Episode Transcript
Hi, everybody.
Speaker 2Welcome to another edition of Packers Unscripted from Packers dot Com.
I am Mike Spofford, joined as always by my trusted colleague Wes Hodkowitz, coming to you hear from our studios at Lambeaufield to talk about Sunday Nights game down in Dallas.
Wes.
It ended in a forty to forty overtime tie.
And I've probably begun a number of shows over are what is this now close to ten years or doing this show with this particular line.
Just when you think you've seen it all in this league, another game gets played and this is another one of those games that nobody could have predicted that, I mean, it's it was.
It was off the wall in so many ways.
And there's a ton of ground to cover in this show, and I don't think we're gonna be able to get to all of it, but just initially your overall impressions of how this game went out.
Speaker 1The first ever forty forty game in NFL history, the second highest tie ever in NFL history, the Dallas Cowboys first tie since nineteen sixty nine.
Speaker 2Nineteen sixty nine.
Speaker 1Nice, And I'll be honest with you, Mike, as I came to terms with this and we finished all of our content.
You and I are flying through the night and get back into Green Bay at a little before four in the morning.
I was walking to my car and I thought to myself, after writing everything, reading everything, it is kind of like going through everything.
It was one of those games where really truly nobody I think deserved to win.
When you and I say that, actually not just from a point of you know, being a contrarian, I mean, you look at both of these sides.
There's a compelling argument for why the Dallas Cowboys should have won and why the Green Bit Packers should have won in neither team achieved the goal.
From the Cowboys perspective, I don't know the stat exactly off my head, but I think it was the first time at least is it in their franchises.
Yeah, I was in their franchise's history.
I think Movski was the one that tweeted this out that they scored over four hundred points with four hundred totally yards with forty points, yeah, and didn't have a turnover.
It was the first time they didn't win that game in franchise history.
I think they're now like it's like three hundred zero and one when they've achieved those those measurements from the Packers standpoint.
The really bizarre thing about this first month, Mike, they've started fast in all these games for the most part.
I mean, they have got on the board, they've put points up, and then they've had these moments where whether it's the block field goal or the blocked extra point in this game, or that bizarre series of events at the end of the first half where you go from leading thirteen to two and now you're trailing sixteen to thirteen at halftime, and then you know, on Green Bay kind of still found ways to get the offense going, but then defensively then they couldn't stop Dallas in the second half.
Just a very bizarre game on so many fronts, and I thought a lot of guys afterwards, you were at the press conferences, I was in the locker room, in the common sense, in the Packers' locker room.
It just was a weird night, a weird game, and the only silver line you could take from it is the Packers walked out of there with a tie, and in twenty thirteen, that was the difference between them getting into the playoffs or not, and the Packers have to keep winning and hope that it's something that could propell them forward down the line.
Speaker 2Yeah, I mean, we'll just have to see.
I think it was you quoted Brandon McManus in the locker room afterwards, saying, you just have to see come December, early January, what a tie on the record means, you know, as you're trying to sort out the all of the postseason, end of season scenarios.
I've certainly never seen a game, or I can't recall one where the last nine consecutive possessions in the football game all resulted in points and actually it was six touchdowns in a row as these teams went back and forth.
In my mind, there are similarities to the game against Cleveland, there are also significant differences.
The similarity being there was another costly special teams breakdown in getting kick blocked.
This one was an extra point that the Cowboys ran back for two points, so in a sense, it was the equivalent of getting a field goal blocked because it was a three point swing on the scoreboard.
The Packers had scored a touchdown and essentially netted only a plus four on the scoreboard because they didn't get the extra point and the Cowboys got too, So that was one similarity.
Another similarity was, as you alluded to a somewhat catastrophic error offensively in terms of a turnover deep in your own territory, giving the other team a short field they end up scoring a touchdown.
The difference was that, at least in this case compared to Cleveland, that big mistake on offense happened at the end of the first half, not at the end of the game.
So the Packers had an entire second half to try to make up for it, and they sort of did and sort of didn't in terms of being able to get out of Dallas with a tie when they went into the locker room at halftime losing.
Speaker 1I think.
Speaker 2With for everything that went wrong in this game, what rises to I would say maybe the largest level of concern for me as far as what I saw was a Packers defense that had played so well for three weeks and started this game so well with three consecutive scoreless possessions forcing three straight punts.
