Shanghaied in Seattle – Packers News @ PFT

[mm-insert-title before=’

‘ after=’

‘]

Green Bay loses game, NFL loses credibility amid replacement fiasco

GREEN BAY – The shield is tarnished; the brand is diluted.
The National Football League is a defective product so long as it allows unqualified officials to oversee its billion-dollar industry. The league’s “Buyer Beware” attitude toward its fans is beyond thankless.
It is heartless.
Sadly, the saddest chapter in this sorry affair is still to be written unless – and it’s a big unless – the NFL decides to do the right thing and bring back the regular referees. To do anything else is to guarantee that the Seahawks’ 14-12 victory over the Packers on Monday night is merely the latest step down the path of officiating ineptitude.
While Patriots’ fans undoubtedly wish the uprights could be raised, Packers’ fans have no doubt the crossbar has been lowered.
Football’s beauty is its sense of fair play. The better team (almost always) wins because football is the ultimate team game. It is intended to be a pretty simple deal. It’s 11-on-11; it’s 10 yards for a first down; it’s six points for a touchdown.
It isn’t supposed to be 3 yards and a cloud of disgust.
It is supposed to be fun.
There was nothing fun about the Packers’ alleged loss at Seattle, or the tragic comedy of replacement referee errors that occurred along the way.
Packers’ linebacker Erik Walden’s penalty for “roughing the passer” stood as the game’s poorest call, but only briefly, because it was quickly superseded by cornerback Sam Shield’s “pass interference” penalty.
A correct call in either case would have assured a Packers’ victory.
Instead, the Packers got “Strike one!” followed by “Strike two!” before being floored with “Strike three!”
Seahawks’ receiver Golden Tate didn’t catch the football for a game-clinching touchdown at the end. Tate caught the Packers’ M.D. Jennings, who had two hands on the football for a game-winning interception. This wasn’t dual possession. It was game over.
What should have happened is this: The officials involved should meet with the referee, discuss what they saw, and get together on the call. It would have resulted in a touchback, which would have been upheld.
Instead, one of the officials hastily signaled “touchdown” despite having the poorer of the two viewpoints. At that instant, the NFL’s credibility took a blow to the gut, the Packers lost a game they should have won, and more than $150 million changed hands in Las Vegas.
It is time for Green Bay Packers fans to take a stand.
In the name of Lombardi, the Packers’ owners/shareholders should call upon the NFL’s other owners to do the right thing. Last night’s game should be viewed as an opportunity to let the league know that its fans – especially its fans in Green Bay – aren’t going to take it lying down.
Why does Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones have a say in the league’s negotiations with the referees, but the Packers’ shareholders do not? If the Cowboys got jobbed the way the Packers did on Monday night – and it still could happen – do you think Jones would go quietly?
The Packers’ fans need to say, “Enough is enough.”
The shield needs to be polished; the brand needs to be strengthened.
It is time for the NFL to fairly and effectively negotiate with the regular referees and dispense with the lockout. The league can chalk it up to the cost of doing business, and then it can tell fans, “We did it for you.”
It’s the NFL’s story. It can spin it however it wants, so long as it spins it with the regular referees moving forward.
Last week’s prediction: Packers 27, Seahawks 24 (Seattle 14-12)
Season: 1-2
This week’s prediction: Packers 35, Saints 24 (replacement refs nothwithstanding)
Chris Havel is a Packers News expert and national best-selling author. His latest book is Lombardi: An Illustrated Life. Havel can be heard Monday through Friday from 4-6 p.m. CDT on WDUZ FM 107.5 The Fan, or on AM-1400, as well as Fan Internet Radio (www.thefan1075.com). Havel also hosts Event USA’ Player Autograph Parties the evening before home games.

