Why the Packers are big fans of the Cardinals on Sunday

The Packers and their path to the No. 1 seed could use a win from the Arizona Cardinals on Sunday.

For one day, Green Bay Packers will be big fans of the Arizona Cardinals.

The Packers and their hunt for the No. 1 seed in the NFC playoffs could use a win from the Cardinals over the Seattle Seahawks on Sunday.

The San Francisco 49ers beat the Los Angeles Rams on Saturday night, complicating the Packers’ path to the top seed. The Cardinals can help on Sunday by beating the Seahawks.

The most plausible scenario for Matt LaFleur’s team: The Packers beat the Minnesota Vikings and Detroit Lions, the Cardinals beat the Seahawks on Sunday, and the Seahawks beat the 49ers next week.

In that scenario, the Packers end up 13-3 and both the Seahawks and 49ers finish 12-4. Even if the New Orleans Saints finished 13-3, the Packers would have the tiebreaker based on conference record.

Actually, there’s one other (less likely) path to the No. 1 seed that doesn’t require the Cardinals to win on Sunday: If the Packers win out and the Seahawks and Rams tie in Week 17, the 13-3 Packers would still get the No. 1 seed over two 12-3-1 teams. Ties happen, but it’s a long shot nonetheless.

The Packers take on the Vikings on Monday night, with a chance to clinch the NFC North with a win. They’ll have even more motivation if the Cardinals can beat the Seahawks on Sunday.

Packers add OT John Leglue, place T Yosh Nijman on IR

#Packers sign T John Leglue from the Saints practice squad & place T Yosh Nijman on injured reserve. : https://t.co/Vj2VLKyGj7 pic.twitter.com/xy81cDfoob – Green Bay Packers (@packers) December 21, 2019 The Green Bay Packers shuffled the bottom of …

The Green Bay Packers shuffled the bottom of their roster on Saturday, placing offensive tackle Yosh Nijman on injured reserve and signing offensive tackle John Leglue from the New Orleans Saints’ practice squad.

Nijman, a rookie, was ruled out for Week 16 with an elbow injury. He’ll miss the rest of the 2019 season.

Leglue (6-6, 301) is a rookie out of Tulane. He started 38 games over four different positions in college and originally signed with the Denver Broncos as an undrafted free agent. He joined the Saints practice squad following training camp.

Leglue joins Jared Veldheer and Alex Light as backups at offensive tackle behind starters David Bakhtiari and Bryan Bulaga.

Packers Wire staff predictions: Week 16 at Vikings

The staff at Packers Wire predicts the winner of the Packers’ Week 16 matchup against the Minnesota Vikings.

The Green Bay Packers can exorcise a demon and check off another goal by beating the Minnesota Vikings at U.S. Bank Stadium for the first time and officially clinching the NFC North title on Monday night.

Here’s how the staff at Packers Wire believes the Week 16 matchup will go down:

Zach Kruse (11-3): Vikings 28, Packers 20

The Vikings aren’t going to have Pro Bowler Dalvin Cook, creating a real possibility for the Packers to win their first game at U.S. Bank Stadium. The worry here is that the Packers offense will struggle to move the football in a tough environment and the Packers defense will allow too many explosive plays to beat a talented team on the road.

Jack Wepfer (10-4): Vikings 27, Packers 20

The Vikings are without Dalvin Cook and their second string running back, Alexander Mattison, is questionable. But even if Mattison doesn’t play, their third-string back, Mike Boone, looks like a solid player. The biggest thing is that, despite having a worse received than the Packers, the Vikings have been playing better football and look capable of playing at an overall higher level. At home, with the division on the line, the Packers simply don’t have enough offense to keep pace. The turf may help the Packers in the sense that Aaron Jones is deadly with a steady surface. It’ll be a competitive game, but Packers can’t get the W this time around.

Marty Kauffman (9-5): Packers 23, Vikings 20

The Packers will be considered underdogs going in and rightfully so. They are 0-3 at US Bank Stadium and the Vikings are a much better team at home than on the road. Green Bay has also not blown out weaker competition the last few weeks when expected but they still got the wins. However, Minnesota has yet to beat a team with a winning record this season and will be without Dalvin Cook on Monday. Green Bay will need to withstand the early surge from the Vikings. The offense needs to get another early flow and maintain it and keep Aaron Rodgers up right. Defensively they need to get pressure again on Kirk Cousins and force him into mistakes he is known for and keep him from throwing the deep ball that has worked In Minnesota’s favor. Green Bay sneaks out with a win and NFC North crown.

