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Giants Beat Packers 37-20: Eli Manning, New York Eliminate Green Bay

Giants Packers

By NANCY ARMOUR   01/16/12 04:11 AM ET   AP

GREEN BAY, Wis. -- The Green Bay Packers walked off the field for the final time this season to a chorus of chants of "Let's Go, Giants!"

Hey, it was better than the boos they heard at halftime.

Fumbles, drops, missed assignments and blown coverages – Green Bay packed a year's worth of mistakes into a few hours Sunday, its dazzling season coming apart in a 37-20 loss to the New York Giants in the NFC divisional playoffs. Unbeatable only a month ago, Aaron Rodgers and the Packers had little response as Eli Manning and the Giants made themselves at home at Lambeau Field.

"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."

End, though, it did. Instead of rolling toward a second straight Super Bowl, the defending champs are clearing out their lockers and scattering for the offseason.

"No excuses," Packers coach Mike McCarthy said, refusing to blame the bye week or the heartache that followed the shocking death of offensive coordinator Joe Philbin's 21-year-old son. "There was nothing in preparation that had led me to believe this was going to occur."

Green Bay picked up right where it left off last season, winning its first 13 games to extend the streak that carried the Packers to their fourth Super Bowl title to 19 games, second-best in NFL history. The high-powered offense piled up points with a team-record 560, and Rodgers played so well that conversations about the league's best quarterbacks could no longer start with Tom Brady and end with Peyton Manning.

But the defense was shaky, maligned all season for its penchant for giving up big plays, and its weaknesses were on full display against the Giants.

The Packers were 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.

"It's a hard play to swallow, a play that shouldn't happen," Charles Woodson said. "The defense has to slow those guys coming off the ball, so that they're not running down the field free with an opportunity to get a steal. That play shouldn't have happened."

As was the case other times this season, though, the defensive players didn't seem to be operating from the same playbook. On one play, 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.

But in the regular season, the offense was always there to bail the Packers out. This time, they were every bit as much of a problem.

The Packers had hoped to win the game 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. "It didn't happen."

The Packers lost three fumbles and the normally sure-handed 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. John Kuhn 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.

"We hurt ourselves," receiver Jordy Nelson said. "Give New York credit for making those plays, but it wasn't up to our standards."

Even Rodgers had an off day. 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.

Rodgers finished with a team-high 66 yards on seven rushes, but was 26 of 46 passing. His quarterback rating of 78.5 was well off his 122.5 for the regular-season, an NFL record.

"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."

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.

Green Bay had one more scoring drive, capped by Driver's 16-yard catch with less than five minutes left. All that did was change the final score, however, not the outcome, and soon the Packers were trudging off the field as the Giants celebrated around them.

"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," Rodgers said. "We had a championship-caliber regular season and didn't play well today."

___

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GREEN BAY, Wis. -- The Green Bay Packers walked off the field for the final time this season to a chorus of chants of "Let's Go, Giants!" Hey, it was better than the boos they heard at halftime.
GREEN BAY, Wis. -- The Green Bay Packers walked off the field for the final time this season to a chorus of chants of "Let's Go, Giants!" Hey, it was better than the boos they heard at halftime.
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10:04 PM on 02/05/2012
I WAS RIGHT!! KISS MY BUTT ALL NON BELIEVERS!! BWAH HAH HAH!!!
05:56 PM on 01/30/2012
Oh Oh This is so funny!! The Giants play in New Jersey so they aren't going to be in the Super Bowl. Bwah hah hah!! What a bunch of IDIOTS!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheTightwireGuy
Attempting to balance reason and passion
05:35 PM on 01/19/2012
This may be old news but I just found this hilarious YouTube related to this story:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZjvXxwvg8mc

And if you follow the suggestion offered by MrMikejach in the Top Comments there...

1. Open up another YouTube tab.
2. Search Sad Violin
3. Play the 1st video along with this.

... I'm sure that most of you (except some, and perhaps many of my fellow Packers fans) will get a kick of doing so. And for your convenience, here is the "Sad Violin" video I found to do so:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gIuotFZnBtk

Cheers! And may the best team win in the upcoming playoff games!

