Packers WR Christian Watson had NFL’s fastest play of Week 12

Christian Watson hit 21.53 miles per hour on his 53-yard catch against the Lions on Thanksgiving.

Green Bay Packers wide receiver Christian Watson was the fastest ball-carrier of Week 12 (through games on Sunday) thanks to the deep shot that hit to open Thanksgiving Day at Ford Field.

Per Next Gen Stats, Watson hit 21.53 miles per hour on his 53-yard catch on the first play of the Packers’ 29-22 win over the Detroit Lions.

Watson ran a deep post on a play Matt LaFleur wanted to change pre-game. The Packers kept it in, and Jordan Love connected with Watson — who got a free release and flew by the coverage — for the big play to kick off the holiday showdown. The completion set up an opening drive touchdown for the Packers, who scored on their first two possessions, led 20-6 in the first half and eventually closed out the win late.

Watson finished the upset win with five catches, 94 yards and a 16-yard touchdown. It was a breakout performance for the second-year receiver, and it could have been so much more.

Watson’s speed on the 53-yard catch is currently the 18th fastest play in the NFL this season and the fourth fastest play by a Packers player, trailing Jayden Reed (32-yard TD in Week 11), Aaron Jones (35-yard TD in Week 1) and Keisean Nixon (51-yard kickoff return in Week 9). The Packers (4) and Miami Dolphins (9) are the only teams with three or more plays in the top 20 this season, per Next Gen Stats.

Last year, Watson hit his top speed — 21.72 miles per hour — on a 46-yard touchdown run against the Chicago Bears in Week 13.

Can Watson’s elite speed help fuel another Packers run to end the 2023 season?

Packers WR Christian Watson breaks out vs. Lions, and it could have been much more

Packers WR Christian Watson broke out vs. Lions, and it could have been so much more.

Green Bay Packers wide receiver Christian Watson had his breakout performance of the 2023 season on Thanksgiving Day against the Detroit Lions.

Five catches, 94 yards and a huge 16-yard touchdown in the second half that ended up representing the game-winning points. And it could have been so much more. In fact, Watson was this close to producing his own Randy Moss Thanksgiving moment.

Let’s run through it.

On the first play, Jordan Love underthrew Watson on what had a chance to be a 75-yard touchdown. It ended up being a 53-yard contested catch.

On 3rd-and-4 from the 24-yard line in the second quarter, Watson fell to the ground while making a full-speed turn on an out-breaking route. He appeared to get hooked by the defender, and officials ruled Watson’s feet got “tangled” with the cornerback. Without the (potentially illegal) contact, Watson had a legitimate chance to make a catch on the run and score a 24-yard touchdown. Instead, the Packers kicked a field goal.

On 3rd-and-10 with 2:59 left in the fourth quarter, Love dealt with immediate pressure up the middle and couldn’t get enough on his deep throw to Watson, who was behind the coverage again. With better protection and throw, Watson almost certainly scores a 42-yard dagger touchdown.

So, two underthrows and a questionable non-penalty call took away almost 100 receiving yards and potentially three more touchdowns.

Do the math. Add another 22 yards and a touchdown on the first play. Add 24 yards and a touchdown on the “tangled” play. Add 42 more yards and a touchdown on the missed dagger.

If all those had hit, Watson would have finished with the game with seven catches, 182 yards and four touchdowns.

The numbers really aren’t the point. Instead, it’s to highlight how great Watson was in a huge win for Matt LaFleur and the Packers.

Watson’s five catches were still huge. He opened the game with a bang, setting up a touchdown. He made a difficult catch along the sideline to convert 3rd-and-8 on the second drive, continuing a touchdown drive. And then he all but put the game away with a tremendous catch on a slot fade for a 16-yard touchdown in the second half. He finished with three contested catches and a 153.3 passer rating when targeted.

When Watson is on and creating big plays, the entire Packers offense changes. Defenses have to respect vertical routes, leaving Love open to attack intermediate areas of the field. And any one-on-one opportunities for Watson is a chance for a game-changing play.

