5 takeaways from Packers’ 31-13 victory over Giants

The top takeaways from the Packers’ 31-13 win over the Giants on Sunday at MetLife Stadium.

As the saying goes, you want to play your best football in December.

Did the Green Bay Packers do that? Did they begin to play their best football on the first day of December?

In snowy New Jersey, it would take more than three full quarters before the Packers would wrest full control over the New York Giants.

The glass-half-full point of view is that the Packers took care of business, beating a hapless Giants team starting a rookie quarterback by a score of 31-13.

The Packers’ bend-but-don’t-break defense rediscovered its thieving ways, setting up the Packers’ offense with three additional possessions via interceptions. The Packers would turn those into 10 points and cruise to victory.

The less-optimistic version goes like this: for a bulk of the game, the offense found itself stuck in too many unfavorable third-and-longs. They disappeared for stretches after a hot start. A few beneficial calls – some obvious, others more gratuitous – helped move the chains for a stagnant offense, too. Absent some terrible throws by rookie quarterback Daniel Jones, this game may have been too close for comfort considering the perceived talent disparities between the Packers and Giants.

Perhaps the pessimism is attributable to last week’s undressing. The Packers have the type of record that says they’re one of the NFC’s top teams, but, at least lately, they’re not showing that with enough consistency.

Is this just the first step towards forging the team’s playoff identity? We’ll see.

Onto the takeaways.

Secondary takes advantage of rookie quarterback

One of the early hallmarks of the Packers’ defense this season was its ability to force turnovers. In the first three weeks, the Packers created seven turnovers, which contributed to their hot start.

The Packers went back to playing that opportunistic brand of football, and it began when Kevin King intercepted Daniel Jones early in the second quarter.

The Packers would then intercept Jones in back-to-back drives in the fourth quarter. The first came by way of an overthrow. Jones targeted Sterling Shepard downfield on the right hash, but the ball sailed on him. Savage played the overthrow and came away with the pick. On the ensuing drive, Jones tried to hit Darius Slayton on the left sideline with Tramon Williams in one-on-one coverage. Williams’ stacked Slayton and played the ball as if he were the intended receiver.

It wasn’t the cleanest game from the Packers’ secondary, but the turnovers are great equalizers in football. The Packers did what they needed to do.

Aggressive Aaron Rodgers is the best Aaron Rodgers

Once again, Aaron Rodgers threw a touchdown pass on a “free” play. This time, it was the too-late attempted substitution that got the Giants with a too-men-on-the-field penalty. Though it’s a bit gimmicky, No. 12 operates like IBM’s Watson at quarterback. No detail goes unnoticed, and the Giants’ sloppiness gave the Packers a big score.

We’ve seen the games where the Packers aren’t getting free plays at the snap or free first downs because of the NFL’s whimsical approach to pass interference, illegal contact, and defensive holding. For as nice as it is to get those calls, it’s not something the Packers should rely too much upon. It’s a nice jolt for the offense, but it can’t be the offense.

Today, Rodgers completed 64 percent of his passes (21-of-33) for 243 yards and four touchdown passes. It was a fine effort. It’s hard not to notice, however, his “free” play touchdown to Davante Adams.

With a Giants defenseman scurrying to get off the field, Rodgers gets the snap in a hurry and sees the yellow flag. From there, he rockets a ball into tight coverage in the middle of the end zone.

When he wants to be – or rather when he’s forced to be – Rodgers can be a deadly downfield thrower, fitting the football into tight windows and registering multiple explosive plays on a single drive. The offense seems to stagnate when Rodgers plays too conservatively; he’ll take “shot” plays on play-action, and he’ll throw it downfield in man-to-man coverage along the sideline. But he generally waits for receivers to break open, which exposes him to the pass rush and removes the rhythm of the play’s initial concept.

Rodgers hates to throw interceptions, but he’s going to have to trust his receivers to make plays in tight coverage. He has the arm. Tipped balls might happen. Interceptions might happen. But to beat the 49ers of the world, this team is going to have to grow a little more comfortable taking some chances.

Packers struggle running the football

Save for a few tough runs by Jamaal Williams in the second half, the Packers couldn’t do much of anything against the Giants today. Some of that was to be expected. Entering today’s game, the Giants had only been giving up 3.9 yards per attempt, which is the sixth-best mark in the NFL.

Williams finished the game as the team’s leading rusher, carrying the ball 10 times for 41 yards. Aaron Jones could muster just 18 yards on 11 carries. Rodgers added 24 yards on three scrambles.

