NFL QB Rankings 2019: Russell Wilson becomes the undisputed No. 1
Tom Brady plummeted from No. 1, and Lamar Jackson made a huge leap.
Sports blog information from USA TODAY.
Tom Brady plummeted from No. 1, and Lamar Jackson made a huge leap.
The 49ers locked down Aaron Rodgers on Sunday Night Football.
The 49ers’ defense was dominant Sunday night against Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers. San Francisco held Rodgers to 104 yards and 3.2 yards per attempt in one of the worst outings of his career.
Perhaps the stat most indicative of the 49ers’ defensive dismantling of the Hall of Fame quarterback was provided by ESPN’s Next Gen Stats.
Rodgers didn’t complete a pass that traveled at least 10 yards in the air:
(Some) defenses do matter pic.twitter.com/9I1AtlH3m2
— Josh Norris (@JoshNorris) November 25, 2019
There were a couple reasons for this.
First, San Francisco’s coverage down the field was terrific. Jimmie Ward knocked two downfield throws away, including a deep shot to Jimmy Graham that was in the tight end’s hands before the safety wrestled it away.
The pass rush was another reason for the lack of throws down the field. Rodgers didn’t have time to sit back and find receivers beyond 10 yards. He had to get rid of the ball to avoid the onslaught of 49ers pass rushers that spent most of the game in the backfield.
Holding Rodgers to such limited production is perhaps the most impressive thing the 49ers defense has done all season, and a tribute to how good they are up front and in the secondary.
Nick Bosa ended his three-game streak without a sack Sunday night.
The 49ers got a huge stop late in the first half that allowed them to kick a field goal and go up 23-0 as time expired in the second quarter. That stop came courtesy of Nick Bosa, who got his first sack since Week 8.
Bear hugs lead to bear shrugs 🤷♂️@nbsmallerbear sack for a loss of 9 💪#GoNiners pic.twitter.com/ouJqIbLRwC
— San Francisco 49ers (@49ers) November 25, 2019
San Francisco sacked Aaron Rodgers three times in the first half.
It’s rare Aaron Rodgers gets hit as hard as Arik Armstead hit him Sunday night.
A Nick Bosa-Arik Armstead stunt isn’t fair. Aaron Rodgers found that out in the second quarter Sunday night when Armstead flew around backup right tackle Alex Light for a big sack.
Thanksgiving is coming up, but @arikarmstead's already FEASTIN' 🍴#GBvsSF | #GoNiners pic.twitter.com/hlodTMdlRb
— San Francisco 49ers (@49ers) November 25, 2019
It’s pretty rare Rodgers takes a shot like that. Expect the 49ers to run that stunt plenty this season. Armstead extended his team lead in sacks as well. He has 9.0 on the season.
Through 11 games, Cousins has led the Vikings to an 8-3 record while throwing for 2,756 yards, 21 touchdowns and just three interceptions.
With Gary Kubiak coming in as the team’s offensive advisor this offseason, many predicted more play-action passes for Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins.
Cousins has taken advantage of the shift in offensive approach.
Per Pro Football Focus, Cousins has been the best quarterback in the league on play-action passes with a grade of 91.4 to go with 1,052 yards and 12 touchdowns.
PFF also notes that Cousins has been the best on crossing routes, on ‘next read’ throws, the best at targeting wide receivers out wide and the best on designed rollouts.
That’s not too shabby.
Overall, Cousins has a Pro Football Focus grade of 85.3, a mark that ranks fifth in the NFL behind only Russell Wilson, Lamar Jackson, Drew Brees and Aaron Rodgers. It’s the best mark of his career and an improvement of 6 points from last season.
Through 11 games, Cousins has led the Vikings to an 8-3 record while throwing for 2,756 yards, 21 touchdowns and just three interceptions.
Packers QB Aaron Rodgers has a passer rating of 131.9 when targeting Aaron Jones and Jamaal Williams in 2019.
No quarterback in the NFL has a higher grade on passes to running backs this season than Aaron Rodgers, according to Pro Football Focus.
This fact appears important as the Green Bay Packers enter the final six games of the regular season.
Per PFF, Rodgers has been especially good attacking downfield to the running back position – completing 4-of-6 passes thrown at least 10 yards downfield to running backs in 2019, with the four completions gaining 80 yards and producing two touchdowns. And one of the incompletions was Aaron Jones’ drop of a sure-fire touchdown against the Detroit Lions.