Last season, Watson broke out with three touchdowns in a big win over the Dallas Cowboys on Nov. 13. He delivered his breakout performance of 2023 — and came close to another multi-touchdown finish — during an upset win over the Lions on Nov. 23.

Anatomy of a Play: How Jordan Love made the most of a bad route

Jordan Love’s first of three touchdowns against the Detroit Lions happened because the Packers’ quarterback adjusted in real time to the wrong route.

The Green Bay Packers were hoping that this would be the year in which quarterback Jordan Love became the franchise guy they wanted when they traded up to select the Utah State alum with the 26th pick in the 2020 draft. It’s been an up-and-down experience to date, but recently, Love has made a lot of positive strides. Last Sunday, he eviscerated the Los Angeles Chargers’ (admittedly awful) pass defense in a 40-27 win, and on a short week, he had what may have been his best game to date on Thanksgiving Day against the Detroit Lions in a 32-22 win.

Love completed 22 of 32 passes for 268 yards, three touchdowns, no interceptions, and a passer rating of 125.5 against a Detroit defense that ranked 10th in DVOA coming into this game.. but has been trending down of late.

But this isn’t about whatever the heck is happening to Aaron Glenn’s defense — it’s about Love’s obvious improvement in processing, and creating important plays out of those processes.

The first of Love’s three touchdowns against the Lions came with 12:21 left in the first quarter; a 10-yarder to Jayden Reed from the outside left slot in trips, with Christian Watson in the left inside slot. That’s where the geometry got interesting.

“We actually messed that play up,” Love said after the game. “Christian wasn’t supposed to be right where he was at. He was supposed to run a slant, and somehow it just worked out. It worked out. I’m not even sure how the ball got in there, but it was great by J Reed (Packers WR Jayden Reed) just being able to concentrate when there was like three dudes right in that window, so just having him be able to concentrate, catch it, and then finish in the end zone was huge. Like we said, it’s not going to be perfect, but when you just go out and make these plays come to life, execute, and then obviously just come up with a big play right there is huge.”

Here, you can see Watson engaging safety Kerby Joseph, and running outside from there. Reed had to navigate all that stuff in the middle, which he did quite adroitly. Love had to read it out from the inside, and the pinpoint throw was something else.

The Lions were playing Cover-1 here, and Love said that Detroit’s increased use of aggressive coverage made a positive difference for the Packers.

“I think they threw a little bit more man at us, and it’s just a testament to the receivers. They’re finding ways to get open and obviously when it’s man it’s going to be a contested catch. You’re not going to be wide open, so I think our receivers just went out there and made some huge plays against that. Like I said, we had a good plan going into the week. Obviously, a short week—you never know what the defense is going to throw at you—so I think just the in-game adjustments and understanding what they’re giving us look wise and being able to take advantage of that, but testament to the receivers being able to get open versus that man.”

Head coach Matt LaFleur seems to think that he’s got his next franchise-defining quarterback, and based on recent tape, he may have a point.

“I thought he was awesome the entire game,” LeFleur said of Love after the win over the Lions. “He is a cool customer and you can have really good conversations with him. I just never see him get too high or too low, whether it’s going good or not so good. He’s just a guy that’s really matured over these last four years. It’s hard not to root for him, he’s such a good person first and foremost. All those guys in the locker room, they love him. I can tell you all the coaches love him, just his approach. He’s consistent in terms of who he is on a daily basis, and that’s just who he is, he’s one of the guys. That’s always important from that position.”

In this week’s “Xs and Os with Greg Cosell and Doug Farrar,” the guys got into what Love had shown in the win over the Chargers. There’s a lot to like here.

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You can watch this week’s “Xs and Os” video, previewing all of Week 12’s biggest NFL matchups, right here:

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You can also listen and subscribe to the “Xs and Os” podcast on Spotify…

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Anatomy of a Play: How Jordan Love made the most of a bad route

Jordan Love’s first of three touchdowns against the Detroit Lions happened because the Packers’ quarterback adjusted in real time to the wrong route.

