I used to be able to run one mile in about 5 minutes and 6 miles in under 40 minutes, but back then I was a lonely, emaciated pipsqueak with no self-confidence who lived in terrible knee and lower-back pain. Now I am lucky to break 6:30 for one mile and 14 minutes for two, but I can squat and deadlift over 400 lbs, I have a banging body, I am pain free, and women love me. Pound for pound, I am almost as strong as Mike Neal. I'll take being a strong, confident and healthy weightlifter over being a weak and timid runner with lots of endurance any day. Being able to run long distances just teaches you that if a threat came up, you could run away and hopefully escape. Being strong teaches you that if a threat came up, you could stand your ground, fight back, and protect not only yourself but those you love.
That being said, I voted "no." Aaron Rodgers has had an exceptional run the past few weeks, so probability says he is likely to regress toward his mean, which is 275 yards and 2 touchdowns a game for his career. Yes, those numbers are skewed downward a bit by his first three years as a backup, but they sound about right to me. It wouldn't surprise me if he has another rushing touchdown as well.