GREEN BAY—One answer was obvious. The other was curious.
After one of this spring’s OTA practices, wide receiver Jordy Nelson was asked by a reporter which two statistics he thinks matter the most to his quarterback, Aaron Rodgers.
Nelson’s first thought was interceptions. No surprise there.
Rodgers has made it clear time and time again how much he loathes throwing the ball to the other team, and with just 32 interceptions in 2,070 pass attempts over the past four regular seasons, Rodgers’ minuscule 1.55 interception percentage ranks first in the league from 2009-12. Only Tom Brady, at 1.61, is even close to him.
Nelson’s second choice, however, wasn’t the expected touchdowns or passer rating or yards. It was completion percentage.
The way Nelson explained it, the two key stats go hand in hand.
“The rest comes with it,” Nelson said. “If you don’t turn the ball over, you get more opportunities. If your completion percentage is high, that means as receivers we’re doing our job, he’s putting the ball in the right spots, and again, it allows you to get more opportunities.
“The more opportunities you get, the more yards you get and the more touchdowns you’ll get, so I think it all starts with those two.”
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