A 34-13 stomping of Indianapolis before their bye week had stood as the Packers' most impressive performance of the season.Until today.
Running back Ryan Grant had 100 yards by halftime, and Green Bay scored the final 30 points in a 37-3 thrashing of the Chicago Bears at Lambeau Field.
Last week, you may remember that it was Kerry Collins who chewed up the Bears' secondary. Tennessee just couldn't run the ball to save their lives, and Collins was able to make the Bears pay for their injury-depleted secondary.
Sunday, "conventional wisdom" dictated that the Packers would do the same thing. Aaron Rodgers is as close to healthy as he's been since hurting his shoulder, and the Packers have more-than-capable receivers in Greg Jennings and Donald Driver.
So they're throwing all day, right?
Wrong.
The Packers committed to the run game like they haven't for most of the season, allowing Grant to plow through the Bears' defense. He ran for 145 of Green Bay's 200 rushing yards, and he scored a key second-quarter touchdown that gave the Packers a double-digit lead before halftime.
Rodgers was solid, throwing for 223 yards and two scores. He recovered nicely from a bad interception he threw midway through the second quarter, and the maligned Packers' offensive line kept Rodgers clean throughout the game. No sacks, and not any moments of incredible pressure, either. The Bears were completely inept defensively.
They may have been worse than that offensively.
Held to nine first downs, the Bears picked up just 234 total yards, held the ball for 22:32, and never threatened to score after a first-quarter field goal by Robbie Gould. Kyle Orton was only sacked once, but he was pressured a lot, completed just 13 of 26 passes, and was never comfortable in the offense. Obviously, no one on the Bears will make any excuses for him, but it's hard to imagine he was anywhere near healthy.
Mason Crosby hit three field goals for Green Bay, including a 53-yarder late in the first half that tied his career-high, and the Packers never let Devin Hester going. They kicked the ball to him, but covered kicks marvelously.
The Packers recorded the most lopsided win since 1994 in the long rivalry with Chicago, when Green Bay won 40-3 at Lambeau Field.
If there was a negative, the Packers took 55 more penalty yards, and they killed a couple drives early in the game with penalties. If there are serious playoff hopes with this team, they're going to have to clean up their game. Too many false starts and other procedural penalties.
With the win, Green Bay improves to 5-5 and drop the Bears to 5-5. Thanks to Minnesota's loss to Tampa Bay, we now have a three-way tie for first in the NFC North. It's a mediocre division, but Green Bay showed today they are probably better than they have played.
The question is: Can the Packers sustain this momentum? They head to New Orleans next Monday night.





















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
11-16-2008 @ 5:04PM
dean said...
what a win for the Packers total domination on both sides of the ball lets keep it up Packers
Reply
11-17-2008 @ 9:19AM
Smita said...
Need to fire the Bears coach, Lovey Smith. The Bears need a new quaterback.
Reply
11-17-2008 @ 1:42AM
dan said...
Sweet win!
Go Pack, Go!
Reply
11-17-2008 @ 12:00PM
grumpa said...
I've been a lifelong Bears fan and have never wavered, but the coaching of this team is a flashback to the Gibron days of the 70's. And what the HELL happened to our vaunted ' Monsters of the Midway'??? We got by when we at least had a one dimensional team. The offense was non-existant but the defense picked up the slack. now we don't even have that! And to all the people who think Orton is the answer, what the hell is the question?
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11-17-2008 @ 9:39AM
Jay said...
The refereeing in this game was a joke. The fact that Green Bay had a league leading 12 offensive holding penalties and only one holding (on Green Bay) was called the whole game.
The apparent holding of Bears #21 Graham on a Ryan Grant run to the goal line. Graham's jersey was pulled over his shoulder on the replay. The Green Bay line got away with too many holds and it is no wonder the run game worked so well. The refs. have to get it right. Hester is called for an offensive pass interference due to the fact the Green Bay defense was allowed to lay on top of the Bears players the whole game. And Green Bay defenders are allowed to hug Hester on slant routes. Get it right. Also stop allowing Bears quarterbacks from receiving late hits. The reason Orton is hurt is because of the apparent late hit after he had already been pushed out of bounce a player was allowed to lay on top of him. What a joke.
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11-17-2008 @ 12:15PM
Tony Muth said...
Most of the time you hear people say "they are better than thier record indcates" in the case of the Bears " THEY ARE NOT AS GOOD AS THEIR RECORD INDICATES"! The Bears are VERY LUCKY to be 5-5, they played the Colts when Manning had no practice time at all and Philly when Westbrook was out. The Bears should be 3-7 at best. I wouldn't be surprised if the Rams kick their asses this week.
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