Anthony Nash (10-4): Packers 28, Vikings 20

The Packers seem to be catching the Vikings in the right space for this game. Not only is Dalvin Cook out, but the Vikings will likely also be without their second-string running back, Alexander Mattison. The Packers have had trouble winning in U.S. Bank Stadium but will be bringing in one of the best teams they’ve had into Minnesota. On the other hand, the Packers offense is struggling to get anything going, and the defense will have a tough time guarding the Vikings’ talented receiving corps. With that being said, the Packers’ identity seems to be winning ugly, and it wouldn’t be shocking to see them find a way to pull out a win and capture another NFC North title.

Nolan Stracke (9-5): Vikings 27, Packers 23

The Packers have played well enough against some sub-par teams lately. Watching them the past couple weeks has given me pause picturing how they could win this week. They definitely could win, but will they? The offense has clunked along lately and the defense will be facing its biggest test since San Francisco hung 38 points on them. The Vikings offense has scored at least 27 points in eight games this season and the options they have on, even without Dalvin Cook, gives them the edge over the Packers. Green Bay is 0-3 at Bank of America Stadium and I have trouble seeing them break that streak this year.

Joe Kipp (10-4): Vikings 24, Packers 20

The Vikings are the better team in several metrics, and with a home advantage it seems highly unlikely the Packers can pull off the upset. This might be a different story if the game were at Lambeau Field in sub-20 degree weather, but in the climate-controlled structure that is U.S. Bank Stadium, Minnesota is 24-7 all-time. Add in the fact that the Packers have yet to win at U.S. Bank Stadium (0-3 all-time), it doesn’t bode well for the visiting team. Unfortunately, I foresee that streak continuing Monday night. Green Bay covers the spread (-5.5) but falls short in the win column.

Writer Prediction Score Record
Zach Kruse Loss 28-20 11-3
Jack Wepfer Loss 27-20 10-4
Marty Kauffman Win 23-20 9-5
Anthony Nash Win 28-20 10-4
Nolan Stracke Loss 27-23 9-5
Joe Kipp Loss 24-20 10-4

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DL Dean Lowry questionable, Packers otherwise healthy on final injury report of Week 16

The Packers will go into Monday night’s showdown with the Vikings at near 100 percent on the injury front.

The Green Bay Packers listed starting defensive lineman Dean Lowry as questionable and ruled out rookie backup offensive tackle Yosh Nijman, but the team’s final injury report for Week 16 shows an otherwise healthy football team heading into Monday night’s showdown with the Minnesota Vikings.

Lowry, who intercepted Mitchell Trubisky in the fourth quarter of last week’s win over the Chicago Bears, has an ankle injury, but he practiced in full on Saturday and looks on track to play.

Keep in mind, roughly 75 percent of players listed as questionable by the Packers have gone on to play this season. Lowry, who has started all 14 games for the Packers, should have a great chance of playing against the Vikings.

Seven other players on the Packers injury report this week were not given injury designations and will play on Monday night. Once again, the Packers are a remarkedly healthy football team entering the final two weeks of the 2019 season.

The Vikings already ruled out Pro Bowl running back Dalvin Cook, and backup Alexander Mattison is questionable.

Veteran tight ends Jimmy Graham and Marcedes Lewis were both listed as limited participants on Saturday’s practice, but the Packers have continually kept their work limited during practices in an effort to keep them healthy and fresh for games.

Cornerback Kevin King, the last Packers starter to miss a game with an injury, was a full participant all week and will play.

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Vikings rule out RB Dalvin Cook, RB Alexander Mattison questionable vs. Packers

The Vikings could be without their top two running backs on Monday night against the Packers.

The Minnesota Vikings will be without their Pro Bowl running back on Monday night against the Green Bay Packers, and they might not have his top backup available, either.

The Vikings ruled out Dalvin Cook (chest) for Monday night’s NFC North showdown with the Packers, who can clinch the division title with a win. Alexander Mattison, Cook’s top backup, is questionable with an ankle injury.

If Cook and Mattison can’t go, third-string running back Mike Boone would take over as the lead back.