The Green Bay Packers were hoping that this would be the year in which quarterback Jordan Love became the franchise guy they wanted when they traded up to select the Utah State alum with the 26th pick in the 2020 draft. It’s been an up-and-down experience to date, but recently, Love has made a lot of positive strides. Last Sunday, he eviscerated the Los Angeles Chargers’ (admittedly awful) pass defense in a 40-27 win, and on a short week, he had what may have been his best game to date on Thanksgiving Day against the Detroit Lions in a 32-22 win.

Love completed 22 of 32 passes for 268 yards, three touchdowns, no interceptions, and a passer rating of 125.5 against a Detroit defense that ranked 10th in DVOA coming into this game.. but has been trending down of late.

But this isn’t about whatever the heck is happening to Aaron Glenn’s defense — it’s about Love’s obvious improvement in processing, and creating important plays out of those processes.

The first of Love’s three touchdowns against the Lions came with 12:21 left in the first quarter; a 10-yarder to Jayden Reed from the outside left slot in trips, with Christian Watson in the left inside slot. That’s where the geometry got interesting.

“We actually messed that play up,” Love said after the game. “Christian wasn’t supposed to be right where he was at. He was supposed to run a slant, and somehow it just worked out. It worked out. I’m not even sure how the ball got in there, but it was great by J Reed (Packers WR Jayden Reed) just being able to concentrate when there was like three dudes right in that window, so just having him be able to concentrate, catch it, and then finish in the end zone was huge. Like we said, it’s not going to be perfect, but when you just go out and make these plays come to life, execute, and then obviously just come up with a big play right there is huge.”

Here, you can see Watson engaging safety Kerby Joseph, and running outside from there. Reed had to navigate all that stuff in the middle, which he did quite adroitly. Love had to read it out from the inside, and the pinpoint throw was something else.

The Lions were playing Cover-1 here, and Love said that Detroit’s increased use of aggressive coverage made a positive difference for the Packers.

“I think they threw a little bit more man at us, and it’s just a testament to the receivers. They’re finding ways to get open and obviously when it’s man it’s going to be a contested catch. You’re not going to be wide open, so I think our receivers just went out there and made some huge plays against that. Like I said, we had a good plan going into the week. Obviously, a short week—you never know what the defense is going to throw at you—so I think just the in-game adjustments and understanding what they’re giving us look wise and being able to take advantage of that, but testament to the receivers being able to get open versus that man.”

Head coach Matt LaFleur seems to think that he’s got his next franchise-defining quarterback, and based on recent tape, he may have a point.

“I thought he was awesome the entire game,” LeFleur said of Love after the win over the Lions. “He is a cool customer and you can have really good conversations with him. I just never see him get too high or too low, whether it’s going good or not so good. He’s just a guy that’s really matured over these last four years. It’s hard not to root for him, he’s such a good person first and foremost. All those guys in the locker room, they love him. I can tell you all the coaches love him, just his approach. He’s consistent in terms of who he is on a daily basis, and that’s just who he is, he’s one of the guys. That’s always important from that position.”

In this week’s “Xs and Os with Greg Cosell and Doug Farrar,” the guys got into what Love had shown in the win over the Chargers. There’s a lot to like here.

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You can watch this week’s “Xs and Os” video, previewing all of Week 12’s biggest NFL matchups, right here:

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You can also listen and subscribe to the “Xs and Os” podcast on Spotify…

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Packers opening play bomb to Christian Watson vs. Lions almost didn’t happen

Matt LaFleur was tempted to change the first play call of Thanksgiving Day. He didn’t, and Jordan Love and Christian Watson created a huge play.

The Green Bay Packers began their Thanksgiving Day win over the Detroit Lions with a bang, connecting on a 53-yard pass from Jordan Love to Christain Watson. However, that play call almost didn’t happen.