Suddenly the Cowboys drove ninety five yards.
They're pinned on their own five yard line.
They go the length of the field, ninety five yards for a touchdown in the second quarter, and then it just felt like Green Bay's defense never recovered from you know, they they took a big punch that Dak Prescott through a Haymaker with that ninety five yard drive and basically announced, Okay, yeah, this Cowboys offense has shown up to play tonight, and it felt like Green Bay's defense never responded to that.
Now, it's just one game, and certainly the bulk of the work of Green Bay's defense over the course of this young season has been much more good than bad, But that was troubling to watch, to feel like Green Bay's defense never recovered from the moment when things started to go wrong.
Speaker 1Yeah, I would agree with that.
And again, the one thing that kind of stinks about the bye week coming now is we're not going to have a chance to really break this thing down with Jeff Halfley, with Richie Saccia.
We're not going to talk to them at least for another week plus, so a lot of time and a lot of water.
I'll be under the bridge at that point.
But so some of these observations, again, we haven't even talked to Matt Lafleur at this point.
Than which we're taping this so trying to figure out what the packer's reaction to a lot of it is and where they thought some of the seams kind of came undone.
We're going to have to still figure that out.
But from my vantage point as I was watching that game, defensively, it just seemed like Green Bay was pretty committed to a four man rush.
Yep, you didn't see much blitzing.
There weren't any simulated pressures.
They moved around Micah Parsons a little bit throughout the front, but there wasn't that threat for the most part.
I think Kuay did blitz a couple of times.
I think Edgern did blitz a couple times, but it wasn't as much incorporated into the plan in this game as it had been some of the others.
Speaker 2Certainly not with how many snaps there were over the course of seventy minutes.
You know, we would have thought, you know, that there would have been some more change ups threat down there.
Speaker 1Yeah, so yeah, we'll have to wait and see.
But you know, long at the end of the day, where Green Bay I thought, by and large, they did a really good job against Prescott.
The problem was they only had the five quarterback hits against some of the one sack which ended up being a huge play.
I mean, it's not your traditional sack, right, but it was a huge play in the game, and that it kept Prescott from getting into the end zone and ultimately kept Green Bay alive to be able to match the or at least have a chance to and then obviously match the field goal.
But Prescott in the times in which he was under pressure seemed to get the ball out just in the nick of time, yep.
And then in the instances where the Packers didn't get pressure, Prescott really went to work.
Speaker 2Yeahak dak.
Prescott's experience and his savvy and his accuracy.
I mean, he he showed in this game how big time a quarterback he is.
I mean, he's missing one of his top weapons, if not his top weapon in CD Lamb and the Packers certainly had their trouble with George Pickens.
Pickens had a big night, but we also saw you know, guys like Jalen Tolbert and Turpin and these and these other guys.
I mean Prescott, I think you had said it an insider inbox.
It was as though he was always a step ahead, because as soon as Micah Parsons was you know, would beat his guy and was closing in on him, the ball was out, you know.
And the ball wasn't just out, but most of the time it was out very accurately to somebody who was able to make a play for him.
It was it was frustrating in that sense to watch.
It felt like as the game went on that that the Packers, the Packers didn't get enough pressure on Dak Prescott.
But then when you go back and look at it and you see how many times he just got the ball out so quickly, you have to you have to give him credit.
And from Jeff Hafley's perspective up above, if he's watching this and he's seeing the opposing quarterback constantly getting the ball out so fast anytime somebody was closing in on him, you can understand the reluctance to blitz, the reluctance to dial things up, because you don't want to compromise your coverage if they're just gonna go three step drop and fire the ball all night long.
So there was there was a lot of that kind of chess match stuff and and and trying to find an answer going on and and and Prescott played a big time game.
On the other side, I thought Jordan Love played a big time game as well.
The turnover deep in your own territory late in the first half extremely unfortunate.
I think the Packers got a little bit this is just my feeling that cycleote logically, they got a little bit too wrapped up in the idea of Dallas being able to double up.
Where Dallas scores on the ninety five yard drive and they're going to get the ball coming out at the start of the second half, and because of that possibility of the double up, the you know, the Packers got a little too aggressive.