Kudos to Matt LaFleur and the Packers for not completely abandoning the run game; much of the offense is predicated upon the team’s ability to at least look like they’re going to run the ball. Still, the Packers will need to find some more consistency in the closing weeks of the season. The weather isn’t getting any better.

Interceptions aside, defense struggles

Like pi, Za’Darius Smith is a mathematical constant. Regardless of the opponent, he brings energy, motor, and, more importantly, production. Today, he hit quarterback Daniel Jones five different times. There’s a little more ebb and flow with his still-productive counterpart, Preston Smith; however, the Packers can almost guarantee a strong performance from No. 55.

The same can’t be said for the rest of the defense, though. Giants rookie tight end, sixth-round pick Kaden Smith, led the team in receiving, catching six passes for 70 yards. The Packers’ struggles with tight ends again reflect the year-long trend where this defense cannot, for a few reasons, cover the middle of the field. Their middle-of-the-field zone coverage struggles to attach itself to receivers entering or crossing into zones, so opposing quarterbacks have easy completions with too much frequency.

A couple key players struggled today, too. Blake Martinez collected tackles (10 today, which led the team), but it’s more about what he doesn’t do that contributes to the team’s struggles. On a fourth and short, Preston Smith contacts the ball carrier short of the marker, but can’t make the tackle. The Giants convert because the Packers, specifically Martinez, don’t fill. He’s also one of the reasons for the porous middle-zone pass coverage, as he doesn’t close throwing lanes well.

Kevin King is another player who struggled. He did get redemption with an interception, but teams are clearly targeting King in coverage and leaving Jaire Alexander more or less alone. King was beaten by Sterling Shepard on a double move for an 18-yard touchdown. Against shiftier receivers, King gives too much cushion; he’s most susceptible on comeback routes.

JK Scott rebounds

JK Scott had been really struggling the past month or so, but he finally put together a good game.

Scott punted the ball three times, averaging 46.7 yards. His longest punt went for 47 yards.

His first punt was fair caught at the Giants’ 11-yard line. His second punt was caught at the 9-yard line and returned to the 21. His last was his best. Punting from just inside his own 50-yard-line, Scott’s last punt of the game would hit the turf and stay out of the end zone. The Packers downed the punt at the 6-yard line.

Early in the season, Scott had been a useful weapon to flip the field when the offense wasn’t playing particularly well. While he didn’t have any field-flipping opportunities, he did keep the Giants playing deep into their own territory.

If Scott is going to break out of his slump, December is a great time to do it.

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Good, bad, and ugly from the Packers’ victory over the Giants

We recap the good, bad, and ugly moments from the Green Bay Packers 31-13 win over the New York Giants.

Following a dud against the San Francisco 49ers, the Green Bay Packers traveled to New York for a game against the Giants that nearly everyone thought Green Bay would win. They did just that, turning in a complete performance that put the Packers back in the win column as they head down the final stretch of their season.

Here’s the good, the bad and the ugly from the Packers’ 31-13 win against the New York Giants:

The Good

  • Za’Darius Smith: The captain (and MVP) of the Packers defensive continues to deliver. Smith didn’t register any sacks during the game, but was constantly in the Giants backfield, tallying five quarterback hits and a tackle for loss. His pressures were a huge boost to a Packers defense that struggled early, and he continues to be a massive addition to the Packers as a whole.
  • Aaron Rodgers: Rodgers had one of, if not the worst game of his career last week, but he followed it up with a stellar performance against the Giants. The Packers quarterback finished with four touchdowns while spreading the ball out and looking very elusive on a handful of plays. One touchdown, in particular, saw Rodgers hit Marcedes Lewis just as he was wrapped up. Rodgers said he needed to get hot in December, and so far, he’s been just that.

  • Forcing turnovers: The Packers bread and butter on defense has been forcing turnovers, and they were able to do that very well against rookie quarterback Daniel Jones. The Packers forced three interceptions on Sunday, finishing the game with a plus-3 turnover margin. Jones has been prone to mistakes all season, but it’s still nice to see the Packers capitalize in a game that they absolutely should have.
  • Davante Adams: The Packers star wide receiver went from not having any touchdowns to scoring in consecutive games, as Adams hauled in two touchdowns Sunday. He didn’t finish as the leader in yards, but Adams was once again an excellent safety valve for Rodgers, and was also able to draw a handful of penalties that aided the Packers offense early on.