Overall, Rodgers has completed 60 passes on 74 attempts for 520 yards and eight touchdowns when targeting Jones and backup running back Jamaal Williams this season.
His passer rating when targeting the pair? 131.9.
Aaron Jones | Jamaal Williams | Danny Vitale | |
Receptions | 35 | 25 | 6 |
Targets | 46 | 29 | 8 |
Yards | 354 | 166 | 94 |
Yards/Catch | 10.1 | 6.6 | 15.7 |
TDs | 3 | 5 | 0 |
Passer rating | 119.3 | 130.1 | 113.5 |
Rodgers has also completed six passes for 94 yards to fullback Danny Vitale, who has at least one reception of 20 or more yards in two games this season.
The Packers coaching staff spent the bye week going through a self-scout exercise, and it seems possible that Matt LaFleur and Mike Pettine discovered what the numbers show: Throwing to the running back position might be the best thing going for the Packers offense.
Sunday night in San Francisco could be the perfect time to get Jones and Williams back involved in the passing game. Over the last two games, the pair has produced seven catches for only 38 yards – including just one catch for Jones.
The 49ers have a terrific pass rush and several good players in the secondary, which could make getting the ball to receivers and tight ends difficult on Sunday night. Finding ways to get Jones and Williams in space or matched one-on-one with a linebacker could be an effective strategy for negating the pass rush and finding easy yards in the passing game.
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Packers QB Aaron Rodgers has thrown TD passes to 37 different players. Who will be No. 38?
Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers has thrown touchdown passes to 37 different players during his career, a fact he revisited in a fun conversation with Matt Schneidman of The Athletic.
Rodgers, who is known for his incredible recall, went through the list and eventually named all 37 players, from Greg Jennings (his first touchdown pass) to Jared Cook (the last player he remembered).
Rodgers told Schneidman he’d like to get his list to 40 or more players. He could certainly add to his list this season, as several players on the Packers offense still haven’t caught a touchdown pass from No. 12.
Among the most likely candidates are veteran tight end Marcedes Lewis, fullback Danny Vitale, rookie tight end Jace Sternberger, receiver Ryan Grant and rookie running back Dexter Williams.
Who will be the next? Vote below:
[polldaddy poll=10464371]
The full list of players who have caught at least one touchdown pass from Aaron Rodgers (sorted by number of touchdowns):
Jordy Nelson (65)
James Jones (41)
Randall Cobb (39)
Greg Jennings (38)
Davante Adams (34)
Donald Driver (22)
Jermichael Finley (19)
Richard Rodgers (13)
Donald Lee (9)
John Kuhn (7)
Eddie Lacy (6)
Geronimo Allison (6)
James Starks (5)
Jimmy Graham (5)
Jamaal Williams (5)
Aaron Jones (4)
Marquez Valdes-Scantling (4)
Andrew Quarless (4)
Spencer Havner (4)
Ty Montgomery (3)
Tom Crabtree (3)
Brandon Jackson (2)
Lance Kendricks (2)
Jake Kumerow (2)
Korey Hall (1)
Trevor Davis (1)
Ryan Grant (1)
Jarrett Boykin (1)
Robert Tonyan (1)
Justin Perillo (1)
Allen Lazard (1)
Aaron Ripkowski (1)
Ryan Taylor (1)
Jared Cook (1)
Brandon Bostick (1)
Ruvell Martin (1)
Jeff Janis (1)
Tom Brady plummeted from No. 1, and Lamar Jackson made a huge leap.
Now that we’re in the stretch run of the 2019 NFL regular season and we have a pretty good idea of what to expect from the quarterbacks around the league, I thought it would be a good time to revisit my preseason rankings of all 32 starters and do a little re-ranking.
Due to injuries and/or benchings, the group of 32 we started with is not the group of 32 we currently have. Cam Newton and Ben Roethlisberger are out. Eli Manning was benched. Joe Flacco is either hurt or was benched for criticizing his coaches. I’ve left those guys off this list. I’ve also left off the new starting quarterbacks who haven’t played much, so if you’re looking for Dwayne Haskins, Brandon Allen and Ryan Finley, you’re going to be disappointed. Just know that those three would have ranked at the very bottom of the list, anyway. The exact order is up to you. We’ll just rank the remaining 29.
