Myers was really affected by having to use a silent count last week. Kurt Benkert did a video on it:
why not just go back to under center versus shotgun? I thought it was one of the poorest officiated games we've been in all season, z must have whacked Love in the head about 5 plays, no call, hands to the face mask on Gary every other play, then Joseph with his cheap shot tackles, Lions play tough, but also dirty.
Re: Green Bay Packers' News - 2024
Posted: 12 Dec 2024 18:33
by APB
I bet someone turns this into a negative against the o-line.
Super weird season with lots of wins concentrated among a few top teams...
... and 25 % of the league with 3 or fewer wins as of mid- December.
Speaking of the Packers:
Packers won their 9th game on Nov 28th this year, last year the Packers won their 9th game on January 7th
In 2010, the Packers won their 9th game on December 26th
In 2011, the Packers won their 9th game on November 14th (!)
I would guess the Packers relatively low use of 12 personnel this season is directly related to Musgrave's injury. MLF likes to show 12 personnel because he wants the DC to respond with a heavier package ( makes it easier to throw) But you're not taking a talented WR off the field for Ben Sims.
My guess is they'd like to get Musgrave some snaps on the home grass before traveling to the &%$@-turf in minny
nobody seems to upset over this, but it has become a trade mark with Lafluer, same with starting the 2nd half of games as though were just protecting a lead, versus trying to increase one.
The Sideline — Clock management, time out management and challenge management were mishandled at various moments, which ultimately are Matt LaFleur’s responsibility. Whoever is in the booth advising the head coach on challenges should be replaced, as MLF is now 0-6 for the season, according to play-by-play man Mike Tirico. It’s an unacceptable number, and they cost the team timeouts. And speaking of timeouts, the team’s penchant for burning them early in halves is too often a reflection of slow or poor communication. This was a Packer staple in the Rodgers/McCarthy era, and it’s disappointing to see it continue. Against Seattle, it left the Packers with no timeouts with five minutes left to play, an eternity. Had a couple of late plays gone differently, the Packers might have needed them.
And finally, the clock management in a sequence at the end of the first half was beyond baffling. With 36 seconds left and timeouts in hand, Jordan Love and LaFleur let the seconds tick down to about 12 seconds before Love threw a deep sideline pass that resulted in a pass interference call near the goal line. But with the clock now under five seconds it forced LaFleur to kick a field goal rather than chance going into the locker room empty-handed.