Coach Matt LaFleur admitted he was tempted to change the play. He stuck with it, and Love and Watson created the explosive play.

Before the ball was even kicked off on Thanksgiving Day, the Packers started things out uncharacteristically by choosing to receive the opening kickoff after winning the coin toss.

Typically, if the Packers win the opening toss, they choose to defer to the second half, with the thought process behind this being that they’ll possibly have the opportunity to double-dip, scoring before halftime and then scoring to begin the third quarter.

But Thursday was different. Against a very good Lions team that featured a stout defense and an offense that can put up points, along with the Packers being short-handed at a number of positions due to injuries, Green Bay knew how important a fast start was.

“Just wanted to start fast,” said Jordan Love post-game about the team’s decision to receive. “Wanted to put the offense out there and set the tone and that’s what we did.”

Green Bay didn’t only attempt to set the tone by choosing to start with the football, but right out of the gate, they came out swinging, with an immediate deep shot off play-action from Love to Watson. The ball was a bit underthrown, but Watson made a nice adjustment and an aggressive play to secure the catch for a 53-yard gain.

“I wasn’t quite sure where the ball was going to go,” said Matt LaFleur. “I had a good idea it was going to Christian or I thought maybe Rome; just with the action we had, I was kind of concerned that we wouldn’t have the checkdowns we might need, but our protection was phenomenal because it was kind of a later developing play to throw a post.

“I told Christian right before the game, there’s a good chance this play is going to go to you, just go up and attack the football, and he did exactly that.”

Green Bay would go on to score on that opening possession, giving them the early lead. After the game, Love said that this specific play was put in just this week, and the plan as of Wednesday was to open the game with it. However, it’s a play-call, at least at this stage of the game, that almost didn’t happen.

“As a matter of fact,” said LaFleur, “I almost changed that first play call. I was kind of mulling it over quite a bit, and I texted Jordan this morning and told him I was going to change it to something else, and he said he wanted this call, so I said okay.”

In addition to that opening play, Watson had what was by far his best performance of the season. He led the team in both receptions with five and receiving yards with 94, including a touchdown catch. Along with seeing Watson’s big play ability on display, the other encouraging aspect of his performance beyond the numbers was that several of those catches were made in contested catch situations–something that has given him fits at times this season.

Short-handed at running back and facing one of the best run defenses in football, the Packers’ passing game, led by Love and Watson, had to shoulder the workload this week, and the fact that they do so successfully shows just how far this offense has come over the last month.

“He had a big-time game today,” said LaFleur of Watson. “That was good to see just for him. I know he hasn’t been flawless up to this point, but I thought he came up big today and made a lot of critical catches.”

Twitter reacts to the Packers’ 29-22 stunner over the Lions on Thanksgiving

Take a look at some of the best tweets to emerge from the Green Bay Packers’ 29-22 Thanksgiving win over the Detroit Lions.

The Green Bay Packers pulled off the upset.

Jordan Love threw three touchdown passes in his Thanksgiving game debut and the Packers curtailed the Detroit Lions all game, 29-22, Thursday afternoon at Ford Field.

Have the Packers finally found a worthy successor to Aaron Rodgers?

Detroit’s offense was troubled, losing three fumbles on the afternoon. The Lions were a horrendous 1-5 on fourth downs. To his brand, Dan Campbell passed up on cheap field goals to go for it while in range of kicker Riley Patterson.

Naturally Twitter was full of takes and comments. Here are some of the best to emerge.

Jordan Love throws TD pass to Christian Watson after Lions’ fake punt backfires

The Packers made the Lions pay for failing on a fake punt attempt

Give Dan Campbell credit, he’s always willing to roll the dice. Sometimes the gamble doesn’t work.

That’s what happened on Thanksgiving Day when the Detroit Lions attempted a fake punt from their own territory in the third quarter.

Trailing 23-14, the fake punt went nowhere.

The Packers took over at the Detroit 22 and soon after Jordan Love found Christian Watson with a TD pass.

