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Packers Fall To Giants 37-20: Green Bay Done In By Mistakes

Packers Giants

NANCY ARMOUR   01/15/12 10:04 PM ET   AP

GREEN BAY, Wis. — Booed off the field at halftime by their own fans, the collapse of the once-perfect Green Bay Packers was as swift as it was complete.

The defending Super Bowl champions bumbled their way through Sunday's 37-20 playoff loss to New York with turnovers and drops, letting Eli Manning and the Giants rule every inch of Lambeau Field. Whether it was the bye last weekend or the shocking death of offensive coordinator Joe Philbin's 21-year-old son days earlier, the Packers were sloppy and sluggish.

"We play to win championships. You win a championship and you're kind of at the top of the mountain, and you forget kind of how bad this feeling is," Aaron Rodgers said. "We had a championship-caliber regular season and didn't play well today."

And all talk about Rodgers having one of the finest seasons in NFL history? Check with Manning on that. He's the one getting it done in the postseason.

The Giants now face the San Francisco 49ers in the NFC championship next Sunday night. The Packers, meanwhile, will be cleaning out their lockers for an offseason that came unexpectedly early. As the final seconds ticked down, Lambeau was silent except for chants of "Let's Go, Giants!" from the smattering of New York fans in the crowd.

"It's very disappointing. It's a locker room that expected a lot more, and rightfully so," Packers coach Mike McCarthy said. "It was an excellent regular season. But we clearly understand in Green Bay it's about winning championships. Just going to the playoffs is not enough."

The Packers have no one to blame but themselves for the dismal finish to a season that started with such promise.

Green Bay won its first 13 games, extending the winning streak that carried the Packers to their fourth Super Bowl title to 19 games, second-best in NFL history. Rodgers and the high-powered offense were piling up points by the bunches, more than enough to bail out the shaky defense, and the Packers seemed on their way to another Super Bowl.

But the defense, maligned all season for its penchant for giving up big plays, was even worse than advertised. It was powerless to stop Manning, who threw for 330 yards and three touchdowns and coolly moved the Giants down the field drive after drive. Hakeem Nicks made the secondary look downright silly with 165 yards receiving and two touchdowns, the second of which he plucked out of the air above a scrum of Green Bay defenders just before halftime, prompting Packer fans to boo as their team trotted of the field.

"It's about big-play opportunities in big games. And that was a big play obviously for the Giants," McCarthy said. "It was a 10-point game at halftime, and we had the ball coming out. It was a big momentum play for them, but we were not deflated as a football team."

And as was the case other times this season, the defensive players didn't seem to be operating from the same playbook. On one play, defensive captain Charles Woodson was still talking to another defensive back when the Giants snapped the ball. Woodson wound up covering the wrong receiver and the dangerous Victor Cruz was left wide open.

"Anything that you've seen through the regular season happened to us today: missed tackles, assignments, not getting to the quarterback," Woodson said.

The Green Bay offense has usually been potent enough to make up for the defense's shortcomings, scoring a franchise-record 560 points during the regular season. The offense had additional motivation, too, wanting to win for Philbin, who was away from the team all week to mourn the death of his son Michael. Michael Philbin's body was recovered from an icy river in Oshkosh on Monday; a preliminary autopsy found that he drowned.

"A lot of us wanted to get this one for him, give some happiness to him and his family during a tough week," said Rodgers, one of many players who went to Michael Philbin's wake and funeral.

But the offense wasn't much better than the defense. The Packers lost three fumbles and the receivers may as well have had rubber on the tips of their fingers for as many balls as they dropped. Jermichael Finley dropped one. James Starks dropped another. Tom Crabtree watched one bounce off his fingers. Despite having their regular starting offensive line in place for the one of the few times this season, Rodgers was sacked four times.

"I felt we had pretty good rhythm. We moved the ball pretty effectively," Rodgers said. "We just had some drops and then had some uncharacteristic turnovers."