For these updated rankings, I used the same methodology I used back in August. Here’s a quick refresher:
These particular quarterback rankings are not objective — and I will not pretend like they are. They are flawed just like every other ranking you’ve ever read.
Statistical production wasn’t a factor. Instead, I ranked the league’s 32 starting quarterbacks based on my own (admittedly flawed and biased) evaluation of their play using film from the 2018 season. I graded each passer on the six attributes I believe to be the most important for the position: Accuracy, decision making, pocket presence, arm strength, creativity and consistency.
Each of those attributes was weighted based on importance, with accuracy and decision making carrying the most weight and creativity and consistency carrying the least. The final weighted score determined the order of this list.
These updated rankings are based on how the quarterbacks have performed in 2019 and how I expect them to perform going forward. Got it? Good, let’s rank some quarterbacks…
So Mason Rudolph hasn’t been — and probably never will be — what Steelers fans had hoped: A potential replacement for Ben Roethlisberger. It’s probably best that they found out sooner rather than later. Now the front office can start a real search for Ben’s successor. Rudolph is timid in the pocket and doesn’t seem to have a play-making bone in his body. He’ll make a fine backup, though.
Oh, Mitch. It was fun while it lasted. Actually, that’s not true. It could have been fun, but Mitch Tubisky was never able to properly execute Matt Nagy’s system. Even when Trubisky was able to make the proper reads, his accuracy would often let him down. Especially on downfield throws. When Trubisky pushes the ball downfield, he looks like he’s just lobbing it up there and hoping for the best. The best has rarely happened in 2019.
The Kyle Allen hype train lasted for exactly a month before the former undrafted free agent turned back into a pumpkin. The truth is, outside of one or two good starts, Allen hasn’t played well all season. His box score stats hid the fact that he was often late to see throws, had shoddy accuracy and wasn’t very good at managing the pocket. He did manage to fool some prominent members of the NFL media into thinking he was a quarterback worth building around. So he has that going for him.
Ryan Fitzpatrick thrives on bad teams. He’s able to play his wild brand of football without having to worry about expectations or high-pressure situations. For all of Fitzpatrick’s faults — and there are a lot of them — the man is unafraid to make a play. If only he had a stronger arm.
Nick Foles has only played one full game and … well, he looked a lot like the Nick Foles we’re used to seeing. No, not the one who went on a heater and won the Eagles a Super Bowl. The other one who isn’t very accurate and is incapable of making plays outside of structure.
I have to give credit where it’s due: Josh Allen looks like a real NFL quarterback. Now, he still doesn’t look like a very good one, but he has been more accurate — just don’t ask him to hit on a deep ball — and he seems to have a better understanding of coverages. Combine that with his athletic ability, and you have a serviceable quarterback. That’s as far as I’m willing to go.
At the very least, Jones has shown that he won’t be a disaster as an NFL quarterback. The guy can execute an offense from the pocket and is athletic enough to make plays outside of it. He’s also very good in the quick passing game. It’s when he has to make plays downfield that his limitations are exposed. A lack of arm talent limits his ceiling, but Jones’ floor is very high.
I say this with all due respect: Ryan Tannehill is the most boring quarterback I’ve ever watched on tape. He is completely uninteresting, which is odd to say about a quarterback who played some receiver in college. You’d at least expect him to be elusive in the pocket, but nope. If Tannehill faces pressure, he’s going down. He is accurate and can read a defense, which is more than I can say for about a third of the league’s starters. I’ll also say this: If he was on the Bears, Chicago would be in the playoff mix right now.
I’m lumping these two together because they are essentially the same guy. Well, Sam Darnold is more athletic and Jameis Winston has a better understanding of defenses, but beyond that, this is a “Spider-Man point at himself” meme situation. Winston is the ghost of Darnold’s future. It’s not too late for Darnold to turn it around and develop into the Jet’s franchise guy. The same cannot be said for Winston, who just hasn’t been able to overcome his crippling addiction to dumb throws. Maybe a change of scenery will help.
Things aren’t so easy for a quarterback when the scheme isn’t doing the heavy lifting. Jared Goff probably already knew that having played on bad Cal teams and for Jeff Fisher, but this season has to be particularly frustrating. Goff’s protection hasn’t been good, but it’s his own inefficient delivery in the quick passing game that has prevented Sean McVay from really adjusting. Goff is still young and has time to develop, but McVay holding his hand through the early part of his career may have stunted his evolution.