Rather than try and go up 16, the Packers went for 2 and their attempt at a Philly Special flopped.

It was 29-14. Packers.

Packers, Lions trade early Thanksgiving touchdowns

Christian Watson opened Thanksgiving Day with a long pass reception

The Green Bay Packers won the coin toss and didn’t defer.

Matt LaFleur had a plan and his offense worked it to perfection.

On the first play of the Thanksgiving Day game against the Detroit Lions, Jordan Love connected with Christian Watson on a 53-yard pass.

The drive concluded with a touchdown as Love hit Jayden Reed with a 10-yard touchdown pass.

The Lions countered on their opening drive as Sam LaPorta caught a 7-yard pass from Jared Goff.

Riley Patterson missed the PAT so the Packers led, 7-6.

That marked 148 yards of offense on the first two drives of the game.

Packers TE coach John Dunn dials up play design on touchdown pass to Christian Watson

Packers TE coach John Dunn had a perfect idea to counter something the Chargers were doing defensively, and it led to a TD pass to Christian Watson.

The touchdown pass from Jordan Love to Christian Watson during Sunday’s 23-20 win over the Los Angeles Chargers was not a play the Green Bay Packers had worked on throughout the week. In fact, it wasn’t even in the gameplan for the week.

“Very nice,” said Jordan Love post-game of the play design and execution. “That touchdown was actually a play that I think Matt (LaFleur) just kind of drew up on the sideline after seeing a look that we had previously, something that wasn’t even really in the game plan.”

On 2nd-and-9 from the Chargers’ 11-yard line with the third quarter coming to a close, Watson lined up in the slot on the right side of the formation with Dontayvion Wicks motioning to his side of the field as the ball was snapped.

On the left side, Tucker Kraft ran to the flat, while Luke Musgrave ran a curl route that drew the attention of the safety. With the safety crashing down on Musgrave, a pocket in the back left corner of the end zone opened up for Watson who was running a crossing route. With a free release for Watson’s speed, the two Chargers defenders couldn’t keep up, resulting in a relatively easy score on beautifully thrown ball by Love.

While Love gave credit to LaFleur for the play design, it was actually tight ends coach John Dunn who drew that play up on the fly. We often hear the phrase “in game adjustments” thrown around, and, well, that’s exactly what this was. The Chargers gave Green Bay a similar look defensively earlier in that same drive, and Dunn had a counter for it the next time around.

“I’ve got to John Dunn all the credit in the world on that,” said LaFleur. “There was a play earlier in that drive… We always look at the pictures and he (John Dunn) saw something there. He suggested a play and then we called it, hit the coverage and those guys went out there and executed it. It was a great job by Christian hauling ass across the field and Jordan made a good throw. The credit goes to John Dunn in that situation.”

This scoring play was a promising development for the Packers young offense for a few reasons. The first being that this group has struggled to make timely adjustments throughout the course of the season, which to a degree, is likely a product of all the inexperience on that side of the ball. In this instance, however, it was an adjustment made on the fly in the midst of a drive and the execution was on point.

The other reason to be encouraged is that Green Bay was able to utilize Watson’s speed and get him the ball in space on a relatively easy pitch and catch. While Watson’s downfield presence is what might standout most from his breakout performance as a rookie in 2022, the Packers did an excellent job of getting him involved on crossing routes, slants, and end-arounds, which led to explosive plays. This season, there have been fewer of those opportunities for Watson.

“We hit one against Denver that was about the last one with Christian,” said offensive coordinator Adam Stenavich last week when asked about getting Watson involved in other ways.” I think some of them have just gone to other people as we’re going. We’re seeing a lot of differences in coverages. More shell where those crossing routes aren’t really that great, so we’ve kind of had to adjust a few things. As we keep going those opportunities will present itself, especially if we keep running the ball well. Those single-high coverages will hopefully help us out with the crossing routes.”

