rating when facing man is significantly less than when facing zone, however that could lead to more splash plays which can turn a game upside down. So far, the Packers have shown ways to win close games and be an extremely tough out.

Matchup Matrix

While Pittsburgh is 4-2, their statistical rankings leave quite a bit to be desired…they’re 19th in total offense and 28th in total defense. What’s keeping them in games and allowing them to win is the turnover differential, they’ve been able to take the ball away 10 times so far this season (tied for 5th) and have tossed 5 interceptions, which is uncharacteristic of Rodgers. This doesn’t bode well for Green Bay as they haven’t shown the ability to take the ball away this season (3 total, ranking tied for 29th).

Should the Packers want to win and control this game, they should be able to move the ball up and down the field and if Love and the rest of the offense can keep the ball from the Pittsburgh D, they should be able to put up some serious points. This looks again like 27 points might be the trick to come out of Acrisure Stadium with a victory.

To assist with the offense, WR Christian Watson has been activated off the PUP list (physically unable to perform) and might make his season debut against the Steelers. Just the threat of Watson’s speed of being on the field will help stretch the defense out, vertically, thus creating more rush lanes for Jacobs and plenty of underneath soft coverage for slant routes and Tucker Kraft, whom needs to see plenty of more targets…he can’t get the ball in his hands enough.

Prediction Time

This has the making of being a close game, and Green Bay just won an uber-close game on the road against a pesky opponent. If Pittsburgh doesn’t get any turnovers (Green Bay is tied for 2nd in the NFL with only 3 giveaways) I don’t see how the Steelers come away with a victory.

Season: 3-2-1
Overall: 110-71-1

It Wasn’t Pretty

Micah Parson (#1) celebrates one of his 3 sacks vs. the Cardinals

Statistically, Arizona was the better team…all game. In essentially every category the Cardinals beat the Packers:

  • 1st Downs
  • 3rd Downs & Efficiency
  • Total Yards
  • Penalties
  • Time of Possession

The major difference? The field goal drive before half that the offense was able to get into field goal range with only 7 seconds left on the clock. That was a huge momentum stabilizer and put the Packers within a touchdown getting the ball coming out of the half. The 2nd was the lone turnover in the game. Rashan Gary’s strip sack led to a touchdown and tying the game. This is the prime example of how turnovers can flip a game – putting the lesser-playing team on top. The phrase “the better team lost” applies here as Arizona was the better team on Sunday, but the phrase “(they) didn’t deserve to win” almost never applies as the winning team found a way to score more points, which is the point.

That, and Micah Parsons. The man had 10 QB pressures, 4 tackles for loss, and obviously the 3 sacks. Each sack occurred in a huge situation. The first came on 3rd & Goal from the Packers’ 8-yard line, holding Arizona to an opening drive Field Goal instead of a Touchdown. The Cardinals opened the game with a 15-play, 59-yard drive that took 7:26 off the clock and set the tone for how they were going to play.

Parsons’ 2nd sack came with 9:50 left in the 4th quarter on 3rd & Goal, again. It kept Arizona out of the end zone once again and they settled for a Field Goal. Giving Arizona a 23-20 lead.

His last sack came on the last drive of the game, on 1st & 10 from Green Bay’s 26-yard line. It forced Arizona to use a timeout and put them way behind the sticks (making the 1st down line further than expected to gain with the remaining downs).

Stats Can Lie

While Jacoby Brissett put up a “monster” game, I can make the case that Jordan Love played better. Brissett’s stat line of 25/36 (69.4%), 279 yards, 2 TD, 0 INT, 110.8 rating. However, he failed to get rid of the ball and took 6 sacks, one led to a game-changing fumble (referenced earlier) while Love was 19/29 (65.5%), 179 yards, 1 TD, 0 INT, and a 93.9 rating. Love took 1 sack, missed 2 throws, but when it mattered, he came through. On the final drive Jordan was 2/3 for 22 yards with the 15-yarder coming on 4th & 2 from Arizona’s 29-yard line. The Packers were well within Field Goal range (having Havrisik nailing a franchise-record 61-yarder right before half). Clutch matters, and Love proved it once again.