Cook, a first-time Pro Bowler in 2019, ran for a season-high 154 yards and ripped off a 75-yard touchdown run in the first meeting against the Packers. Cook and Mattison combined for 179 rushing yards on 24 carries in Week 2.

Over the Vikings’ first 14 games, Cook produced 1,654 yards and 13 total touchdowns for the run-heavy, screen-heavy Minnesota offense. Mattison is averaging 4.6 yards per carry over 100 carries.

The Vikings rank third in rushing attempts and rushing touchdowns and fourth in rushing yards this season.

Boone, an undrafted free agent from Cincinnati, rushed 13 times for 56 yards and two scores as the Vikings routed the Los Angeles Chargers last week. Minnesota also has former Detroit Lions running back Ameer Abdullah.

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Packers vs. Vikings: 5 things to watch and a prediction

Five things to watch and a prediction for Monday night’s showdown between the Packers and Vikings at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis.

The Green Bay Packers can clinch the NFC North title and secure a top-3 seed in the NFC playoffs by beating the Minnesota Vikings in primetime on Monday night at U.S. Bank Stadium, a venue where the Packers have never won.

Here are five things to watch and a prediction for Monday night:

1. Rushers in the spotlight

This matchup will feature four of the NFL’s most productive pass-rushers, with Green Bay’s Za’Darius Smith and Preston Smith matched up against Minnesota’s Danielle Hunter and Everson Griffen. Who will be the most disruptive duo on Monday night? The Packers kept Kirk Cousins under consistent pressure in the first meeting, especially early, while Hunter and Griffen both got going once the Packers built a lead. Cousins has been terrific this season, but he’s prone to mistakes and inefficiency when pressured. This is a great opportunity for the two Smiths to take over another game. On offense, David Bakhtiari and Bryan Bulaga have a big challenge awaiting them. Hunter and Griffen are tough to block in the noise at U.S. Bank Stadium.

2. Winning the rushing battle

The Vikings are 9-1 when they rush for more yards than their opponent and 1-3 when their opponent wins the rushing battle this season. Everything the Vikings do on offense is based around the run, and that probably won’t change even if running backs Dalvin Cook and Alexander Mattison don’t play on Monday night. They block well and stay committed to the run as a foundation of the scheme. Mike Zimmer’s defense has only allowed three opponents to rush for more than 125 yards this season, although the Packers accomplished the feat in Week 2. The Seahawks ran for 218 yards and scored 37 points against the Vikings. The Lions and Chargers managed 132 total rushing yards and scored just 17 total points the last two weeks. Can the Packers contain the Vikings on the ground and get Aaron Jones and Jamaal Williams going on Monday night?

3. Will Kenny keep killing it?

In the first meeting, Kenny Clark dominated rookie center Garrett Bradbury. The two will face off again on Monday night. Bradbury has improved, especially in pass protection, but Clark has overcome a midseason injury and is once again dominating. He’s controlling games up front, allowing the defense to play lighter against the run, and he’s getting – and winning – far more one-on-one battles as a rusher. Mike Pettine has found ways to get Clark freed up, using Za’Darius Smith as a rover to eliminate opportunities for teams to double-team the Packers’ nose tackle. Clark needs to be a game-changer on Monday night.

4. Heart of the defense

Vikings linebacker Eric Kendricks is having an All-Pro season. He runs well, diagnoses quickly and is rarely out of position, and he’s arguably the best cover linebacker in football. His matchup against Aaron Jones could help decide the game. In the first meeting, Jones found cutback lanes and gashed the Vikings for chunk gains. Expect Kendricks and the Vikings front to put up a better fight this time around. Also, will the Packers prioritize getting the football to the running backs in the passing game? Jones and Jamaal Williams were effective as receivers in Week 2.

5. Packers CBs vs. Vikings WRs

The matchup of the game: Jaire Alexander and Kevin King vs. Stefon Diggs and Adam Thielen. Both the Vikings receivers have terrorized the Packers in recent years, although Alexander and King finally put up a legitimate fight back in Week 2. Ideally, the Packers would stop the run and force Kirk Cousins to win the game with his arm. Can the cornerbacks prevent big plays and help the Packers get off the field on big third downs? Alexander has played at a high level all season but is lacking that one special game. Maybe he’ll produce it Monday night against Thielen and Diggs, one of the game’s best receiver tandems.