The Bad

  • First-half play: The Packers’ first half was a mixed bag, as the offense was able to get out to an extremely hot start while the defense took some time getting its feet under them. To their credit, Green Bay’s defense held the Giants to just 10 points in the first half, but for a while, the Packers soft zone coverage and inability to put drives away looked to make this a much closer game than it needed to be.
  • Penalties: The number one killer for the Packers in 2019 hasn’t been its special teams play or inconsistent offense. Instead, it’s been the penalties that the team accrues, and they once again popped up against the Giants. Green Bay was called for seven penalties in the game, some of which helped enable the Giants to continue extending drives. It didn’t hurt them too much but is something that has to be cleaned up.

The Ugly

  • Fourth down defense: The Packers “bend but don’t break” philosophy was tested heavily against the Giants, as the Packers had an extremely hard time forcing stops against a Giants offense that came into the game as one of the very worst in the league. The Giants finished the game just 5-14 on third downs, but was 3-4 on fourth downs, which allowed New York to have a huge time of possession advantage early on. It didn’t end up being a problem, but in the modern day NFL, teams – especially bad ones – aren’t afraid of trying to go for it on fourth down, and the Packers will need to get off the field on more of those attempts than they have been.

Instant analysis of Packers’ 31-13 win over Giants in Week 13

Instant analysis of the Packers’ 31-13 win over the Giants on Sunday at MetLife Stadium.

The Green Bay Packers once again bounced back and responded to a loss, using four touchdown passes from Aaron Rodgers and three interceptions of rookie quarterback Daniel Jones to beat the New York Giants by a 31-13 final score at a snowy MetLife Stadium on Sunday.

It was over when …

… Rodgers wiggled out of a potential sack and found veteran tight end Marcedes Lewis for a 1-yard touchdown, giving the Packers a three-score advantage in the fourth quarter.

Game balls

  • QB Aaron Rodgers: He hit seven different receivers, threw four touchdown passes, didn’t take a sack and didn’t have a turnover, leading a big afternoon from the Packers’ passing game.
  • OLB Za’Darius Smith: He didn’t have a sack, but the Packers’ top edge rusher did produce five quarterback hits and a tackle for loss. Several of his pressures helped end drives.
  • Coach Shawn Mennenga: His entire group played well. Mason Crosby made all five kicks, including a 47-yard field goal, JK Scott put two punts inside the 20-yard line, Tremon Smith had a three-yard punt return and the kickoff coverage group held Cody Latimer to 19.3 yards per return.

Key Stat

+3: The Packers’ turnover margin over the Giants. Mike Pettine’s defense produced three interceptions, and the Packers offense didn’t have a giveaway. Tough to lose when you finish three up in the turnover ledger.

Quick takes

– The Packers are now 3-0 after losses this season. Matt LaFleur still doesn’t know what a losing streak feels like.

– The offense and defense did what exactly was required. Aaron Rodgers and the receivers took advantage of a bad secondary, and the defense pressured a rookie quarterback into big mistakes. It wasn’t always pretty, but it was a winning formula on Sunday.

– The Packers defense had a few rough moments and gave up a few more explosive plays, but they only allowed one touchdown and took advantage of takeaway opportunities. Their identity is taking the ball away and playing well in the red zone.

– Sunday in New York was probably the Packers’ best performance on special teams all season.

– Credit Matt LaFleur and Aaron Rodgers for the early success attacking downfield. They definitely saw an opportunity for big plays against the Giants secondary, and they wasted no time attacking. Allen Lazard made two big plays against busted coverage in the first quarter.

– The Packers were much better on third down after going 1-for-15 last week. They converted seven third downs. Rodgers even converted a 4th-and-10 with a great play under pressure. The Packers also benefitted from four first downs via penalty.

– Once again, the Packers created an advantage in the red zone. They scored three touchdowns on three trips inside the 20-yard line, while the Giants were 1-for-3 scoring touchdowns in the red zone. That part of the field has been a sweet spot for the Packers all season.

– The Packers had problems running the ball inside, but that’s where the Giants are best on defense. Aaron Jones managed only 18 yards on 11 carries and had a touchdown run negated by penalty. Jamaal Williams ran hard late as the Packers shut the door.

– The broadcast caught Rodgers yelling, “Big Dog! Big Dog!” right before he threw a touchdown pass to Marcedes “Big Dog” Lewis in the fourth quarter. Rodgers has wanted to get the veteran tight end into the end zone. He celebrated with Lewis in the end zone after the score.

– Geronimo Allison converted a fourth down and a third down with big catches.

– Za’Darius Smith was unblockable early on. He won from at least three different spots along the defensive line for pressures.