The (hopeful for next year) Tightwire Guy
11:22 AM on 01/17/2012
Looking back now, I can see there was strategy involved with letting Rodgers run the ball. They, the Giants, never put a spy on him. They probably felt 8 yds/run was better than him completing 17 yd passes. It also says a lot about a patched up Giant secondary too.
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psychophil
Don't listen to me.
01:36 PM on 01/16/2012
The giants have gotten this far by taking advantage of one-dimensional teams. The falcons were too dependent on the run working, and the packers were too dependent on the pass. Rodgers made several big third down conversions, but he couldn't get it done every time, and the packers needed him to get it done every time because they have no run game and no defense.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Edogg62
12:26 PM on 01/16/2012
That non-call? The Jennings FUMBLE? That confirms one of two things for me... either the NFL tries to subtlely take things into their own hands when possible to determine outcomes... OR... the replay system is fatally flawed because when you overturn your OWN mistakes it makes you look bad. "Well boss... I screwed up, and I admit it." I think the latter... the talking heads like spouting all the stats on how many replay challenges DON'T change, but maybe they DON'T change because the refs don't want to look bad... either way... what a HORRIFIC non-call that was. And if you'll notice, NOWHERE on ESPN.com is there even a MENTION of it. Hmm...
01:25 PM on 01/16/2012
refs were absolutely horrible, I thought they were bought out
09:35 PM on 01/16/2012
Seriously, the refs were horrendous. What about that sack on Rodgers in 4th quarter where they called a personal foul on giants. That call was even worse than the fumble call. That was a perfectly clean sack. Funny thing is both of those bad calls were on plays that should have turned ovr the play but instead ended in GB td's. If not for those calls GB may have only had 6 points.
fscuttle
I'd kill for a Nobel Peace Prize
02:00 AM on 01/17/2012
That wasn't a ordinary bad call.. You could tell the announcers were very unnerved about it. The first ref called it a fumble on the field and then the head ref reversed the call on the field and then blew the replay. If he got to see the same footage at the same speed that we did then there is no other explanation he purposely called it wrong. So there are only 3 possible explanations. The league wanted him to do it or the Packers paid him off or he had money on Green Bay.
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Dak Broadbent
Part of happiness is knowing when not to care
10:23 AM on 01/16/2012
A 15 and 1 team that most people, including me, had going to the Super Bowl gets absolutely slammed in the playoffs. This is so funny I can't stop laughing. The number one rated team during the regular season were beaten by a pretty comfortable margin: seventeen points!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheTightwireGuy
Attempting to balance reason and passion
05:47 PM on 01/19/2012
Dak,

I am a Packers fan, and, after shedding some internal tears over this past weekend's loss (which is probably why it took me so long to bring myself to read this particular HuffPost article), I ran across this hilarious video mashup that I thought you might enjoy watching:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5cNYtAD65Z8

The (thankful he was too busy to watch most of that game) Tightwire Guy
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Dak Broadbent
Part of happiness is knowing when not to care
10:36 PM on 01/21/2012
I enjoyed that very much and I know a friend who will enjoy it as well. I know You'll feel much better about Rodgers after watching this.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E7_duxRMIh0
08:52 AM on 01/16/2012
Hakeem Nicks took a doody on the Packers in the playoffs! I haven't seen a performance like that since Plaxico Burress took a doody on the Packers in the playoffs!! Bwah hah hah!!
08:47 AM on 01/16/2012
The road to the Super Bowl goes through New York Baby. That game yesterday proves that you can have an awesome regular season, but if you don't ramp up your intensity when the playoffs come, your're outta there.
11:47 AM on 01/16/2012
Actually the road to the Super Bowl goes through New Jersey. Learn where the team is based, where the players live and where 85% of the fans are from.

New York New Shmork.
12:31 PM on 01/16/2012
Are you stupid?
12:33 PM on 01/16/2012
The bus driver to Stupidville is Danny Clem.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheTightwireGuy
Attempting to balance reason and passion
06:18 PM on 01/19/2012
charles,

Correction: The New York Football Giants may get to (and win) the Super Bowl, but like the team that won THIS particular Super Bowl...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Bowl_XLII

... this year's Giants' team has been and will be taking to other team's "house"s in their quest to get to this year's much anticipated Super Bowl showdown.

And if they do so, they will be reminiscent of this historical giant's "team" for its 5th-century "road show":

http://badassoftheweek.com/attila.html

With that said, I offer my humble chops to Giants fans for sticking with their team this year by offering up these links to YouTube videos posted by their football fandom brethren:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h8PpirBQPSo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5cNYtAD65Z8

The (reluctantly respectful to this year's New York Football Giants) Tightwire Guy