Grantland: The Straw That Broke the NFL's Back

[mm-insert-title before=’

‘ after=’

‘] Bill Barnwell at Grantland has an excellent piece on not just the Packers loss last night, but the replacement referees in general:

It’s that aspect of replacement referee performance that’s really come to surprise me over the first three weeks of the season. To be honest, it’s not exactly unexpected that the officials would screw up on judgment calls like pass interference or, say, simultaneous possession on a catch. They’ve been worse there than I expected, but that was always going to be the aspect of their performance where their lack of experience would stand out.
Instead, the officials have shown an incredible propensity for getting simple facts wrong. They mis-spot balls on the wrong side of the field. They forget to keep accurate track of how many timeouts each team has. They call for fumbles on plays in which a guy’s entire body was down on the ground and then whistle plays dead on clean strips. They incorrectly award touchdowns and interpret pylon rules on plays that are directly in front of them. It’s a miracle that we don’t see more accidental “12 men on the field” penalties, because it seems generous to assume they can count all the way up to 12. And for all the exposition of an Ed Hochuli, who doesn’t long for the days of detailed minutiae when the replacement refs announce a mysterious penalty or review reversal, don’t explain what happened or who was involved, and then bounce back onto the field to renew the game? It’s telling that, at the end of the Patriots-Ravens game, a reasonably large portion of independent observers assumed that the referees standing directly underneath the goal post weren’t qualified to judge the one thing they were supposed to be judging.

At this point, it’s become time for the league to put its tail between its legs, apologize profusely, and ask the locked-out referees to come back under a deal of the NFLRA’s choosing. There’s no reason the referees should accept the same terms they would have offered two weeks ago; after a weekend dominated by the replacements, the real referees have more leverage than they had even a week ago. In fact, the only reason the league might want to push an agreement back further is that they have no leverage whatsoever. It’s hard to imagine the replacements being quite as noticeably bad as they were this week.

The whole article can be found here and is well worth the read.
[source]

Grab a Skybox for Jaguars at Pack – Bring Aaron Rodgers Home!

[mm-insert-title before=’

‘ after=’

‘] For a limited time only, when you purchase a Jaguars vs. Packers private suite, Event USA is going to hook you up with some awesome extras including!


Private Suites at Lambeau Field
Private Suites at Lambeau Field
Private Suites at Lambeau Field
[custom_list style=”list-1″] [/custom_list]

Pricing


Call us at 920.PACKERS (722.5377) today to secure your suite!
Private Suites available for ALL Packers home games! Click here for more information!

Masthay gets rewarded for TD Pass

[mm-insert-title before=’

‘ after=’

‘] Packers punter Tim Masthay has been named the NFC Special Teams Player of the Week in each of the last two seasons because of the way he kicks the ball.
The NFL announced that he’s being honored for the third time in as many years this week, but his kicking has nothing to do with it. Masthay’s most notable moment of Green Bay’s 23-10 win over the Bears last Thursday night came via his arm.
With the Packers leading 3-0, Green Bay faced a fourth-and-26 situation at the Chicago 27-yard line in the second quarter. The Packers lined up for a field goal but executed a fake. Masthay, who holds for kicker Mason Crosby, threw a 27-yard touchdown pass to tight end Tom Crabtree, opening up a bigger lead for Green Bay and sending them on their way to their first victory of the season.
Masthay is the first Packers punter to throw a touchdown pass since 1972. He also punted five times with a net average of 42 yards and, most importantly when playing the Bears, no touchdowns for Devin Hester. He is the first punter in league history to be named his conference’s Special Teams Player of the Week in each of his first three seasons.
[Source] – by Josh Alper, ProFootBallTalk.com

Great Deals for Packers vs. Saints this September still available!

[mm-insert-title before=’

‘ after=’

‘] Event USA has plenty of great deals still available to get you and your team to this huge NFC North battle to close out September at Lambeau Field! PFT has options for all budgets including:
[custom_list style=”list-1″]

[/custom_list] And don’t forget, Event USA is your home for all things Packers in 2012 – whether you’ve got a group of 5 or 500, get to the game with Event USA!