This Baker Mayfield we’re seeing in 2019 is the one I thought we’d see in 2018: He’s a talented thrower but happy feet in the pocket can cause him to be late on throws or just flat out miss them. Everyone wants to know what’s wrong with the Browns offense; it starts with that. It’s hard to be too pessimistic, though. Mayfield did show he’s capable of playing with poise in the pocket during his rookie season.
The Cardinals are headed for another losing season, but they have to be happy with what they’ve seen from the first-overall pick. Kyler Murray has been as advertised in that he is already one of the league’s most talented throwers and his speed has translated to the NFL level. He’s also making big plays from the pocket, which may surprise some but not anybody who overlooked his height and really studied his game before the draft. By next season, Murray could be a top-10 quarterback in this league.
Jacoby Brissett is never going to be Andrew Luck, but I don’t think the gap in their skill sets is as wide as many people believe. I would like to see him throw downfield more often, but it’s been hard with T.Y. Hilton in and out of the lineup. His WR1 is back now and we may finally get to see Brissett show off his full range of skills. He’s a willing pocket passer with a big arm, and he’s sped up his process this season which has boosted his efficiency. Brissett will just keep getting better the more he plays.
I don’t know what to think about Jimmy Garoppolo. He’s either really good or kind of bad. Or maybe he’s both. The quick release against pressure in combination with his undeniable arm talent can make for some pretty plays, but then he’ll panic in the pocket and just heave the ball into double coverage. 49ers fans will have to ride that roller coaster all season. Having Kyle Shanahan there to direct it could make things easier on the stomach, at least.
Derek Carr is producing like a top-10 quarterback. Now, a lot of the credit for his resurgence should go to the offensive line, but that doesn’t mean Carr hasn’t taken major strides as a passer. He’s always had a strong arm, but Jon Gruden has finally gotten him to use it. And, to his credit, Carr has been more willing to hang in there against pressure and try to make plays on the move. I still want to see him do it without the best offensive line in the NFL.
I might be the last person on the planet who doesn’t think Philip Rivers is washed. The interceptions look bad, but that represents a small sample of his throws and there are a lot of good ones on this 2019 tape that you wouldn’t see from a washed quarterback. And Rivers still does all the little things that have made him a great quarterback throughout his career. He’s still making brilliant checks at the line and reading the defense in a nanosecond.
Calm down, Patriots fans. I know. I KNOW! You are already screen-shotting this to throw back in my face when Tom Brady is lifting another Lombardi Trophy at the end of the season. But even YOU can’t deny that he doesn’t look the same this season. He’s missing easy throws with regularity and, worse, he doesn’t have any interest in getting hit. Who would? Well, it’s part of the job and with Brady not interested in buying extra time for his receivers to get open, the Pats offense is sputtering.
This ranking isn’t going to appease anyone. For the Kirk Cousins haters, this is too high for a streaky player who still takes the easy way out a little too often. For his backers, this will be too low for a guy who is producing like an elite quarterback while also making a handful of beautiful throws each week. I have to admit that Cousins has greatly exceeded my expectations, but I’m still skeptical. One thing I can say for sure: Our perception of Cousins will change based on how the rest of this season goes. For better or worse.
As evidenced by his preseason ranking, I didn’t get too low on Matt Stafford after years of captivity in Jim Bob Cooter’s boring offense. With Darrell Bevell calling the shots in Detroit now, Stafford can finally be himself and sling the ball downfield. That aggressiveness has helped boost Stafford’s efficiency numbers but he’s also managed to avoid a lot of the headache-inducing mistakes he made in his past life as a gunslinger. Right now, we’re watching peak Matt Stafford and … he’s pretty damn good.
Carson Wentz is undoubtedly one of the most talented quarterbacks in the NFL. But he should be better, right? Maybe it’s the Eagles receivers holding him back. Maybe it’s the play-calling. Some of this also falls on Wentz, who’s still just a little too inconsistent with his accuracy and is liable to make a bad read or two. Wentz may just be one of those guys who remain on the periphery of the top tier for his entire career.