Packers Quest to the Cardinals’ Nest

Signs of a Good Team?

Green Bay had the yardage advantage of 200 : 23 in the 1st half only to lead 10-0 at halftime. However, I believe, the Packers are the only team to hold a double-digit lead in every game they’ve played. Aside from special teams disasters and reluctant 2nd half defense, the Packers could (should) be 5-0.

Speaking of that 2nd half defense, Green Bay relinquished 18 second half points against Joe Flacco and the Bengals. That doesn’t seem so bad now considering Flacco beat the 4-1 Steelers on Thursday night, and their OL held up against a solid pass rush.

2nd Half Defense MUST Improve

Green Bay has pitched a shutout in the 1st quarter in all 5 games, and they’ve been the worst defense in the league in the 4th quarter.

  • v Cin – 11 points
  • @ Dal – 17 points (incl. OT)
  • @ Cle – 13 points
  • v Was – 15 points
  • v Det – 7 points

That’s 63 points, averaging 12.6 points per 4th quarter, that’s unsustainable for a team that aspires to win the Super Bowl. Defensive Coordinator, Jeff Hafley, must combat the quick-throw game since opposing offenses realize they can’t sit back and let Green Bay’s pass rush get home. In theory, zone coverage means guys aren’t open quick, but clearly that’s not working in the 2nd halves of these games.

Offense Seems to be Rolling

Green Bay scored 27 points in each of their 3 home games – that “should” be enough. Jordan Morgan needs to play RG from hereon out, and he’s vastly improved since he’s been playing there consistently. Getting the OL figured out is paramount for the run game, which will help this team in every facet, defense included, by keeping them off the field.

Who Are the Cardinals?

The Cardinals started hot, 2-0, then took the 49ers to the edge losing at Levi’s Stadium 16-15. After Week 3, they had a close battle with (now) 4-2 Seattle and snatched defeat from the hands of victory by dropping the ball prior to crossing the end zone line vs. Tennessee.

As you can see, Arizona is a middle of the road team in almost every statistical ranking, and Green Bay has the opportunity to keep their offense rolling in a dome environment, much like in Dallas. The Cardinals are also terrible at holding onto the football and the Packers need to get on the takeaway train, much like last year. Their offense is too good not to give additional possessions, and this would be a great game for the Packers to increase their takeaways and get some serious momentum rolling.

How Will This Play Out?

The Packers have the advantage in each category, as well as the better QB and Head Coach. If the 2025 NFL season has proven anything, it’s that any team can beat another on any given Sunday. While that’s always been the mantra, it rarely happens. However, the Packers have succumbed to this as they dropped a game against the Browns, inexplicably. Hopefully that along with the tie in Dallas was a wake-up call and motivates this team to finish games. It would be great to see the defense dominate all 4 quarters and restore confidence to the point where us fans were after Week 2. If Love & Co. can establish the ground game early, this would pave a path for the Packers to hang 30+ points again and ideally, cruise to victory.

Prediction Time

Season: 2-2-1
Overall: 109-71-1

(Should Be A) Bengal Beatdown?

Cincinnati Is Terrible

Since Joe Burrow went down with turf toe, the Bengals have become the worst team in the entire NFL. They’re 0-3 with a point differential of -76, scoring 37 points and giving up 113 in that time. If Green Bay is a great team – coming off a bye, at home…should be “easy.”

Cincinnati also has 11 turnovers, and just this last week vs. Detroit (another great team), Jake Browning tossed 3 interceptions, each worse than the last. The Packers must take advantage.

Get Right Game

This is the best opportunity for the Packers to correct all (or most) of their issues that have plagued them so far this season. Coming off a bye after 2 poor team performances, at home, with an chance to implement and gain momentum – against the worst team in the NFL – this is the time!

Joe Flacco was just traded to the Bengals from the Browns earlier this week is slated to start for the 2nd time against Green Bay in a month.