– The Packers are 9-3 through the first three quarters of the 2019 season. Coach Matt LaFleur tied the franchise record for wins by a coach in his first season.

– Up next: The Packers head back home to play the Washington Redskins at Lambeau Field on Sunday.

Packers extend lead over Giants with free-play TD from Aaron Rodgers to Davante Adams

Second TD of the day for #One7 ❄️ RETWEET to #ProBowlVote for @tae15adams! ❄️ #GBvsNYG | #GoPackGo pic.twitter.com/G1WZ0Mrn5O – Green Bay Packers (@packers) December 1, 2019 Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers extended his team’s lead with a …

Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers extended his team’s lead with a touchdown pass to receiver Davante Adams on a free play in the fourth quarter.

Rodgers hurried to the line and caught the New York Giants with 12 men on the field, and once he knew he had the free play, he found Adams in a crowd in the end zone for the 17-yard touchdown.

The improvised score gave the Packers a 24-13 lead with just over 14 minutes left.

The Giants were caught attempting to make a defensive substitution before the third-down play.

The Packers’ 75-yard drive was helped along by two defensive penalties. including one on third down, and Rodgers found Geronimo Allison under heavy pressure to convert a 4th-and-10.

Rodgers has now completed 17 of 27 passes for 217 yards and three touchdowns, including two to Adams.

The Packers intercepted Giants quarterback Daniel Jones on the ensuing drive. It hasn’t always been pretty, but Matt LaFleur’s team is closing in on a ninth win in 12 games.

Packers WR Allen Lazard catches long TD in the snow in New York

❄️ Dashing through the snow…! ❄️ @AllenLazard is WIDE OPEN for the touchdown! #GBvsNYG | #GoPackGo pic.twitter.com/skPCSpQEci – Green Bay Packers (@packers) December 1, 2019 Green Bay Packers receiver Allen Lazard is having a big opening quarter in …

Green Bay Packers receiver Allen Lazard is having a big opening quarter in the snow against the New York Giants.

One drive after setting up the Packers’ first score with a diving, 43-yard catch, Lazard got open deep and caught a 37-yard touchdown to give the Packers a 14-7 lead late in the first quarter.

The Giants turned Lazard loose in the middle of the field, giving Rodgers an easy throw for the score.

The second-year receiver now has two catches for 80 yards and a touchdown.

Aaron Rodgers is carving up one of the NFL’s worst secondaries. He has completed 6 of 7 passes for 103 yards and two touchdowns.

Lazard’s 80 receiving yards are already a career-high. The touchdown catch was the second of his career.

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Packers WR Allen Lazard makes diving catch, sets up opening-drive TD vs. Giants

Packers WR Allen Lazard made an awesome catch on the second play of the offense’s scoring drive against the Giants.

Allen Lazard’s diving catch helped set up the Green Bay Packers’ opening-drive touchdown against the New York Giants on Sunday at MetLife Stadium.

Lazard laid out to finish the 43-yard completion from quarterback Aaron Rodgers on the second play of the drive. Five plays later, Rodgers found Davante Adams from eight yards out to finish the scoring march.

Rodgers completed all five of his passes for 66 yards on the drive, which took just under four minutes and gave the Packers a 7-0 lead.

Adams caught three passes for 16 yards, including a 10-yard catch on 3rd-and-8 to extend the drive.

Jones caught a pass on the first play for seven yards and rushed once for four yards. A game-breaking weapon in the passing game in October, Jones caught only one pass during the month of November.

Packers RT Bryan Bulaga active for Sunday vs. Giants

The Packers will have their entire starting offensive line available for Sunday against the Giants.

The Green Bay Packers will have their entire starting offensive line available on Sunday against the New York Giants.

Right tackle Bryan Bulaga, who hurt his knee last week in San Francisco and was listed as questionable, is officially active. He practiced on Thursday and Friday, setting himself up to play on Sunday.

Safety Will Redmond and cornerback Tony Brown are both inactive after being listed as questionable.

The Packers inactives:

– WR Ryan Grant
– RB Dexter Williams
– S Will Redmond
– CB Tony Brown
– B Ka’dar Hollman
– G/T Adam Pankey
– T Yosh Nijman

The Giants already ruled out five players on Friday, including three key contributors. The team also placed long snapper Zak DeOssie on injured reserve.

Here is New York’s inactive list:

– WR Golden Tate
– TE Evan Engram
– TE Rhett Ellison
– S Jabrill Peppers
– QB Alex Tanney
– G Chad Slade
– OT Eric Smith

The Packers and Giants kick off from MetLife Stadium at noon CT on Sunday.