I have no doubt in my mind that Deshaun Watson will one day evolve into an elite quarterback. He’s just not quite there yet. Which is fine because he’s still young and just now learning how to play behind a semi-competent line. But Watson’s development has been impressive. He’s rapidly improving in the quick passing game, which gives him a nice Plan B when teams focus on taking away deep shots.
Matt Ryan is so good at everything that he’s kind of boring to watch. Sure, his arm isn’t great and he’s not going to gash defenses with his legs, but he knows how to work the pocket and read a defense and he generally gets the ball where it needs to be. I don’t know if he’s good enough to carry an offense on his own, but Ryan is clearly a quarterback who is worth the crazy money starters get these days.
I had no idea where to put Drew Brees on this list. We’ve barely seen him play this season and he really hasn’t had to do too much when he has played. His arm dying in mid-December is, of course, a concern, but I think that narrative was overblown in the offseason. Brees is still a great quarterback who will find the open receiver and hit him on time and on target. I just don’t know what else he offers at this point in his career.
Lamar Jackson is the biggest riser on the list, but I’m not surprised by his ascension. Here’s what I wrote back in August:
If he can just get to a point where he’s getting the ball to those open receivers on a more consistent basis, Jackson will be a star in this league. He’s shown signs of developing into that kind of passer during the 2019 preseason. If it carries over into the regular season, the NFL’s biggest rushing threat (that includes running backs) should easily outplay this ranking.
It’s safe to say that the development we saw in the preseason has carried over to the regular season — and then some. Jackson has already developed into a league-average passer at 22, which is kind of amazing give where he was at last season. What’s more surprising is that he’s actually improved as a runner. Jackson is now doing the kind of things we saw him do at Louisville against NFL players. That’s astonishing. Imagine what he’ll be doing when he hits his prime.
I feel so ashamed looking back at my preseason ranking of Dak Prescott. I have only myself to blame for selling him short. I was one of the first people on the Dak bandwagon, and I stuck with him during a rough sophomore campaign. But then I started falling for the narratives and my belief that Prescott was one of the best quarterbacks in the NFL was shaken. It was a moment of weakness, but I’ve enjoyed him spending the last few months making me and other nonbelievers look like fools with his exquisite play from the pocket and command of the Cowboys offense. As I argued earlier this month, Dak is now officially one of the NFL’s elite quarterbacks. Shame on me for ever doubting him.
Aaron Rodgers has lost a few MPH off his fastball and isn’t quite as accurate on the move as he once was, but this is still one of the more physically gifted quarterbacks in the league. Rodgers is playing within the structure of the offense more than he had been over the last few seasons and that’s typically when he’s at his best. I don’t know if he still has it in him to reach the heights of his last MVP campaign in 2016, but we’ve seen flashes of that guy.
Patrick Mahomes was never going to replicate the numbers he put up in 2018 but that doesn’t mean he hasn’t improved as a quarterback. Dealing with injuries has caused him to miss some throws, but Mahomes has made better decisions and has looked calmer in the pocket. Once he gets healthy, the numbers will get back to where they were a year ago.
Russell Wilson can still be a maddening quarterback to watch sometimes, but he’s become such a good passer that it doesn’t even matter anymore. Even if he bails out of a clean pocket or misses a receiver running open, Wilson is still going to find a way to make a play. He’s always been an accurate quarterback who can make throws from any platform but he has taken it a step further in 2019. I don’t know if I’ve seen him miss on a deep ball all season. That’s obviously an exaggeration, but you get the idea. It may not be possible for Wilson to keep this up but the gap is so wide between him and the next guy that I don’t know if he needs to in order to maintain his spot atop this list.
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The Packers will probably have to beat the 49ers in San Francisco at some point. Aaron Rodgers wants to get it done this week.
[jwplayer CyWAa1YN-ThvAeFxT]
The path forward looks pretty simple to Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers. Either the Packers beat the 49ers in San Francisco on Sunday night, or they’ll likely have to do it at some point in January.
This week’s showdown at Levi’s Stadium features the top two seeds in the NFC entering Week 12. The winner will emerge as the favorite to earn home-field advantage throughout the conference playoffs.
“This is an important one for us,” Rodgers said at his locker Wednesday. “The way I look at it, we have to beat them once at their place at some point. It’d be nice to do it now. They are a good football team.”
The 49ers are 9-1 and leading the NFC West. The Packers are 8-2 and leading the NFC North. Together, the two teams have a winning percentage of .850.