Cincinnati must be hopeful for Burrow’s return this season as they traded for Joe Flacco this week to buoy the Bengals’ season. Green Bay is all too familiar with Flacco already this season. Although he wasn’t great, he did lead Cleveland to their only victory of the 2025 campaign, and as we all remember, coming at the expense of the Packers.

Matchup Matrix

While Green Bay’s defense after the Dallas game took a hit in the rankings, they should feast on this Cincinnati offense. The Bengals’ offense ranks either at or near the bottom of the NFL in every category, and while Burrow hid a ton of issues, he’s not there any more and Flacco used to be capable, but he still puts the ball in danger enough to not threaten a good defense – just as he did against Green Bay in week 3.

Speaking of their atrocious offense, they rank last in the NFL in rushing and total offense. Green Bay ranks 2nd in the NFL, still, in rush defense. The Packers should completely control this game from start to finish – especially if the Packers are the team we all want (and think) they are.

Cincinnati can’t move the ball, or score – couple that with their defense being awful, that’s the perfect recipe for domination. Cincinnati’s defense ranks in the bottom third of every major category – Jordan Love should feast in every facet and put up either gaudy numbers or blow this team out, likely both.

Every team has their challenges – the Packers have theirs, obviously – but Green Bay is in good position all things considered to correct the issues.

Correctable Issues?

Penalties are the main contributor to stalling the offense’s momentum. Almost all of this can be attributed to the offensive line and the lack of consistency they’ve had in their starting lineup. Should RT Zach Tom return, that should solidify the unit and get rookie Anthony Belton off the field – although Belton being injured might do that on its own. With OL uniformity, the ground game and Josh Jacobs should improve to the levels they experienced last season and by doing that the entire offensive unit will be back near the top in efficiency in the league.

The issues on the defense??? Well we covered the egregious holding Dallas committed, or allegedly committed that went uncalled – Micah Parsons is still generating as quick a pressure as anyone in the NFL and we’ve seen Lukas Van Ness take a huge step in progression this season. Should this continue and they stay healthy, this defense is one of the top units in the NFL, if not THE top unit. The injury to Devonte Wyatt can’t go unnoticed and the younger players (Brooks, Stackhouse, etc.) need to step up just from a depth perspective. When Wyatt is on the field, he’s the lynch pin for the defense’s run stuffing. Even when healthy, the Packers will need those rotational players to step up and help out much like TJ Slaton did last season – who ironically is now on Cincinnati.

Prediction Time

Season: 1-2-1
Overall: 108-71-1

Disaster in Dallas

What “Should’ve” Been a Blowout

The special teams struck again, up 13-0 and a blocked extra point flipped the game on its head. The momentum – along with DT Devonte Wyatt going out – spun to Dallas’ sideline. Give credit to the offense for weathering the storm and continuing the scoring, especially in the 4th quarter. Dallas was shut out for a majority of the 1st half, then scored 35 points in the final 32 minutes…unacceptable.

Love Was Great Outside of 2 Plays

While the strip-sack was obviously not on Love, it still can’t happen. Love wasn’t at fault (Rasheed Walker getting beat in < 2 seconds), he’s got to find a way to feel the pressure and keep the ball. The other play was a missed open receiver (Tucker Kraft, I believe), but the overall stat line was extremely efficient, especially once the OL improved the pass protection. Love’s stat line: 31/41; 337 yards; 3 TD; 0 INT; 118.1 RAT. Had Green Bay pushed it, not necessarily the play-calling, but more the urgency (or lack thereof) at the end of OT, Love might’ve finished with 4 TDs and 350 yards…

Also, while complaining about officiating is a losing take, it was egregiously bad. There were countless holds committed by Dallas that went “unseen” and directly led to 21 Cowboys points. Had just 3 of the egregious holds been called (there were at least 4 against Parsons alone), Green Bay wins 37-16, which is about the expected score, but alas, they weren’t and the Packers still should’ve come out victorious.