Point/Counterpoint: Should the Packers deal Greg Jennings?

[mm-insert-title before=’

‘ after=’

‘] Trent Stutzman of Bleacher Report and Bob McGinn of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel engage in a bit of debate as to what options the Packers have when it comes to free agent wide receiver Greg Jennings.
McGinn, in his piece at the Journal Sentinel, argues keeping Jennings would be a “quick fix” and hamstring the organization down the line:

If Jennings is 1-a on their depth chart, then Jordy Nelson is 1-b. Twelve months ago, Ball got Nelson signed to a three-year extension averaging $4.2 million. As unassuming as Nelson might be, no team can have one veteran of comparable value making three times another veteran at the same position.
If the Packers did re-sign Jennings for, say, $13 million per year, the end result probably would be the sacrificing of a good younger player in free agency.
Clay Matthews and B.J. Raji, both 26, will be up after the 2013 season. The Packers would like to extend them during the next off-season as well as Aaron Rodgers, whose deal expires in March 2015.

Another reason the Packers can’t go all in on Jennings is their abundance at wide receiver.
Sure, they could place the franchise-player tag on Jennings in March, but the cap charge for that would be about $10 million and would do nothing to ease the logjam at the position and at the negotiating table.

Over at Bleacher Report, Stutzman, seems to think the Packers could get far less for Jennings than would make any deal worthwhile:

It’s going to be nearly impossible to keep all four of those core players and Jennings at their market values. If any of them should be left out, it would be Jennings, given the Packers’ depth at wide receiver.
But would a trade really be worth it? I say no.
Should Thompson trade Jennings this year, what would Green Bay get in return? Player-for-player trades are almost nonexistent in today’s NFL, so count out the return of a veteran player to immediately fix an area of weakness.
A much more likely scenario would involve a couple draft picks. McGinn points out that Brandon Marshall was traded for two third-rounders this offseason and for two second-rounders in 2010.
Jennings is a better receiver than Marshall, but not by a lot. So it looks as though the Packers would likely receive maybe two seconds and a third, or something in that ballpark. They may even pick up a first-rounder, but I wouldn’t count on it.
Should the Packers let Jennings walk, they would be rewarded with a compensatory pick the following year. The top compensatories are usually handed out at the end of the third round. The difference in compensation for Jennings is larger in a trade scenario, but not significantly.
Green Bay might as well stick it out for the rest of this year and hope Jennings can contribute to another Super Bowl-winning run.

So what does Packer Nation think? Check out both articles – then hit our Twitter, Facebook, Google Plus, or Pinterest accounts with your thoughts!

Green Bay Gets Even – Packers News @ PFT

[mm-insert-title before=’

‘ after=’

‘]