Prediction: Vikings 28, Packers 20 (11-3)

The Vikings aren’t going to have Pro Bowler Dalvin Cook, creating a real possibility for the Packers to win their first game at U.S. Bank Stadium. The worry here is that the Packers offense will struggle to move the football in a tough environment and the defense will allow too many explosive plays to beat a talented team on the road.

Packers rookie Rashan Gary ‘getting better at the right time’

Can Packers rookie Rashan Gary follow in the footsteps of Kenny Clark’s rookie season?

Late in 2016, then-rookie defensive lineman Kenny Clark started coming on as a playmaker for the Green Bay Packers defense. He wasn’t yet a dominant player down-to-down, but he flashed the occasional disruptive ability that eventually helped turn him into one of the NFL’s best interior linemen.

First-round pick Rashan Gary could be following a similar path during his rookie season.

Packers defensive coordinator Mike Pettine said Gary, who had one sack in his first 13 games, is trending in the right direction after playing his best game of the year during Sunday’s win over the Chicago Bears. The Packers’ top pick tallied his second sack of the season late in the first half when he blew past the Bears right tackle and chased down Mitchell Trubisky.

“He did some good things. I was glad to see he got some production as well,” Pettine said Friday. “I just know he’s been working real hard with coach (Mike) Smith, a lot of things outside of his normal drill work, his get-off, his stance, his pad level, just little technical things that he’s trying to clean up and trying to find the right combination for himself.”

Slowly, Gary is positioning himself to be an important player for the Packers defense down the stretch, especially if he keeps gradually improving.

“He’s getting better at the right time,” Pettine said.

Clark did the same as a 21-year-old rookie in 2016. Mostly quiet for the first three months of the year, Clark produced four quarterback hits over the final six regular-season games before breaking out with two quarterback hits and a tackle for loss during the Packers’ playoff win over the New York Giants in the NFC Wildcard Round.

Barring injury, Gary isn’t going to be anything close to a full-time player, but Pettine knows how important he is to the defense’s rotation at outside linebacker, especially considering how often top rusher Za’Darius Smith is used at different spots across the defensive front.

Gary or Kyler Fackrell often come on the field in obvious passing downs.

“It’s good to see him get the production, and he’s a big part of that rotation. Preston (Smith) and Z, we don’t want to put the whole game on them. To have guys like Kyler and Rashan, to have that four-man rotation,” Pettine said.

Gary played 18 snaps against the Bears, tallying three tackles, a sack, a tackle for loss and a quarterback hit.

The Packers are approaching the final stretch of the 2019 season with a chance to clinch the NFC North and a first-round bye in the NFC playoffs. This time of year, teams don’t get better from the outside. They improve from within. And few young players look more capable of taking a step and producing in a meaningful way than Gary, who – despite a slow start – keeps progressing in his development as an edge rusher.

The rookie rusher might not take over games down the stretch, but just a few more flashes – like the flashes Clark provided during the playoff run in 2016 – could make a big difference for the Packers defense as the postseason nears.

Raven Greene returning from IR remains option for Packers

The Packers could get back DB Raven Greene at some point in the near future.

Green Bay Packers coach Matt LaFleur left the door open for versatile defensive back Raven Greene to be the team’s second player to return from injured reserve.

“It is certainly an option, and I know he’s working hard every day. I think he’s moving around pretty well,” LaFleur said Friday.

The Packers already used a designation on rookie tight end Jace Sternberger.

Greene, a second-year defensive back, injured his ankle early in the second half in Week 2 against the Minnesota Vikings. He left the game on a cart and hasn’t been on the field since.

LaFleur said Greene continues to rehab the injury and hasn’t yet returned to practice.

The Packers used Greene, who added weight during the offseason, in the box as a subpackage linebacker during the first two weeks. Ibraheim Campbell has since returned the PUP list and assumed the role.

Over the first two games of the season, Greene played 68 snaps on defense and another 18 on special teams. He was on the field for 77 percent of snaps during the Packers’ win over the Chicago Bears in Week 1.

Greene might be the only logical option to be the team’s second player to return from injured reserve. Lane Taylor, the starter at left guard to open the season, had surgery to repair a biceps injury.

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

How to watch, stream and listen to the Packers’ Week 16 matchup against the Minnesota Vikings on Monday, Dec. 23, 2019.