Outside of Wyatt

Edgerrin Cooper has his worst game a pro. He over-committed on rush lanes, missed plenty of tackles, and seemed a step slow. I don’t think it was due to injury, but chalking it up (for now) as a bad game. There will be concern if this happens again against an awful Cincinnati Bengals team.

Quay Walker – the other Inside Linebacker – had a solid game, again. He was firing rush gaps and playing very aggressively, making tackles in the open field and seemed to be in the right position at the right time, often.

Where Does Green Bay Stack Up?

The rush defense has stayed steady, which is a great sign, but with Wyatt exiting, the pass defense reverted to the Joe Barry-led defense…not a good sign that 1 player seems to have that large of an impact on an entire unit – the same can be said with Right Tackle Zach Tom on the offense.

We’d like to see this defense get back on track, and likely will against lesser offenses coming up. The main concern is to see if this team can string wins together away from Lambeau Field. Currently the Packers are 2-0 at Lambeau and 0-1-1 on the road. If not for the special teams, the Packers would be 4-0 without having put together a complete game. The tie sure felt like a loss, and it should’ve, but in the grand scheme of things, the Packers are in great shape to accomplish everything they’ve set their eyes on at the onset of the season. Just keep winning and things will sort themselves out.

Directional Game in Big D

Micah Returns

This is the major national story, and especially in Dallas – Micah Parsons returns to AT&T Stadium. However, in Green Bay, this is another game, and hopefully a get-right game for the Pack. After what could’ve been in Cleveland, and seeing the rest of the division take care of business, Green Bay needs to prove once again they’re one of the top teams in the NFL, and this is the defense to prove it against.

In the last 2 games, Dallas has allowed 37 points to a Russell Wilson-led Giants team and 31 points to a Caleb Williams-led Bears team – making each of those quarterbacks look amazing in doing so; impressive.

Love and the offense must dominate from the start, much like they did in their 2023 Wild Card Playoff game where they jumped to a 48-16 lead in the 4th quarter.

Can The Offense Get Back On Track?

Right Tackle Zach Tom sure seems to be the lynch pin of the entire offense. It was clear in Cleveland, once Tom went out nothing worked properly…Myles Garrett wreaked havoc and nothing worked. Green Bay couldn’t run the ball (Green Bay ranks 27th in the NFL in yards per rush at 3.4), Love didn’t have time to pass, it was a mess. This is odd considering Green Bay over the last 30 years has been one of the most consistent in O-line play regardless of injury. This needs to be corrected and it falls squarely on the shoulders of last year’s 1st round pick, Jordan Morgan. He was drafted for depth and to be the eventual Left Tackle of the future, he must play like it.

Bigger Picture

While losing to Cleveland can be considered as a “Bad Loss,” there have been “Bad Losses” by the last 10 Super Bowl winners.

  • 2024 Eagles lost to 8-9 Atlanta
  • 2023 Chiefs lost to 8-9 Las Vegas
  • 2022 Chiefs lost to 4-12-1 Indianapolis
  • 2021 Rams lost to San Francisco, twice – however SF reached the NFC title game where the Rams beat them
  • 2020 Buccaneers lost to 8-8 Chicago
  • 2019 Chiefs lost to 7-9 Indianapolis
  • 2018 Patriots lost to 6-10 Detroit and 7-9 Miami
  • 2017 Eagles lost to 9-7 Seattle
  • 2016 Patriots lost to 7-9 Buffalo
  • 2015 Denver lost to 7-9 Oakland

These aren’t all “Bad Losses,” however they’re the worst loss by each eventual Super Bowl champion – it goes to show that no one is immune.

Matchup Matrix

These teams are evenly ranked while Dallas has the football – Green Bay possesses the 3rd total defense (entering Week 4) while Dallas has the 4th overall offense. This game will be determined by Love getting the offense back on track considering Dallas has one of the worst defenses in the NFL.

As mentioned before, Dallas surrendered a combined QB rating of 134.2 over the last 2 weeks, to 2 bad Quarterbacks. Again, Love should have his way with the Dallas defense and this with the challenge of RT Zach Tom likely missing the game. Getting Josh Jacobs and the ground game going will be a sight for sore eyes and this is the opportunity to accomplish that mission.