Packers overwhelm Bears’ inept O-line as McCarthy shines

GREEN BAY – The Green Bay Packers’ 23-10 victory over Chicago last Thursday night at Lambeau Field should carry the warning label: Revisionist history can be dangerous to an NFL team’s health.
The Packers’ performance was gritty and timely, but it wasn’t the overpowering, start-to-finish dominance that some in the media have suggested in its aftermath.
The Packers did what good NFL teams do. They took advantage of the Bears’ weakest link – their offensive line – and backed it up with smart, hard-hitting football in all three phases.
To take Green Bay’s win and spin it into a “Packers’ defense is back” storyline is a fairy tale. Defensive coordinator Dom Capers’ unit displayed progress, and seven sacks and four interceptions can’t be taken lightly, but this isn’t Green Bay’s defense of 2010.
Not yet. Not by a long shot. Capers still is trying to find the right pieces to fill in the puzzle. Much work remains.
However, the outcome is an indication that Green Bay isn’t a one-trick pony. Victory is still attainable even when the offense is less than magical, and even when Aaron Rodgers is less than perfect.
That was the point Packers’ coach Mike McCarthy hammered home by trying a fake field goal. McCarthy wanted to jolt his team into the present by forcing it to stop waiting for the offense to carry the day. Specifically, he wanted his team to quit waiting for last year’s offense to gallop out of the tunnel and save the day.
The fact that McCarthy’s call resulted in an unlikely Tim Masthay-to-Tom Crabtree 27-yard touchdown pass was a bonus. The perfectly executed fake on fourth-and-26 with less than two minutes in the first half shook up the Bears.
More important, it woke up the Packers.
“I was trying to send our team a message when I did call it,” McCarthy said. “And, frankly, I would have been fine with the field position.”
To paraphrase the coach: Don’t ask what your offense can do for you. Ask what you can do for your offense.
McCarthy’s fake field goal wasn’t gutsy in and of itself. The risk was minimal thanks to the Bears’ inept offensive line. McCarthy suspected he had the luxury of “going for it” because the Bears’ offensive line showed no signs of slowing down Clay Matthews and the pass rush.
McCarthy’s decision was an example of his growth as a head coach.
Within the flow of a nationally televised game, and despite the pressure of being 0-1 coming in, he shrewdly seized upon a teaching moment.
Essentially, McCarthy traded three points for the chance to make a point.
Instead of being sidetracked and frustrated by his own offense’s ongoing struggles, and settling for a 44-yard field goal attempt, he disdained the “our offense will get ‘em next possession” mentality.
In a single play call, McCarthy displayed trust in his defense, belief in his special teams and patience with his offense.
The Packers must continue to profit from the lesson.
If the Packers feel any inclination to get fat and sassy after embarrassing the Bears, they should remember two things.
First, the Bears’ offensive line is a shambles. Matthews was unstoppable at times, to be sure, but Bears’ left tackle J’Marcus Webb and Co. was offering less resistance than a turnstile.
That fact, coupled with the Packers’ ability to know how to play with a lead, effectively doomed the Bears.
Second, the Seattle Seahawks’ offensive line isn’t to be confused with the Chicago Bears’ sieve. The Seahawks dismantled Dallas, 27-7, in Seattle on Sunday in a game that wasn’t that close.
Seahawks’ running back Marshawn Lynch tore up the Cowboys’ defense to the tune of 122 yards in 26 carries. Russell Wilson chimed in by completing a highly efficient 15 of 20 passes for 151 yards, one touchdown and a 112.7 quarterback rating.
At this stage of the season, the Seahawks aren’t nearly as explosive as Green Bay, but they are a more complete team. That makes them dangerous, especially at home.
Meantime, McCarthy is working to get the Packers pulling together in all three phases. It is necessary if the Packers are going to truly challenge for the NFC title.
If Green Bay goes to Seattle and wins Monday night it will be McCarthy – as much as anyone – who deserves the game ball. Not for what he might do in Seattle, but because of what he did against the Bears.
Last week’s prediction: Packers 24, Bears 21 (Packers 23-10)
Season: 1-1
This week’s prediction: Packers 27, Seahawks 23
Chris Havel is a Packers News expert and national best-selling author. His latest book is Lombardi: An Illustrated Life. Havel can be heard Monday through Friday from 4-6 p.m. CDT on WDUZ FM 107.5 The Fan, or on AM-1400, as well as Fan Internet Radio (www.thefan1075.com). Havel also hosts Event USA’ Player Autograph Parties the evening before home games.

