This is the first week I've written up this piece this year but I'm hoping to do it for at least the next five games. I'll be highlighting a key play that shifts the momentum of the game, spew out a few stats that I think represent the game well and then give a closing statement. Let me know what you think and how I could improve it. This week I'll start with a short piece.
Key Factor: If we score on the drive where Rodgers' fumbled we're looking at an entirely different game.
6. The number of meaningful possessions we had all game. Our other two were right before the half ended (:20 seconds?) and right before the game ended (:08 seconds).
2. The number of punts we had compared to Atlanta's 4.
4-11. Third down conversions. Not good at all but almost equivalent to Atlanta (4-12). If I recall most of our third downs were third-and-short if not third-and-1.
7.1. Our average gain per play. Obviously boosted by a few long plays but compared to Atlanta's 5.2 it's pretty good.
Basically I feel that we should have had this game won. We went into a hostile environment and with only six good possessions marched down the field on four of them, only to have one slip out of our hands. If we hadn't left points on the field this game would've been entirely different, which is why the Rodgers fumble is my key factor or play of the game.
The one interesting point I've heard after this game is that the Packers don't have a run game and desperately need one if they want to be considered a contender. I sincerely disagree with this statement. We went and played Atlanta ("Best Team in the NFC") in their stadium (where they are 19-1 in the last 3 years) and proceeded to march down the field 4 out of 6 times with nothing but a prolific passing attack. Rodgers dropped back 40+ times and was only sacked once. Our passing game averaged 9.5 yards per pass play. That's nearly a first down every play. The only plays that held our drives back were the run plays. The plays in which we ran ended up losing us yards. The Falcons never respected our play-action or our run game but it didn't matter. We were able to drive down the field anyway. The third-and-shorts we didn't convert were the ones we ran on or where Rodgers threw a deep ball.
EDIT: I went through the play-by-play just to show what we did on our third and shorts.
3rd-3, GB18 8:04 A. Rodgers rushed up the middle for 2 yard gain Punt
3rd-1, ATL4 0:51 D. Nance rushed to the left for no gain FG
3rd-4, ATL33 11:58 A. Rodgers passed to J. Jones to the right for 9 yard gain First Down
3rd-1, ATL1 7:32 A. Rodgers rushed to the left for no gain. A. Rodgers fumbled. M. Peterson recovered fumble Turnover
3rd-2, GB28 8:38 A. Rodgers passed to G. Jennings to the right for 34 yard gain. G. Jennings fumbled. K. Hall recovered fumble First Down
3rd-1, ATL29 7:37 A. Rodgers passed to J. Nelson to the left for 28 yard gain First Down
3rd-1, GB38 11:18 B. Jackson rushed to the right for 12 yard gain First Down
3rd-1, ATL41 9:20 A. Rodgers incomplete pass to the right Fourth (went for it)
3rd-1, ATL21 2:11 A. Rodgers incomplete pass to the left Fourth (went for it)
I would like to concede my point a bit by saying yes, if we had a running game that consistently picked up 3rd-and-1 it would have been huge in this game. But our passing is good enough and with Rodgers mobility 3rd-and-short should be a breeze. Probably one of my biggest beefs with Rodgers and Mike McCarthy is taking shots deep on third-and-short. I liked that Jordy caught a 28 yarder on 3rd-and-1 but at that juncture 27 of those yards were almost completely unnecessary.