You get the first down at the thirty two yard line, but after a false start moves you back to the twenty seven and you're out of timeouts and the clock is, you know, down into the low twenties in terms of seconds left in the first half.
You're probably better off going in the locker room there at thirteen to nine.
And I know that's easy for me to say, like you know, sitting here, but I think it was just it was this whole pressure of feeling like, Okay, you can't let the Cowboys double up, right, and then they ended up doubling up and getting a chance to triple up as it turned out, So that was unfortunate.
But the Packers' offense, and as we've seen with Jordan Love, when a mistake happens, he shakes it off, he comes out, and he came out in the second half firing.
And as much as the Packers were having trouble stop in Prescott, the Cowboys are having just as much trouble stopping Jordan Love in the Packers.
Speaker 1You know what drives me nuts sometimes with Packer fans.
I'm a little raw here because I just got done doing Insider Inbox last night, So kind of like if you had to do it, if we had to do this show right after you wrote Inbox on Mondays, I'm guessing you'd have a few different thoughts after you get a time to sort of let things marinate a little bit.
Speaker 2Yeah, walking off the plane at four am wouldn't have been after writing that Insider Inbox wouldn't have been a good time for me to step in front of a microphone.
But yes, go ahead.
Speaker 1But what drives me nuts sometimes with fans is you know, they get so frustrated, and yes, I'm not.
I understand Jordan made a bad interception a week earlier against Cleveland, and then that whole thing of again, that series of unfortunate events at the end of the first half, which Matt Lafuller took ownership for for wanting to put the foot on the pedal for probably when the fall start happens, maybe at that point packing your bags in because you don't have any timeouts left.
You are down to twenty seconds on the clock maybe to play another day.
Speaker 2Yeah, and yard and five yards in that situation when the best you're gonna do is field goal range, five yards is a big deal and you have to and you have to consider that.
Speaker 1But go on.
So the point I want to raise with that is the way that Jordan Love bounced back from that and the way that the defense bounced back from that.
If the Packers don't have that response, this isn't even a game.
But what happened was is the defense did get one, did get off the field once, and that's what gave Green Bay a chance to get back into this thing.
And when Jordan Love got that ball back in his hands, he got back to his playmakers.
Josh Jacobs played some really good football in this game.
Emmanuel Wilson played some really good football in this game.
The Packers run game showed up in Tucker Kraft and those the sprinkling there of Romeo Dobbs with the touchdown catches.
When I talk about my frustration with fans at times is they focus so much on what the immediate result is, and I don't think they always understand you're seeing the maturation of young players before your eyes.
Romeo Dobbs is as cool, calming, collected as a receivers you're going to find in the National Football League, and they need that in this offense.
Jordan Love with his cool disposition to things and his ability to let the water kind of go off his shoulder a little bit and focus on the next task at hand, that's an important trait that I think trickles down to the rest of this football team offensively.
This was their day.
As you were in the press conference with Micah Parsons, he said he went up to Jordan Love and thanked him for picking the defense up that day.
When you're looking at complimentary football, these are the instances you look at special teams had a rough day.
Defense had a rough day.
But outside of just the end of that first half.
Offensively, in a game in which Jordan Love could not afford to blink, he kept his straight forward vision and helped this offense succeed.
Speaker 2Yeah, I thought you mentioned Jacobs and Wilson.
I thought we maybe saw the best of each of those guys in a Packers' uniform.
Certainly the best game of Emmanuel Wilson's young career.
I thought he was extremely effective.
And uh and just in general the Packers, the Packers got the running game going, they got both of the running backs involved in in the passing game, whether it was screens or or checkdowns, and uh, and there's a there was a lot to like about about what Green Bay's offense did in this game.
And as you mentioned, Dobbs had the had the three touchdowns the the end of the game, so Green Bay's defense is up against it.
In overtime, the Cowboys have first and goal on the five yard line after the the sideline toe tap catch there by Tolbert on I mean, on an incredible throw by Prescott.
Frankly, under pressure, he heaves it, it looks like it might just go out of bounds, and Tolbert is able to get it and uh and keep his feet and bounds.
So it's first and goal at the five, and the Packers defense has not stopped Dallas since the opening drive of the second half, but they rose up and they were able to force the field goal.
