Packers caught in tailspin ever since London trip
GREEN BAY, Wis. — The Green Bay Packers were tied for first place in the NFC North when they headed to London last month as 8 1/2-point favorites over the New York Giants.
They haven’t been the same since.
ADVERTISING
Green Bay blew a 14-point lead that day and lost 27-22 in a game that ended with Aaron Rodgers injuring his right thumb on a foiled Hail Mary attempt. That started a seven-game stretch in which the Packers have gone 1-6, putting their playoff hopes in peril.
The Packers (4-7) didn’t get a week off after the London trip at their own request because they wanted the rest later in the season. Packers coach Matt LaFleur wonders now whether that was the right call.
“Yeah, absolutely I’ve wrestled with that, and all you can do is move forward and learn from every experience, both good and bad,” LaFleur said Friday, one day after a 27-17 loss to the Tennessee Titans. “It’s a tough lesson, I would say, considering where we’re at. But it was the decision that I made at the time and what I thought was best for our team, and it’s hard to say if that was the right decision.”
LaFleur has learned plenty of tough lessons this year — in contrast to his first three regular seasons as Green Bay’s coach, all of which finished with 13 wins and the NFC North title.
Barring a historic collapse by Minnesota (8-1), the division is out of reach this year. A wild-card playoff berth is still possible. The Packers believe they can turn their season around, but they acknowledge they’re running out of time to do so.
“Our backs are against the wall,” wide receiver Randall Cobb said Thursday night. “You’ve got to win games now. You lose another one and you might as well say we’re probably out.”
That’s bad news for a team that has three games left against division leaders. The Packers visit Philadelphia (8-1) on Nov. 27, play at Miami (7-3) on Christmas Day and host Minnesota on New Year’s Day.
“Every team has the same goal coming into the season,” LaFleur said. “I think for some, it’s more realistic than others, and I think we were one of those teams that definitely believed. And I’m not saying that it can’t happen, but we’re going to have to play a hell of a lot better and we’re going to have to coach a hell of a lot better and just truly take it that one game at a time.
“But I think you’re always fighting for something. Every one of these guys, myself, all the coaches, you’re always fighting for your job. Always. Every time you go out there. And that’s just the reality of the league we live in and we work in. So that’s always going to be the mindset. Whether you’re in the race or not, to me, you’re always fighting for your job.”
WHAT’S WORKING
A run defense that has struggled for much of the season limited two-time NFL rushing champion Derrick Henry to 87 yards on 28 carries. Henry’s longest rush was 9 yards, though he did catch a short pass and turn it into a 42-yard gain. … Receiver Christian Watson scored twice Thursday and has five touchdowns in his last two games. … Green Bay got a spark from its punt-return unit after releasing former return man Amari Rodgers. Keisean Nixon netted 37 yards on two returns.
WHAT NEEDS WORK
The pass defense was gashed all night, as Ryan Tannehill went 22 of 27 for 333 yards. … The offense couldn’t get anything going down the stretch. The Packers ran 20 plays for 45 yards in the fourth quarter. … Four nights after teaming up for 203 yards rushing in a 31-28 overtime triumph against the Dallas Cowboys, Aaron Jones and A.J. Dillon combined for 53 yards on 18 carries.