It wasn't Rodgers' best game, either. He overthrew an open Jennings in the end zone on the very first drive, and lost his first fumble in a year when he was sacked in the third quarter by Osi Umenyiora. With the Giants secondary smothering the receivers as few defenses have this year, Rodgers was often forced to scramble or dump off for short gains. He finished with a team-high 66 yards on seven rushes, but was 26 of 46 passing and his quarterback rating of 78.5 was well off his 122.5 for the regular-season, an NFL record.

"If nobody's open, I'm going to try and extend the play. For whatever reason, that happened more than usual tonight," Rodgers said. "I tried to make the most of it, I ran for a few first downs. It's not something I was thinking was going to happen maybe as much going into the game, but their high volume of man coverage kind of dictated it."

The Packers did put together a nice drive in the third quarter, as Rodgers connected with Donald Driver for a 13-yard catch and Starks on a 12-yard reception as Green Bay marched to the Giants 17. But he failed to connect with Jennings in the end zone again, and the Packers had to settle for a field goal when they really needed a touchdown.

"We got beat by a team that played better," Rodgers said. "That's the reality of this league. (I've) been in the playoffs four times, and three times you lose your last game and you go home, and the one time you have that euphoric feeling that you keep fighting for. It's tough. I didn't think it was going to end tonight."

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GREEN BAY, Wis. — Booed off the field at halftime by their own fans, the collapse of the once-perfect Green Bay Packers was as swift as it was complete. The defending Super Bowl champions bumbl...
GREEN BAY, Wis. — Booed off the field at halftime by their own fans, the collapse of the once-perfect Green Bay Packers was as swift as it was complete. The defending Super Bowl champions bumbl...
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11:18 AM on 01/16/2012
Green Bay was vastly over-rated and it was obvious from the first snap that it was a team with their bags packed to head to someplace warm after mailing in a performance of walking through the game. This team won't be back in the playoffs absent wholesale personnel changes
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10:45 AM on 01/16/2012
A team and a person can learn more and grow more from losing than from winning. The Packers had all year to work on their bad defense but they probably didn't because they were being carried by the offense and winning games. If you have the best record of any team for the 2011 -12 regular season where's your incentive to improve? Had the Packers lost a few more games somebody would have gone to work on the defensive issues and possibly made the Packers a better team.
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kapalabhati
Lokah Samasta Sukhino Bhavantu
06:39 AM on 01/16/2012
And 14 of the Pack's 20 were directly related to arguably the two worst calls this season.
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dvglass3
Right, Left....Wrong
09:21 AM on 01/16/2012
No joke, it was like the refs were trying to fix the spread or make it a better game. I hate games where the refs take over, it just kiils all the excitement. Well, no more Packer fan telling everybody how great they are, thanks NY!
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pezmusic
singer songwriter looks great in a cowboy hat
03:59 AM on 01/18/2012
their meeting was the same way.... TD called out bounds when it wasn't for giants and juggle catch was dropped was called a TD the packers....
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StephenJK
All your consciousness are belong to us
03:58 AM on 01/16/2012
It's really simple. The Giants put tremendous pressure on the entire offense of the Packers from BOTH sides of the ball tonight. Let's face it, when a defense is playing that well against your one-dimensional offense AND the Giant's offense is making big plays, it puts you in the pressure cooker. The Packers ran up the score on nearly every one of their opponents this year and were stopped twice in two losses. Their defense couldn't stop the big plays. Hakeem Nicks really exposed their secondary in a bad way. In a big game like that, you have to make plays on the ball. That hail mary at the end of the second quarter was exceptionally poor considering how long the ball was in the air and how predictable it was. Nicks found ways and had the huge night the G-Men needed from someone. MVP right there.
12:03 AM on 01/16/2012
In my 67 years, having watched the Packers play for over fifty of them, I have never seen a team with so much talent, at the very top of their game, sink to the very bottom so quickly. If this offends you Packers, then be offended. I could have caught some of the passes you dropped today, and I am older than your parents and have never played anything more than touch football. The defense never showed up tonight, and the only offense was Aaron Rodgers.
Apart from Rodgers, if I were the coach I would fine everybody every dime they made tonight and give it to the poor. I absolutely cannot believe that this is the same team of men who dazzled everyone with their incredible playoff run and Superbowl victory less than a year ago.
There was a saying back in Lombardi's day: "When the going gets tough, the tough get going." Tonight the legendary Packers did not get going; they disappeared. And sadly, they still get paid even when they don't perform. Not like the real world their fans have to endure. If they had to live in our world, they would be fired and have to earn their money, maybe digging ditches for $10.00 per hour, or less, after such a display of ineptitude.
I am sure Lombardi would agree with me if he were here, but he would have been a lot harsher than I am.