Micah Parsons gets the chase down sack and I think Dak Prescott's gonna score on that scramble if Parsons isn't able to catch him, so they force the field goal.
There a big moment for Green Bay's defense.
Then on the other end, the Packers get all the way to the twelve yard line.
They have first and ten on the Dallas twelve.
Obviously, a touchdown wins the game, a field goal ties the game.
The clock is running down, and we do this show a couple of days after the game, so we've seen a lot of the narratives out there.
And if there's one narrative about this game that bothers me more than anything, it's that supposedly Matt Lafleur and the Packers weren't trying to win the game there, and just because they weren't able to doesn't mean they weren't trying.
I mean the first play, the first play they try the wide receiver screen to Matthew Golden.
They have decent numbers on the outside there, but a block is missed and Golden gets tackled for a three yard loss.
Unfortunate, the play wasn't executed all that well.
But just because the Packers throw the ball sideways for a screen and not towards the goal line doesn't mean they weren't trying to win the game.
So then we hear afterward from Matt Lafluur and Jordan Love.
So then on second down, Lafleur is trying to take advantage of the fact that, Okay, on this first on the first down play, the Cowboys have had their guys up tight to the line of scrimmage, So if they're gonna do that again, we're gonna take the shot at the end zone.
The Cowboys morph into a cover too, They drop their coverage into the end zone.
There's nothing there for Jordan.
He takes the checkdown to Emmanuel Wilson, who isn't quite able to get back to the line of scrimmage and the clock is still running.
I would say there's an argument to be made there.
Maybe Jordan Love needs to throw that ball away rather than take the checkdown.
It's one on one on the outside.
If Emmanuel Wilson could make the guy miss, then maybe he gets, you know, a few yards, gets out of bounds.
Whatever.
The biggest problem with the final sequence is that Emanuel Wilson, it's tackled with twenty two seconds on the clock, and then the third down snap doesn't happen until there are six seconds left on the clock.
It took sixteen seconds.
There wasn't the urgency out there on the field to get to get lined up to run the play, to take that last shot at the end zone.
And quite frankly, the Packers got extremely lucky that there was still one second on the clock when the pass to the end zone hit.
I believe it was Sandborn in the back the linebacker Jack Sanborn.
It hit him in the back and fell to the ground.
If that ball is tipped or deflected in any way, that last second probably ticks off the clock and you've got an even greater disappointment on your hands.
My point, my overarching point, is the final sequence didn't work out.
The lack of urgency on third down to get the snap off and not run the clock down.
As far as the Packers did, that was the biggest problem with that sequence.
It wasn't that the Packers weren't trying to win the game, weren't and were just settling for the field goal.
That is not what was happening there.
It was a it was a bad sequence of plays, it was a bad series of downs that didn't go well.
But to sit back there and say that that Matt Lafleur was being all conservative and wasn't trying to win the game, that is so misguided and and it's and quite frankly, it's it's lazy.
It's it's frustration at not getting the victory being applied to Oh the the intent to try to win the game wasn't there.
And and that's I don't have any I don't have any time for that.
And it's been out there way too much.
As far as as far as the end of this game.
I'm sorry, I went on a long monologue there.
I'll turn it back over to you.
Speaker 1No, it's it's very much the case.
And you know, I think seeing how the Packers rallied there down the stretch, I I feel like most of that frustration for fans and and maybe some of it's coming from the media too.
Is I the idea that Okay, well you you won the coin toss, so you elected the kick.
So you're trying to put yourself in a position to be able to win the game, right and you know, you see if your defense can hold, and they did, they kept him to three points.
So now you're at this point where you just had Brandon McManus hit a fifty three yard field goal as time expired in the in regulations.
So once the Packers crossed midfield, the thing I'm sure that's going through everybody's mind is, okay, well we got the three in the bag.
Now, whatever happened on the extra point, we came back, we made good on the the you know, the fifty three yard because that's about as high level difficulties you're going to find for an NFL kicker and then a whole operational unit.
Speaker 2Yeah, and McManus absolutely striped that kick too.
It was right down the middle and probably would have been good from sixty five yards.
Speaker 1Yeah.
And as somebody said too, I mean you want to talk about ten out of ten just from a you know, pure beauty standpoint, I mean that thing was right down Broadway.