Prediction

Season: 1-2
Overall: 108-71

Whoof

How Did This Happen?

As stated in the blog leading up to the game, an ill-timed turnover and special teams’ disasters leaving short fields (which both did), handed the Browns 10 points. That “shouldn’t” have been enough to do the Packers in, but given the offense’s issues…

Jordan Morgan had about as bad a showing as I can remember since Don Barclay. Morgan was thrust into too many positions prior to mastering one…also, LaFleur clearly rushed RT Zach Tom back from injury, lasting only 1 snap, and Morgan was unable to handle Myles Garrett – or anyone else for that fact.

Rookie WR Matthew Golden deciding to run out of bounds when he had a chance to score, and at minimum gain an additional 10-15 yards was another blunder. When you add together the special teams issues, Jordan Morgan, vanilla play-calling, along with Browns S Grant Delpit tricking Jordan Love into an ill-timed interception, well, that’s how you get the Browns to beat the “best team in the league.”

Injuries Are Piling Up

We already mentioned RT Zach Tom, which turned out to be the lynchpin for the entire offense operation. Him moving out had the offensive line in shambles and they were never able to recover. RG Aaron Banks also went out, thrusting Jordan Morgan back to LG (which is his most-experienced position), and he struggled mightily there as well. The last (major) injury came to S Javon Bullard. Bullard has had a great start to the season, and while the defense didn’t seem to miss him, he is an attacking defender that’s very quick and assists in the swarming defense.

Cope: It Was Just 1 Game

This is true, however, if used appropriately, LaFleur and the coaching staff can use this as a callback point should focus become an issue again. Let’s hope this pisses the team off enough to make a statement – playing in Jerry World on Sunday Night Football seems like the perfect opportunity for that game.

Frozen Tundra Meet The Dawg Pound

Where Does Each Team Stand?

Green Bay is one of, if not the, best teams in the NFL. They’re tied for 3rd in point differential (+23) meanwhile Cleveland is on the opposite end of the spectrum, currently 0-2 and a point differential of -25 ranking 30th in the NFL. The Browns are working through a rebuild, of sorts, needing to identify a Quarterback of the future, but have Joe Flacco manning the helm right now and is quite serviceable. The Browns have talent, but they’ve been on the struggle bus for some time now.

Prime Matchup: Defenders?

This game will feature the best 2 pass rushers in the NFL. Myles Garrett and Micah Parsons are the premier pass rushers and can wreck a game on their own from the defensive side of the football. We, as Packer fans, now know how good Micah Parsons is, but this will be a good look at how effective Garrett is for the common fan. Meaning – if all-world RT Zach Tom is unable to go, rookie Anthony Belton will have the greatest test a rookie can be tested with…facing Myles Garrett. Depending how Cleveland decides to use Garrett, likely shifting all over the field pre-snap, the Packers might be able to alleviate some pressure on Belton with counters and play action, but this will be a tough test regardless.

Matchup Matrix

These teams boast 2 of the best defenses in the NFL, at least through 2 weeks. They also have the top 2 rush defenses in the NFL. Cleveland also ranks #1 in total defense (yards given up/game), however they’ve been done in by turnovers. This will be the key to the game, as the only way Cleveland will be able to win this game is by winning the turnover battle, they may have to win it by 2 or 3.

When the defense is on the field, they’ll have the advantage in this game, for both Green Bay and Cleveland. Again, whichever teams takes care of the football and is able to get some chunk plays, will win the game. The Packers enter this game as 7 ½ point favorites and it could be tough to cover unless their defense generates a couple of short fields off turnovers.

Prediction Time

Whichever team is more effective vs. the other’s outstanding pass rusher will come out victorious. I should elaborate a bit more on that – for Cleveland that is a must, Green Bay might be able to get away with Garrett wreaking some havoc.

Season: 1-1
Overall: 108-70