Sunday night’s matchup will feature only the sixth game featuring two teams with two or fewer losses at this point in the season since 2007. The last two winners of such games – the Denver Broncos in 2015 and the Seahawks Seahawks in 2013 – went on to win the Super Bowl.
The significance of the game isn’t lost on Rodgers, who knows that if the Packers lose Sunday night, any rematch in the playoffs would likely be back in San Francisco.
“We’re all aware of where we’re at in the seeding going into Week 12 and what’s in front of us and the opportunities,” Rodgers said. “There’s still a lot of football to be played and a lot can happen. You’re in denial if you don’t think about the implications of a ‘dub’ or an ‘L’ this week and how that affects stuff down the line. The way we look at it, we’re going to have to win there one time. It’d be nice to get it done this week.”
The Packers and 49ers are two of five teams in the NFC with eight or more wins. While the Packers are in a strong position to qualify for the postseason, either as the NFC North champion or wild card, Rodgers believes the strength of the conference only amplifies the importance of coming together and getting on a roll to end the regular season.
“It feels like one of those years where you just have to get in,” Rodgers said. “Any of those teams that are in position right now could make a move and get hot. That’s what it’s all about. Getting hot at the right time and being healthy.”
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Our weekly NFL underdog betting staple continues into Week 12 where Ken Pomponio features three teams likely to upset their underdog odds
Thanksgiving is only a week away and we’re quickly cutting to the chase in the 2019 NFL season.
Believe it or not, every team will have only five games remaining after this weekend, and each one takes on added significance with postseason berths and draft positioning on the line. We will see if that means more favorites come through in the win column – and, for our purposes, against the point spread – as the stakes grow higher.
Last week, favorites posted a season-best-matching 9-5 mark against the mid-week lines, and we were able to forecast only one (the Arizona Cardinals) of the five covering underdogs, moving our season record to 19-14.
The Week 12 pickings look slim at the outset, but come up with three dogs we must, utilizing Wednesday’s point spreads from BetMGM.
Quarterback Jacoby Brissett was back Sunday, and so was the Colts’ mojo as they snapped out of a two-game skid with a 33-13 rout of the visiting Jacksonville Jaguars. This week, Brissett looks like he may get back his top weapon in wideout T.Y. Hilton.
The Texans, meanwhile, came off their Week 10 bye and were summarily smashed by Lamar Jackson and the red-hot Baltimore Ravens 41-7 on the road. The rout highlighted the Texans’ growing defensive deficiencies as they’ve surrendered 24 or more points in five of their last six outings.
That includes a 30-23 road loss to Brissett and the Colts in Week 7 – Indy’s fifth win in the last six series meetings, including a 21-7 road playoff triumph last January in the Wild Card Round.
Also factor in the success of Thursday night underdogs and their 8-3 record against the spread this season, and there is ample reason to back the visiting Colts Thursday night.
Yep, we’re playing with fire again, siding against the Patriots who are 11-3 ATS in their last 14 games dating back to Week 17 of last season.
The New England defense is allowing a league-low 10.8 points per game but has famously feasted largely on a group of bottom-feeder teams and injury-addled offenses.
Dak Prescott and the Cowboys are anything but, ranking fourth in the league with an average of 28.6 points per game and have the requisite run-pass balance to pose a serious challenge.
Overshadowed by a dominant defense, Tom Brady and his offense simply haven’t been their usual potent selves and have managed only five offensive TDs over the last three games.
The Cowboys may not pull off the outright upset in Foxborough, but they have more than enough to make this Sunday afternoon national showcase game a close one.
After bouncing back from their first loss of the season, the Niners are tied with the Pats for the league’s best record at 9-1.
But whether it’s been a rash of key injuries or the up-and-down play of QB Jimmy Garoppolo, the 49ers have covered only once in their last five outings and are 5-4-1 overall ATS on the season.
Aaron Rodgers and the Packers, meanwhile, are only one game behind the Niners at 8-2 and have been at their best in their biggest games, beating the division-rival Chicago Bears and Minnesota Vikings, and winning on the road in Dallas and against the Kansas City Chiefs.
Now comes their biggest test yet – a prime-time NFC playoff-seeding showdown in San Francisco – and we give Rodgers and Co. more than a puncher’s chance to not only cover but come away with the outright road upset.
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