ProFootBallTalk: Reaction to Rodgers underscores his difference from Cutler

[mm-insert-title before=’

‘ after=’

‘] Interesting analysis of different reactions to the same behavior, as seen in Green Bay on Thursday night:

Bears Jay Cutler caught plenty of heat Friday after bumping left tackle J’Marcus Webb and swearing at him on the field for a bad play.
But in the same game, Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers showed some frustration with wide receiver James Jones, when a miscommunication led to an interception.
“I was expecting him to come out flat,” Rodgers said after the game, via Rob Demovsky of the Green Bay Press-Gazette. “He started out flat and then kind of took it up. That’s about as frustrating as it gets right there.”
Granted, Jones made a mental mistake, while Webb was simply beaten. That gives Rodgers more latitude. A quarterback needs to trust his guys to be in the right place at the right time, but he can’t assume they always win one-on-one battles.
Packers coach Mike McCarthy said he didn’t think the exchange between quarterback and receiver had any malicious intent.
“There’s a line between playing with a lot of emotion and being disrespectful, and sometimes it looks the same,” McCarthy said. “I think that’s the reality of that particular situation. He’s not trying to disrespect James Jones by no means. He’s competing. He’s extremely competitive, and they talked about it immediately on the sidelines. I think that’s the case.”
The difference in the reactions to Cutler and Rodgers is based primarily on the difference in their careers.
Rodgers has won something, which goes a long way. But he also doesn’t have a track record of churlish behavior.
So it becomes constructive criticism when he does it, and not the kind of thing to dominate conversation for days at a time.

[Source] – by Darin Gantt

Packers vs. Bears Recap 09/13/12: Matthews Leads the Charge!

[mm-insert-title before=’

‘ after=’

