Pass protection woes exposed
GREEN BAY As a first-year starter last season, Aaron Rodgers made playing all 16 games a significant goal—and he did, despite playing through a serious shoulder injury.
The way things are going now, it’ll be even more impressive if he does it again.
The Green Bay Packers have a serious pass protection problem, giving up 10 sacks in their first two games and leaving Rodgers exposed to big hits even when he can get rid of the ball. Now veteran left tackle Chad Clifton has a sprained right ankle, and it isn’t clear when he’ll be back.
Rodgers didn’t call out his linemen after getting sacked six times in Sunday’s 31-24 home loss to Cincinnati. But he did take offensive players, himself included, to task for their practice habits.
“We’re two weeks into the season now,” Rodgers said. “We’re 1-1 and it’s time to grow up and be a pro and practice and play like it.”
Packers coach Mike
McCarthy has seen enough of linemen getting beat in basic one-on-one matchups, guys who generally knew who to block and just weren’t able to do it. He said the resulting hard hits haven’t affected his quarterback’s play yet.
“I thought he hung in there again this week, like he did last week,” McCarthy said. “But it’s only natural, it’s all about trust. Every player’s got to trust the other player to do his job.”
The coach did say Rodgers needs to get rid of the ball more quickly in some situations: “He had his share of mistakes, too.”
McCarthy didn’t have a timeline for the return of Clifton, who was injured on the Packers’ first offensive play of the second half and had to be carted off. His availability for Sunday’s game in St. Louis remains unclear.
“We’re preparing to play without him,” McCarthy said.
The Packers would likely go with the same plan they used after Clifton was injured Sunday. Former starter Scott Wells comes off the bench to play center, Jason Spitz slides from center to left guard and left guard Daryn Colledge moves over to replace Clifton at left tackle.
Colledge didn’t get much work in practice at left tackle and missed much of last week’s practice with a foot injury of his own, making Sunday’s second half a challenge.
“It was a lot tougher than it should’ve been—that’s the facts,” Colledge said. “I needed to play my technique. I had some very good drives; I did a good job on a couple. And then I had some complete meltdowns. That’s just unacceptable.”
Bengals defensive end Antwan Odom dominated Colledge, getting four of his five sacks in the second half. Odom said he was surprised the Packers didn’t assign other players to help Colledge.
“I guess they believed in him and they thought he could block me one-on-one,” Odom said.
McCarthy expressed confidence that Colledge can play significantly better if given a week to prepare as the starting left tackle.
“He just did not look comfortable out there,” McCarthy said. “I thought he played well at left guard, he graded out well, but did not look comfortable at left tackle.”
In all, it’s another week of head-scratching for a first-string offense was nearly unstoppable in the preseason. Rodgers’ late touchdown pass to Greg Jennings to beat Chicago in Week 1 covered up a host of offensive problems, and the Bengals exposed them.
Running back Ryan Grant said poor pass protection is the root of the problem.
“There should be a level of concern,” Grant said. “We need to do a better job, from the back and from the line of protecting Aaron, make sure he doesn’t get touched.”
Rodgers’ teammates regretted that they couldn’t get the job done. “That’s the guy we all depend on (to) take us to the Super Bowl,” tight end Donald Lee said.
Meanwile, McCarthy said safety Nick Collins has a clavicle sprain and safety Aaron Rouse sustained a neck stinger. Their injuries will be re-evaluated later in the week.
NFL won’t move Vikings, Packers if there’s baseball
The NFL said Monday it will not reschedule this season’s Packers-Vikings games in case a Major League Baseball tiebreaker game is played at the Metrodome.
Green Bay is scheduled to play at Minnesota on Monday night, Oct. 5, pitting Brett Favre against his old team in front of a national TV audience.
If the Minnesota Twins are able to catch Detroit and host the Tigers in a tiebreaker game to determine the AL Central winner, however, Major League Baseball would prefer that Monday night slot.
The Packers host the Vikings on Nov. 1, but NFL spokesman Dan Masonson said there is no swap of sites under consideration to accommodate the potential baseball game. He said the game wouldn’t be moved to a different night, either.


Sep 22, 2009 at 12:07 p.m.
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I always find it very amusing how the sports reporters seem to see the patently obvious AFTER the fact. The sharps all new this was why the packers would be a very average to below average team BEFORE the season started. I, of course, posted my prediction on the Gazette blog (and various others) last week, saying The Bengals were a full scale unload on play, betting wise.
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http://gazettextra.com/news/2009/sep/14/...
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Hype is an amazing thing in life, and even more so in football. I have never seen a team so over hyped as the packers were in a very long time, simply based off a few meaningless pre-season games. In all that talk on how great they looked, I don't think I ever heard it mentioned once that the offensive line was probably the worse in football. That ,is of course, the formula for loosing teams. Winning is ALL about being strong and dominating on the front line. Look at your playoff teams every year, and they are always teams who have a great offensive line.
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Ted Thompson is simply a stodge. He refused to resign two of their best lineman a couple years ago, and drafts lineman in the late rounds, many times from division 2 programs. The results of all that became very apparent on Sunday. This is a very average to below average football team, primarily because the line is atrocious. Has no talent (other than Clifton; who btw got injured Sunday)or depth, thanks to the incompetent draft moves of Thompson.
Sep 22, 2009 at 11:33 a.m.
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With the talent they have they should play a lot better.
Sep 22, 2009 at 8:54 a.m.
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The offensive line was in a shambles last season and their safeties at least have talent but are unreliable because of health concerns. These were two huge areas of concern coming out of last season and Ted Thompson did little to improve either major area of concern. He signed the FA safety Smith from Pittsburgh but then cut him. Bet they wish they had him now with only one healthy safety on the roster. We saw how well the backup linemen played in the offseason. Rodgers will not last the season with the protection he is getting -sacked 10 times and knocked down at least that many. That is AWFUL.
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