Richard Mangan
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10:36 AM on 01/16/2012
"If they had to live in our world, they would be fired" In real life should people be fired for one lackluster. Football is just a game mister. In games as in the real workforce you can't be at 100%, 100% of the time.
11:18 PM on 01/15/2012
If your a fan to a team of choice you stand by them win or lose not boo them off the field!!
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kanook67
The future is not what it used to be.
07:53 AM on 01/16/2012
That was loud boo-hoos, not boos.
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10:50 AM on 01/16/2012
I agree. Talk about rubbing salt in the wound. I can't believe the Packers own fans booed them off their home field at half time! That's the act of a defeatist fan base.
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opprobrious
More speech. Less Flagging.
10:55 PM on 01/15/2012
Frankly, the offense played worse than the defense. The D actually kept the Packers well within reach for what their offense is normally capable of. I don't blame Rodgers (although he did miss a couple of wide open receivers for easy TD's). This was a group effort. The receivers dropped a lot of passes and killed a lot of drives and the turnovers did the rest. The play calling and time management was a bit bizarre as well. What was the need for an onside kick in the first half or the timeout that handed the Giants the opportunity to score at the end of the half? Oh well. What's done is done and I still love my Packers. There is always next year and I wish the Giants and their fans all the best next week. Bottom line is, your team won.
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fjg
a jolly good fellow
11:09 PM on 01/15/2012
A very disappointing end to the season. When the offense was not at its best (to say the least!), the defense failed to get off the field or get a turnover. The run prior to the Hail Mary was absolutely pathetic. How the excellent, aggressive defense of last year turned into this year's disaster is a mystery to me.

The team is still loaded with talent...the Giants were better today, but the Packers future is bright. The Pack will be back!
09:28 AM on 01/16/2012
I thought the Packers defense was extremely effective against the Giants' running game. The Giants only had two runs for long gains (one before the Hail Mary pass and one for the last touchdown), both on broken tackle second effort reverses of course, and I think an overwhelming number of their running plays were getting stopped or making only short yardage. I think the Giants only had one sack when it mattered, and other than the Umenyiora hit that got called for a penalty, their rush didnt get through and hit Rogers at all (Manning got roughed up a fair amount by the Packers' rush). The Giants pass coverage was probably better than most Giant fans expected.
09:33 PM on 01/15/2012
Mistakes don't magically materialize out of the air. The Giants played steady with a strong defense and forced some of those "mistakes." But if you want to talk about mistakes, the officials made two big ones: a Giant-recovered fumble that was ruled down by contact and a roughing the quarterback(helmet to helmet) call that had no helmet contact on the replay. Despite these blunders, the Giants kept their cool and won because they were the better team today.
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kapalabhati
Lokah Samasta Sukhino Bhavantu
06:40 AM on 01/16/2012
Well said, counselor.
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Wayne Peterson
09:14 PM on 01/15/2012
......I was unaware that the Packers were capable of playing so badly. I'm really good at dropping passes and if they hire me next year, I'll do it for only $1M per year, which will help their salary cap!
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BuckyJamesDio
This monkey's going to Heaven.
09:08 PM on 01/15/2012
Somewhere out there is a Fantasy player jumping up and down and quite possibly spilling his Dr. Pepper and making the neighbors wonder once again what all the shrieks from the basement are and if they should alert the authorities.