Jim Polzin: The Packers have discovered their identity just in time
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GREEN BAY — There were 7 minutes, 36 minutes remaining in a rout at Lambeau Field when Jordan Love entered the game for some mop-up duty. The seven snaps that followed were relatively meaningless in the grand scheme of developing a young backup quarterback, whose only job Sunday was to get the Green Bay Packers to the finish line.
But Love’s cameo appearance in the Packers’ 41-17 victory over the Minnesota Vikings got me thinking about something I was asked by a reader back in late November. The Open Jim mailbag question from a Twitter follower got right to the point — Shut down Aaron Rodgers? — and that sounded like the right move to me a few days after a 40-33 loss at Philadelphia dropped Green Bay to 4-8 on the season.
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I say yes. This team isn’t going anywhere, so let Rodgers rest his rib and thumb injuries and give the organization a chance to evaluate Love over the final five games of the regular season.
File that one in the bad-takes category, because here we are a little over a month later and the Packers appear to be going somewhere after all. The only thing standing between them and the NFC playoffs is the Detroit Lions, who will arrive in Lambeau Field next weekend hoping to complete their own improbable run to the postseason.
The lesson here, for me and others who were ready to gaze into the future: Don’t give up on a season until a team is officially eliminated from playoff contention.
“We’ve all seen some of the comments on the outside as we went from 4-8 to 5-8 to 6-8 and nobody’s worried about the Packers and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,” Rodgers said. “Now what are they going to say?”
That we were wrong, that we’re sorry for doubting, that this season has become a whole lot more interesting thanks to a four-game winning streak and a ton of help from others competing for the third and final wild card spot in the NFL.
The latest example came earlier Sunday when the Washington Commanders lost at home to the Cleveland Browns, putting Green Bay in control of its own postseason fate.
Everything is breaking the Green Bay Packers’ way as they seek a berth in the NFC playoff berths.
But Rodgers and Co. still had to go out and take care of business and, wow, did they ever do that. This was the first game all season in which all three phases played well, resulting in a thoroughly dominating performance against the NFC North champion.
Are the Vikings imposters? Most likely yes. They’re now 12-4 and yet have a minus-19 point differential, the combination of being 11-0 in one-score games with losses by 17 (Philadelphia), 37 (Dallas), 11 (Detroit) and 24 (Green Bay).
But that’s still a team that was chasing a No. 1 seed and found itself trailing the Packers by 38 points in the fourth quarter.
Why? Because Green Bay finally was mastering complementary football, something that was missing the first 12 games of the season. The offense, defense and special teams all had scored a touchdown by halftime and — get this — the Packers were winning 14-3 in the first quarter despite having 14 total net yards through two offensive series.
This was the hope for this team from the start: A dominant defense that created turnovers (four on Sunday, seven in the past two games, 12 during the winning streak), an improved special teams unit under Rich Bisaccia and an offense that relied heavily on running back Aaron Jones and a veteran quarterback.
“This is the identity that we thought we were going to have,” said Rodgers, who threw for only 159 yards during a turnover-free performance against the Vikings. “It just took a long, long time to get there.”
Too long, in fact, but the Packers figured it out just in time.
“We just needed confidence,” Keisean Nixon said.
That, and the emergence of two big surprises.
What nobody could have seen coming back at the midway point of the season was the impact that rookie wide receiver Christian Watson would make. He didn’t add to a touchdown total that stands at nine and only had one catch for 11 yards against the Vikings, but his presence on the field has changed the dynamic of this offense. Defenses have to respect Watson’s speed and ability to make plays downfield.
“There’s so many things outside your control,” quarterback Aaron Rodgers said of the Green Bay Packers’ playoff hopes.
And certainly nobody could have predicted the home-run capability that Nixon has added to Green Bay’s return game. LaFleur and Rodgers are disappointed when he doesn’t bring a kickoff out of the end zone, no matter how deep it is, so you can imagine their sheer joy when he took one back 105 yards in the first quarter to give the Packers the lead for good.
The team once left for dead now looks downright dangerous, the red-hot team nobody’s particularly anxious to play when the playoffs begin later this month.
“We’re going to have a good story to tell … but we’ve got to finish it,” safety Adrian Amos said. “We finished this week and now we’re 0-0. We’ve been in playoff mode for a while. We’ve got to continue going into this week.”
The fact this regular-season finale against the Lions is meaningful is hard to comprehend considering how bleak things looked for the Packers in late November, back when shutting down Rodgers in favor of Love seemed like a good idea.
Photos: Packers rout Vikings to keep playoff hopes alive
Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins slides to the turf ahead of Packers defensive tackle T.J. Slaton during the second half on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
MORRY GASH, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Packers safety Rudy Ford intercepts a pass intended for Vikings wide receiver Adam Thielen during the second half on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
MORRY GASH, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Packers wide receiver Christian Watson reacts during the second half against the Vikings on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
MORRY GASH, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers runs from Vikings linebacker Brian Asamoah II for a 2-yard touchdown run in the second half on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
MORRY GASH, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Packers linebacker De’Vondre Campbell (59), linebacker Quay Walker (7) and defensive tackle T.J. Slaton celebrate after a third-down stop during the first half against the Minnesota Vikings on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
MORRY GASH, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Packers safety Dallin Leavitt (6) and Minnesota Vikings fullback C.J. Ham look to recover a blocked punt during the first half on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
MATT LUDTKE, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Packers head coach Matt LaFleur reacts on the sideline during the first half against the Minnesota Vikings on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
MIKE ROEMER, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Packers cornerback Rasul Douglas celebrates after a defensive stop during the first half against the Minnesota Vikings on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
MATT LUDTKE, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Packers’ Keisean Nixon returns a kickoff 105 yards for a touchdown during the first half against the Minnesota Vikings on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
MORRY GASH, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Packers running back Aaron Jones runs from Minnesota Vikings cornerback Patrick Peterson during the first half on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
MORRY GASH, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Packers cornerback Keisean Nixon (25) celebrates with teammates after returning a kickoff for a touchdown during the first half against the Minnesota Vikings on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
MORRY GASH, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers throws a pass during the first half against the Minnesota Vikings on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
MATT LUDTKE, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Vikings wide receiver K.J. Osborn is tackled by Packers linebacker Quay Walker during the first half on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
MORRY GASH, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Packers tight end Robert Tonyan celebrates with teammates after catching a touchdown pass during the first half against the Minnesota Vikings on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
MORRY GASH, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Packers cornerback Keisean Nixon runs back a kickoff for a touchdown against the Minnesota Vikings on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
JEFFREY PHELPS, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Packers safety Darnell Savage leaps into the stands after an interception for a touchdown against the Minnesota Vikings on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
JEFFREY PHELPS, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins is sacked by Packers linebacker Justin Hollins during the first half on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
MATT LUDTKE, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Packers cornerback Rasul Douglas (29) celebrates with teammates after a 56-yard field goal by kicker Mason Crosby during the first half against the Minnesota Vikings on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
MORRY GASH, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Packers defensive tackle T.J. Slaton celebrates after a missed field goal by Minnesota Vikings kicker Greg Joseph during the first half on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
MORRY GASH, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers celebrates after scoring on a 2-yard run during the second half against the Minnesota Vikings on Jan. 1, 2023, in Green Bay.
MORRY GASH, ASSOCIATED PRESS