Struggling Packers defense desperate for consistency, better communication

It’s been 12 weeks, but the Packers are still looking for consistency and better communication on defense.

Green Bay Packers defensive coordinator Mike Pettine has seen the flashes. He knows his group can get it done. There’s evidence of high-level play from the Packers defense throughout the first 11 games.

A frustrating lack of consistency has been the problem. For every third-down sack, there’s a 50-yard completion. For every three-and-out, there’s a 12-play scoring drive. The quality of play ebbs and flows.

Unevenness has been the defining feature of the Packers defense in 2019.

“It’s been frustrating,” Pettine said Friday. “Every game we play well for stretches and we can be dominant for stretches. You look at the first 20 plays against San Francisco. I think a lot of it is a consistency thing. It’s something we’ve battled in the room. We have to be able to focus on our jobs.”

The Packers talk all the time about all 11 players on the field doing their respective job. All it takes is one failure out of 11 for an otherwise good play for the defense to turn into a big play for the offense. Often times, communication has been to blame.

“Unfortunately for us, we’ve had too many (self-inflicted mistakes) and we’ve had them at some inopportune times. It’s a thing we talk about each week. Our guys know, for us to get where we want to go, we’ve got to become way more consistent,” Pettine said.

Despite a strong three-game start to open the season, when Pettine’s group looked like a potential top-10 defense, the Packers have faded back to the middle of the pack in the NFL over the last two months. Green Bay ranks 14th in points allowed, 28th in total yards allowed, 30th in yards allowed per play, 27th in passing yards per attempt and 27th in rushing yards per attempt.

By DVOA, the Packers are 22nd overall, 19th against the pass and 28th against the run.

Down-to-down struggles defending the run, covering the middle of the field and preventing explosive plays have plagued the defense all season.

“We’re all frustrated together. These are competitive guys. They’re professionals, they want to win, they want to get it done,” Pettine said. “We have to break through that, get over that hump of having those handful of plays that are lapses and we end up giving up explosives.”

Pettine said the Packers have to better at focusing on every single play and avoiding the communication problems that continue to come up during games.

The next three games should provide a chance for Pettine’s group to get back on even ground, correct the obvious mistakes and get hot for a playoff run. The Packers will face rookie quarterback Daniel Jones on Sunday in New York, rookie quarterback Dwayne Haskins next Sunday at home and struggling Bears quarterback Mitchell Trubisky in Week 15.

Now is the time to get right, because the Packers have a pivotal game in Minnesota against the highly efficient Vikings offense on Dec. 23, and no team can win in the postseason without a high level of consistency on defense.

Packers at Giants: TV schedule, streaming, how to watch

How to watch, listen or stream the Packers’ Week 13 matchup with the New York Giants on Dec. 1, 2019.

The Green Bay Packers (8-3) travel from one coast of the country to the other after a humbling defeat to the San Francisco 49ers (10-1). The Packers head east in Week 13 to play the slumping New York Giants (2-9) at MetLife Stadium. 

California has not been kind to Green Bay this season. The team has been outscored 63-19 in the Golden State after two games. Yet after each previous loss this season, the Packers have bounced back in big ways (versus Cowboys and Panthers). An injury-riddled Giants team will limp into this game without a few key starters and also own one of the league’s worst defenses, offering the Packers an opportunity to right the ship.

Green Bay currently has a two-game winning streak against New York, including the playoffs. The Packers have not faced the Giants since 2013 at MetLife Stadium but did win there last season in overtime against the Jets, 44-38. Green Bay is 28-23-2 all-time versus the Giants.

FOX will broadcast the game. Thom Brennaman (play-by-play) will be joined by Chris Spielman (analyst) in the booth with Shannon Spake reporting from the sidelines.

The game can be heard over Milwaukee’s WTMJ (620 AM) and the Packers Radio Network, which is made up of 50 stations in five states. Wayne Larrivee (play-by-play) and Larry McCarren (analyst) will call the action with John Kuhn providing coverage from the sidelines. The matchup will also be aired over Sports USA Radio and the WTMJ feed of Sirius Satellite Radio.