‘] Green Bay – Dom Capers’ defense lives. The Green Bay Packers are alive and well, too.
Led by Clay Matthews, the irrepressible and almost unblockable linebacker, the Packers’ defense buried Jay Cutler under an avalanche of seven sacks in a badly needed 23-10 victory over the Chicago Bears on Thursday night at Lambeau Field.
Matthews sacked Cutler 3½ times in a virtuoso performance befitting one of the National Football League’s premier defensive players. The Bears couldn’t cope with the hard-charging Matthews despite giving considerable help to overmatched left tackle J’Marcus Webb.
Under heavy pressure right from the start, Cutler had his third nightmarish performance in as many appearances in Green Bay. The Bears finished with 168 yards (2.9 per play) and Cutler’s pass rating was 28.2.
“This was an old-school, Black and Blue division game,” Packers general manager Ted Thompson said. “Typical Green Bay-Chicago game.
“You never know what you’re going to get in this league. But you go back and look at the scores in the (series), there were a lot of 10-3, 13-6 games.”
Four days removed from a sobering defeat against San Francisco, the Packers clearly didn’t want to start 0-2. Seventeen times in the previous 91 seasons the Packers had lost their first two games, and none of those teams qualified for the playoffs.
Coach Mike McCarthy extended his hot streak against the Bears to 7-1, whereas Bears coach Lovie Smith fell to 8-10 overall in the series by losing for the eighth time in his last 10 games. It was Chicago’s fifth straight loss in Green Bay.
It wasn’t only pass rush, however.
Capers devised a coverage scheme to halt newcomer Brandon Marshall, billed as the finest wide receiver for the Bears in decades. Tramon Williams shadowed Marshall in most situations, and safety Morgan Burnett clouded over the top.
Marshall was a non-factor, catching two passes for 24 yards and dropping a certain touchdown pass.
“We’re known for offense but, frankly, I’d rather be known for defense,” said McCarthy. “We feel like we’re building something special with that defense.
“I thought Clay was off the charts, just the energy and production he brought. That defense really flew around.
“Like all of us, we got kicked in the ass four days ago, and we were motivated as a team.”
Defense was the watchword in the first half. The Bears were limited to 47 yards and four first downs, and Cutler compiled a passer rating of 16.7.
“Both teams were really getting really good pressure,” Thompson said. “We got off the field. We put pressure on the quarterback. We controlled the run.”
Matthews was all over the field in the first half with 1½ sacks, two quarterback hits and a batted pass. He beat Webb around the corner for one sack, then was credited with one-half after beating left guard Tim Spencer inside.
The first quarter was scoreless, and the only penetration by either team across the 50 was by Green Bay. The Packers had a first down at the Chicago 33, but rookie defensive end Shea McClellin beat Marshall Newhouse outside to set up a sack and then Aaron Rodgers had the ball slip from his hands on an aborted third-down pass.
Green Bay drove 50 yards early in the second quarter and broke the ice on Mason Crosby’s 48-yard field goal. The key play was a challenge by the Packers that the Bears had 12 defenders on a third-and-3 incompletion. Rodgers gestured, and McCarthy threw the red flag.
When the challenge was upheld, the Packers had their field goal. “Looked like it was Aaron’s call all the way,” Thompson said.
The Bears reached the Green Bay 37 in the second quarter before tackle Gabe Carimi was penalized for unnecessary roughness after he shoved A.J. Hawk and they had to punt.
Rodgers completed a pair of first-down passes. Then, on third and 3, he lateraled the ball alongside him to receiver Randall Cobb, who eluded safety Chris Conte and raced for 28 yards.
“It was a toss to the open side,” said Thompson. “Get him in space and see what happens. He made a nice move and the guy missed the tackle.”
Julius Peppers sacked Rodgers for minus-7 on first down after beating Newhouse wide. Then Bryan Bulaga failed to pick up defensive tackle Henry Melton on a stunt and Rodgers went down again.
After a third-down pass fell incomplete, Crosby lined up for a field-goal try of 45 yards. The snap went to Tim Masthay, and Crosby veered hard left. As he did so, Tom Crabtree moved across the formation from left to right.
From a kneeling position, Masthay made a back-handed flip to Crabtree, who surged into the clear off the right side and scored easily for a 10-0 lead.
“We got a ‘gotcha’ play there,” Thompson said. “That happens sometimes.”
Three plays later, Cutler matched Matt Forte against D.J. Smith and he beat him inside for 22. The only other substantial play by the Bears in the first half was a 24-yard pass-interference penalty on Smith as he tried to defend a seam route to tight end Kellen Davis.
Cutler then threw into traffic inside and Tramon Williams intercepted. It led to Crosby’s 35-yard field goal as time expired in the first half.
The Bears drove 53 yards to open the third quarter, finally scoring on Robbie Gould’s 45-yard field goal to make it 13-3. On the previous play, Cutler threw for the first time to Marshall, who was open in the end-zone corner but dropped the ball.
Erik Walden cut Cutler’s legs out from underneath him just as he released a pass that was intercepted by Charles Woodson. But Bears cornerback Charles Tillman not only forced Jermichael Finley to fumble but also recovered it to end the threat.
When fullback John Kuhn followed Cedric Benson in failing to convert on third and 1, Crosby kicked a 54-yard field goal for a 16-3 lead. It broke by a yard the longest ever booted by a Packer at Lambeau Field.
Now obviously frustrated, Cutler fired deep even though it was obvious that Williams and Morgan Burnett had Marshall bracketed. The interception was made by Williams, who returned 38 yards.
On the next play, Rodgers looked off safety Major Wright and came back to a wide-open Donald Driver between the hash marks for a 26-yard touchdown and 23-3 advantage.
Davis beat Smith up the seam for a 21-yard touchdown pass for the final margin. It was preceded by Tim Jennings’ sideline interception on what looked like an indecisive route by James Jones.
By Bob McGinn, JSOnline.com[source]

Update: Mariucci Player Reception Photos and Lambeau Leap!

[mm-insert-title before=’

‘ after=’

‘] Check out the video of Coach Mariucci’s Lambeau Leap at NFL.com!
After a wonderful night with our very special guest Coach Mariucci, we’ve got TONS of Packers Player Autograph Reception photos to go through!
The first batch is up now and available by clicking here and heading to our Picasa account, or enjoy a sampling of last nights photos below!
The rest are uploading as we speak – and we’ll have the whole set up by the end of the afternoon!

[pwaplusphp album=”PackersBearsReception”]