The Green Bay Packers (11-3) cross state lines in Week 16 to battle the Minnesota Vikings (10-4) in a pivotal game on Monday Night Football. With a win, the Packers strengthen their chances of securing a top playoff seed and first-round bye.

Green Bay has fared well against the Vikings with Aaron Rodgers as starting quarterback, racking up a 13-8-1 record. However, the Packers have yet to win a game at the Vikings’ U.S. Bank Stadium (0-3) and it’s no given they’ll break that streak on Monday.

The Vikings will enter this matchup in the top 10 of several statistical categories including points forced (5th), points allowed (6th), rushing yards gained (4th), and rushing yards allowed (8th). Even with star running back Dalvin Cook unlikely to play, Minnesota has plenty of other playmakers to get the ball to. As it stands right now, Minnesota is the favorite to win. Green Bay will need a complete performance on both sides of the ball to secure the win.

The Packers are looking to sweep the regular-season series with the Vikings for the first time since 2014 and the sixth time since 2002 (2011, 2010, 2007, 2006, 2004). 

Green Bay will stay on the road in Week 17 for the regular season finale at the Detroit Lions (3-10-1). The Lions placed starting quarterback Matthew Stafford (back) on season-ending injured reserve Tuesday, ensuring the Packers won’t have to face him for a second time this season.

ESPN will broadcast the game. Joe Tessitore (play-by-play) will be joined by Booger McFarland (analyst) in the booth with Lisa Salters 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 Westwood One Sports and the WTMJ feed of Sirius Satellite Radio.

Here’s the information you need to know to watch Monday night’s game:

What: Green Bay Packers (11-3) at Minnesota Vikings (10-4)
When: Monday, Dec. 23 at 7:15 p.m. CST
Where: U.S. Bank Stadium, Minneapolis, MN
Referee: Bill Vinovich
TV Channels: ESPN, WLUK-TV FOX11 in Green Bay and WISN-TV CBS58 in Milwaukee
Radio: Packers Radio Network, Sirius Satellite Radio (WTMJ feed), Westwood One Sports
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: Nationwide

After stabilizing against young QBs, Packers defense needs statement game vs. Vikings

The Packers defense has a chance for a statement game on Monday night against Kirk Cousins and the Vikings.

The Green Bay Packers stabilized on defense over the last three games, holding Daniel Jones’ New York Giants, Dwayne Haskins’ Washington Redskins and Mitchell Trubisky’s Chicago Bears to just 41 total points in the three Green Bay victories.

Now, the Packers defense needs to produce a statement game on Monday night against Kirk Cousins and the Minnesota Vikings.

Mike Pettine’s group ranks ninth in the NFL in points allowed per game. They’ve held seven opponents under 20 points and rank among the NFL’s best at generating turnovers and holding teams out of the end zone inside the red zone.

However, save for an impressive Week 2 performance against Cousins and the Vikings, the Packers have mostly beaten up on bad offenses with young quarterbacks and struggled against most teams with experienced passers.

Getting to the Super Bowl is going to require the Packers to beat at least one of the great passers heading to the NFC playoffs, possibly even on the road. Doing it now won’t mean they’ll do it again, but it sure would create some confidence in a young group that has been up and down for much of the year.

Facing Cousins and the Vikings’ fifth-ranked scoring defense at U.S. Bank Stadium will provide another litmus test for the Packers defense, even if Pro Bowl running back Dalvin Cook doesn’t play.

Cousins has been terrific for most of the 2019 season. He’s third in the NFL in completion percentage and fourth in passer rating and yards per attempt.

At home, Cousins is completing over 80 percent of his passes, with 10 touchdowns and one interception and a passer rating of 126.0. The Vikings are averaging 27.7 points per game and haven’t lost at U.S. Bank Stadium.

Like the offense, the Packers defense has flashed bursts of dominance this season. They have the pass rush and secondary players to compete with anyone, but the group has lacked game-to-game consistency, mostly due to lingering issues stopping the run and preventing big plays.

The Packers have improved slightly against the run over the last month and should be more confident in the secondary after making life difficult on three young quarterbacks. It’s time to apply those improvements to a skilled opponent with an experienced quarterback in a tough environment.

Monday night in Minnesota should be a terrific opportunity for the Packers to prove they are playoff-ready on defense.