Yeah, nice operation there, and afterwards you know, McManus commended both Matt Orzik and Daniel Wheeland for the whole operation there.
Okay, that all happens Packers rally, they're down the field, things are looking up, and you have some strikes to the end zone.
But one of the things is is now that we're down to this fifth you know, we go from fifteen to ten minutes and when it was not you know that now on both teams, no matter what, get a chance to possess the ball, you're going to see some down to the wire overtimes.
Now, Yeah, because there isn't always just going to be a you know, seventy five yard touchdown to get things started.
It's going to be long, sustained drives that could take six, seven, eight minutes.
So Green Bay I felt like in that instance, I mean Mattlefuer took ownership for it.
He said, you know, we got to be better there, play calls got to be better, whatever you want to call it, right, But at the end of the day, I think there also is a lot of trust that Jordan Love is going to get this offense where it needs to be.
And again, kind of going back to my point earlier, I think sometimes fans get so wrapped up in what the actual result is, you're not actually seeing what's happening on the field.
And Jordan Love is taking absolute command of this offense.
Now he's catching guys every week with twelve men on the field.
There's so many attributes that it's not just about what he learned from Aaron Rodgers.
There's a lot that he learned from Aaron Rodgers, and that's a big part of his story, but it's also the way that Matt Lafuer develops quarterbacks and the way the Packers developed their offense.
The pieces are coming together, and yeah, it got really dramatic there at the end, But I guess a part of me never felt like the thing was out of control.
And I think a lot of the frustrations that we've heard verbalized in the last few days, I think coming mostly out of the standpoint that it was a frustrating game and the Packers weren't able to punch it in at the very end.
Speaker 2Yeah, here's my question that I'll throw out to you as a hypothetical of sorts.
Were you surprised that on fourth and goal from the four that the Cowboys didn't go for it In overtime because I thought they might, just because their defense had been struggling so much that Okay, if you don't get the touchdown there, the Packers are backed up on their own four yard line, you're giving your defense the you know, an opportunity there.
And I'm not saying that they should have gone for it.
Speaker 1I just I thought it was I.
Speaker 2Thought it was an interesting question the way that game had gone on everything.
On fourth and goal, you're inside the five yard line, do you go for it there?
They obviously chose to kick the field goal.
I was just curious if you had any thoughts.
Speaker 1And they're gonna take one more look just to see.
I want to see what the plays were leading up to that.
Sorry fans.
Okay, so person sacked him on second down and then the passes incomplete on third.
Yeah, okay.
My initial reaction to that is, no, it didn't surprise me.
And the main reason for that is, while you're right about where things were at with the defense, you also saw what was happening with the Packers offense at that point, and yes, they would have been supremely backed up.
But if Green Bay does move the ball from that point, chances are it's going to be a long drive that will ultimately lead to a game winning field goal.
I get yeah.
Speaker 2In the end the Cowboys that ultimately the decision was we're not going to put our defen in a position where they can lose the game on a field goal.
They're only going to lose the game on a touchdown.
And it worked and it worked out for them.
But again that goes back to the Prescott scramble.
I mean, say, if Parsons is another step late and Prescott gets to like the two or the one yard line and then you're talking fourth and goal from there as opposed to the four, maybe it's a whole different decision as well.
I realize that's all hypothetical stuff.
I was just curious.
Speaker 1Yeah, it's a good question.
I guess that's where because I'm looking at it now.
I mean, here's the thing, like leading up to the end of the game here, I mean, I'm personally perseverating so much on the Packers defense, but the whole second half is nine plays sixty five yards touchdown, eight plays sixty five yards touchdown, ten plays sixty five tart yards touchdown, three plays thirty nine yards game tying field goal, and then they end up actually having a thirteen play drive that leads up to the game tying field again for McManus, so, I think it's one of those things that when you're in that type of shootout, nine straight scoring drives, as you mentioned, a bunch of touchdown drives combined as well.
Yeah, I think you can't take anyffer granted to shoot the Packers put what was it the Cowboys started at their own five.
You're thinking the Packers got three straight punts at that point in the second quarter.
Speaker 2Right, and that that's that's the point that you think the Packers defense is in great position, you know, with the offense has already scored, you're in the lead.