Here’s the information you need to know to watch Sunday afternoon’s game:

What: Green Bay Packers (8-3) at New York Giants (2-9)
When: Sunday, Dec. 1 at 12:00 p.m. CST
Where: MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, NJ
Referee: Craig Wrolstad
TV Channels: FOX, DirecTV (Channel 712)
Radio: Packers Radio Network, Sirius Satellite Radio (WTMJ feed), Sports USA Radio
Live Streams: fuboTV (try it free), the NFL app (offers free streams for viewers in the local market), Packers mobile app and on packers.com (via iPhones and iPads using the Safari browser, available to in-market fans only)
Televised Areas:

via 506sports.com

Week 13 film notes: Packers passing game should get back on track in New York

The Packers have an opportunity to get it turned around in the passing game on Sunday against the Giants.

Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers said this week it was time for him to “get hot” and set the tone on offense.

Sunday’s trip to New York to play the Giants offers up a strong opportunity for Rodgers and the Packers passing game to get back on track to start December.

In games against the Los Angeles Chargers, Carolina Panthers and San Francisco 49ers, Rodgers threw two touchdown passes, took 10 sacks, averaged 5.1 yards per attempt and produced a passer rating of 81.9.

Those were fast, pressure-centered defenses with talented front fours. This Giants defense can’t dream of comparing.

James Bettcher’s group doesn’t have the edge rushers, the quick-twitch inside linebackers or the cornerbacks to replicate what the Chargers, Panthers and 49ers accomplished against the Packers during the month of November.

This is a “get right” game for the Packers passing offense. Rodgers should have time in the pocket, and the receivers should be able to win one-on-one matchups on the perimeter and in the middle of the field.

Other notes from watching the last few games of the Giants:

– Veteran Janoris Jenkins is still a competitive battler on the perimeter, but young cornerbacks Deandre Baker, Corey Ballentine and Grant Haley look like big liabilities in man-to-man coverage. It’s possible the Giants will use more of second-year cornerback Sam Beal on Sunday. They need a spark in coverage.

– The Giants’ run game isn’t impressive. Saquon Barkley sure looks like he’s lacking the same kind of instant acceleration that made him great as a rookie, and the Giants get little push from the interior of the offensive line. Everything they do in the run game looks laborious. Kenny Clark could have a big game against center Jon Halapio.

– The Packers still can’t underestimate Barkley. He’s lost some juice, likely due to a lingering ankle issue, but he’s still really tough on first contact.

– Receiver Sterling Shepherd could be dangerous. He’s a subtle route runner and really quick on in-breaking routes. Matchups against Kevin King on the outside could be trouble for the Packers. Darius Slayton has some big-play ability, but he looks like an inconsistent young player.

– The Giants don’t do a lot well on defense, but the interior of the defensive line is solid. Dexter Lawrence, B.J. Hill, Dalvin Tomlinson and newcomer Leonard Williams are strong at the point of the attack and can push the pocket at times. All four are plus players against the run. Running the ball inside might be difficult for the Packers.

– However, if Aaron Jones can get to the second level a few times, explosive runs are possible. The Giants aren’t good at inside linebacker.

– The Giants’ edge pass-rush is almost non-existent. Former Cardinal Markus Golden is probably their best rusher. Even if Bryan Bulaga doesn’t play, the Packers should have time to throw the football Sunday. The Giants often have to blitz to make up for their lack of a rush, and the shaky secondary behind the front often gets burned because of it. The Packers should be expecting plenty of stunts up front on obvious passing downs.

– Aaron Rodgers has to be comfortable throwing to the middle of the field. The Giants don’t have great cornerbacks, and the Packers will like the matchups out wide, but the easiest completions will likely come between the hashes. Watch for Jimmy Graham up the seam and Davante Adams running routes from the slot. Allen Robinson did a lot of damage in the middle of the field against the Giants.

– Daniel Jones and the Giants passing game left a lot of yards on the field against the Bears. There were big plays to be made but the whole operation was always just a little off. It wouldn’t be surprising if the Giants came into Sunday with some confidence about their passing game, even though Golden Tate and Evan Engram won’t play. If they would have finished a few big-play opportunities last week, they likely would have beat the Bears in Chicago.

– The Giants tried to counter the Bears’ pass-rush with a bunch of play-action rollouts. They were hit or miss. Jones moves pretty well but his accuracy is spotty on the move.

– Aldrick Rosas, the Giants kicker, is on his last strike. He missed wide right and then wide left in the first half against the Bears. Neither kick looked good coming off the foot. He’s also missed an extra point in three of the last four games.

– Preston Smith and Za’Darius Smith need to come in swiping on Sunday. Daniel Jones is prone to holding the ball, and he hasn’t been good at protecting it against edge pressure. If the two Smiths get around the corner, they should be targeting the football. Jones will make it available.

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