You back them up on the five yard line, and that's when Dak Prescott came out, drove them all the way down the field and he sort of announced like all right, I came, I came to play tonight.
And the Packers defense had trouble on their hands the rest of the game.
Speaker 1By the way, one last thing on all this, uh dude, something that drives me absolutely nuts right now too.
Again this is the West is Going Nuts episode?
Uh people, Well they didn't have Cedee Lamb, so how did the Dallas George Pickens is a really good football receiver.
Speaker 2Pickens is good, and the Packers had Packers had trouble.
Speaker 1Did you watch those clips of Ceedee Lamb on the sideline, like picking out the plays that picking was gonna make explosives?
Yeah, Like, yeah, there's a lot of like bad juju so to speak around Pickens because of how things ended in Pittsburgh.
But the guy's always been really really talented.
Yeah, so yeah, I mean, Dak is really good.
Pickens is really good.
The Packers walked out of there with the tie, and as I also said an insider inbox, they're going to go back to Lambeufield here after the bye.
The Packers still have yet to lose at Lambefield.
And I know what you wrote an inbox and what you said during final thoughts last week.
You want to split on the road.
It's gonna get really weird now with being zero one and one on the road.
But that being said, one of the arguments I made the Los Angeles Chargers did a cross country flight to New York against the Giants team that last week I said was ill advised in starting Jackson Dark.
Speaker 2Three and o versus zero and three and welcome, Welcome to the NFL.
Speaker 1It's very hard to win on the road, so it's not an excuse.
I understand the frustration.
Fortunately, the Packers are two to one and one here going into the by and are the one think green Bay has to do coming out of it.
They have to be more consistent, for sure.
Everybody agrees with that.
Yes, they also need to get incredibly more healthy.
It's wild what happened in this game really for both offensive lines being down a lot of their preferred starters.
Green Bay's got work to do.
Yeah, that's the more of the story.
Speaker 2One last thing I want to say before we pay some bills.
We mentioned Brandon McManus.
Obviously the two clutch kicks that stave off defeat.
He was also making tackles on kickoffs.
I thought Brandon McManus played a whale of a football game.
The blocked extra point was not his fault.
The Packers actually changed multiple personnel on the right side of the field goal protection unit after the pat was blocked.
And when McManus is making tackles on kickoffs, the Packers have a lot to figure out and sort out on special teams.
That's got to get sorted out.
But I just wanted to give a tip of the Captain McManus because that was a whale of a game from a kicker and the Packers are lucky to have him.
But right now I do need to turn it over to a word from our sponsors.
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Welcome back to Packers Unscripted West.
Last thing before we go a quick look at where things stand in the NFC North.
The Detroit Lions at three and one, sitting back on top where they've been the last couple of years.
The Packers right behind at two to one and one, Minnesota and Chicago both two and two, both getting to two and two in very different ways.
The Vikings losing across the pond in Ireland to the Steelers, a comeback attempt at the end that comes up short, and the Bears get a block field goal on the final play in Las Vegas to hang on and beat the Raiders.
So the Bears have wiped out their zero and two start, the Packers have almost wiped out their two and oh start.
Although two to one and one is certainly better than two and two, and everybody's chasing the Detroit Lions again, we're right back where we've been the last couple seasons.
Speaker 1Yeah, it was really funny to watch how this thing played out.
Now.
By the way I was mentioning our last segment, the difference between playing home and away, I thought you saw that with Detroit being inside Ford Field, Cleveland trying to go in there and doing what they did and obviously having a much different result than what happened against Green Bay.
I give a lot of credit to Minnesota.
They kept their head in it, they tried to make some plays.
I thought Pittsburgh had a really good plan for justin Jefferson allowed them to build that pushing that under.
They ultimately ended up needing.
I was a little bit flabbergasted by how Mike Tomlin and the Steelers handled those last five minutes of the game.
Speaker 2Yeah, that was a little rough, but.
Speaker 1That being said, they did find a way to pull it out.
Minnesota falls to two and two.
Uh.
My other takeaway from the Bears game, Ashton Genty is very very real.
I there's a part of me that wonders with Steve Carroll, with Pete Carroll.
Excuse me, almost said Steve Carrell.
It's been a long week.
Speaker 2Steve Carroll, A guy named Steve Carroll was actually one of my college baseball teammates.
Speaker 1By the way, that's a whole that what position?
Speaker 2First base?
Speaker 1Nice power hitter, Yes, actually big gotta have your power on the corners.
Speaker 2Big guy Rote wrote his honors thesis on the economics of baseball, and I proofread it for him.
But anyway, that's cool.
There we go.
I hope you gotten a Sorry you just mentioned name like Steve Carroll and all these men come back.
Steve, I have no idea if you're out there and listening to this, but anyway, you just got You just got your moment in the sun and backers scripts scripted my old my old teammate and economics major.
Anyway.
Speaker 1But but my point I was going to try to make before I ended up watching.
You know, one of the most longest tenured head coaches in the National Football League is the fact that correct, you know, Carrol's offenses when they have been most successful in Seattle always had that type of back.
Yeah, it was the offense was built around him.
I think Gent can be that guy.
But but to the Bears credit, man, they found a way to win that football game, even though it was a road game.
As you mentioned, there's still a lot of Bears fans there.
But at the end of the day, you have to be able to pull those out.
It's going to be competitive, man.
I said it the day after the Packers beat the Lions.
I mean, the Lions are not going anywhere, no, And it's a good thing Green Bay picked up that win, because if you don't do that there the Lions would be sitting and undefeated here at the quarter pole.
Speaker 2Yeah, and for all of the hair pulling and everything else that's going on, you know, there are thirteen games left in this thing.
The Packers have played exactly one Division game and they got a win in that one Division game.
There are five to vision games left.
Those are going to be obviously of heightened importance as they as they always are.
But this is going to be a long, tough slog in the NFC North.
I think there are a lot of good teams in this mix again, just as there were last year, and there's it's going to be a long time in my opinion before this gets sorted out.
Speaker 1And you got to win the games that are in front of you.
Man.
Baltimore Ravens right now are one and three in the season, Kansas City's two and two, and only one of those teams is going to be able to get the two in the win column out of that matchup.
It is, as I've said time and time again, it is difficult to win in this league.
And you know, records are not created equal.
I mean there was that one statistic too.
If Spencer Rattlers still has not won an NFL game.
I think he's zero to ten now as a starting quarterback.
The Washington Commanders were flying high, and then Jaden Daniels gets hurt, and now Atlanta, who couldn't move the ball on anybody, ends up having a really strong offensive performance.
Drake London finally has a big game for that offense.
Speaker 2So yeah, if you think the Packers have been a little bit of jecky and hide here in the first month of the regular season, look at what's been going on around the league with whether you're talking about the Falcons or the Panthers or even the Buccaneers to a certain extent.
Who you know, they're pulling out all these last second victories in the first three weeks, but then you know they run into Philadelphia and now the Eagles are sitting there at four and oh.
Speaker 1And to be fair, I mean, this is what good teams do, though, right, Buffalo's four and oh, the Eagles are four and oh.
When you are a front runner, when you are a contender, you are consistent.
That is the translation.
Everybody can do it at a high level from the most cases in this league, it's who does it in all three phases on the most consistent basis.
That's what the biggest learning lesson has to be for green Bay out of this first month of the year.
This team can compete with anybody.
They have the talent to win a super Bowl this season, but doing it down in, down out, eliminating the mistakes, protecting the football and taking it away.
Yeah, as I look at this team going into October, that's where green Bay needs to improve.
Speaker 2YEA.
Can they reach a level at which they can sustain their level of play on a consistent basis over the course of time.
Not that you're not going to have some ups and downs, but the ups and downs through the first four weeks have been a little bit.
It's been too much of a swing back and forth, and the Packers need to get to a certain level and even that out, and then I think they can put together the season they're looking for.
Speaker 1And that's the most exciting thing.
Offensively, they have the firepower to put up points like they did against Dallas.
Defensively, they have the assets there to shut down a team like Detroit.
Just getting it all to converge at the same moment.
Speaker 2Absolutely.
With that, we'll call it a rap on this edition of Packers unscripted and because it is the bye week, this is our only show this week, so we went a little bit long.
Hopefully we made up for it a little bit.
We will be back next week when the Packers are back preparing for the Cincinnati Bengals.
So for Wes, I am Mike, thank you for tuning in everybody, and we will see you next time.