I do think that there can be a more concerted effort by LaFleur and his staff to give Watson more opportunities on these types of over-the-middle routes. But also, as the Packers offense as a whole continues to find success elsewhere, Watson – who still draws a lot of attention – is going to benefit from that as well.

As Stenavich mentioned, an improved run game will force defenses out of that split-safety look, while the continued big play ability from Dontayvion Wicks, Jayden Reed, and others will take some of the playmaking burden off of Watson’s shoulders. The touchdown pass he caught against Los Angeles is a prime example of that, with the safety flying downhill towards Musgrave.

Continued success on offense should open up improved opportunities for Packers WR Christian Watson

Jordan Love on Packers WR Christian Watson: “A lot of it isn’t his fault.” Improving in other areas on offense should make life easier for Watson.

The current connection between Jordan Love and Christian Watson hasn’t been working as effectively as hoped. But as the Green Bay Packers offense hopefully continues to progress in other areas, Watson could benefit from more quality opportunities to get the ball in his hands.

In six games this season, Watson has caught only 14 of his 33 targets, including just two receptions of 20-plus yards. Of Love’s 10 interceptions thrown, five have come when targeting Watson. The good news is he’s averaging almost 17 yards per catch, but he and Love haven’t been anywhere near efficient enough for opponents to feel the true effect of what that connection can do.

When something isn’t working, it’s natural to want to find out what that one specific thing is that’s going wrong. However, in football, very rarely is it ever just one person or one thing contributing to an issue. Watson, by his own admission, needs to be more aggressive going for the ball. Matt LaFleur also mentioned wanting Watson to play fast, decisive, and confident on every snap.

There have also been times when Love could have been more accurate when throwing Watson’s way, and perhaps the coaching staff could have been more intentional about trying to create more manufactured opportunities for Watson to get the ball in space. To a degree, Watson is also feeling the effects of what has largely been an ineffective offense up for a large chunk of the season.

During the second half of the 2022 season, when Watson burst onto the scene, it was his vertical presence that stood out, but he was also able to generate explosive plays via slants, crossers, and even an end-around in the Chicago game. However, those opportunities haven’t been there very often in 2023.

“We hit one against Denver,” said offensive coordinator Adam Stenavich. “That was about the last one with Christian. I think some of them have just gone to other people as we’re going. We’re seeing a lot of differences in coverages. More shell where those crossing routes aren’t really that great, so we’ve kind of had to adjust a few things.

“As we keep going, those opportunities will present itself, especially if we keep running the ball well. Those single-high coverages will hopefully help us out with the crossing routes.”

As we all know, the game of football is incredibly interdependent. All 11 players have to be on the same page, and if one player doesn’t execute well, the entire play can be blown up. Each phase or element of the game has an impact on the others.

The Green Bay run game has been performing better as of late, but it is still not consistently where it needs to be and was non-existent for a large portion of the season up to this point. As Stenavich mentioned, the impact of this is that the Packers’ offense has seen a lot of shell coverage, which can make generating chunk plays through the passing game all the more difficult.

If Green Bay is able to continue to find some success on the ground moving forward, defenses will have to start committing an extra defender to the box, thus opening up opportunities for Watson and the other pass catchers, not only downfield but at other levels of the field as well.

Early on in the Pittsburgh game, when Green Bay was seeing more man coverage as Watson noted, he had two receptions, one on an out-route and another over the middle. However, when the Steelers switched to zone, moving the ball through the air became more challenging for the offense.

Although Watson hasn’t seen the production one would have hoped for, he still has a lot of gravity, drawing the attention of opposing defenses because of the big play potential he possesses. This, in turn, helps create for others in the offense by giving them more space to operate in or a one-on-one matchup to take advantage of.

With that said, as players like Luke Musgrave, Jayden Reed, and Dontayvion Wicks continue to generate explosive plays, which is becoming more of the norm as of late, defenses aren’t going to be able to key in on one specific player. Rather, when they have to account for several, that can take some of the eyes off Watson and generate more favorable situations for him to get the ball, and not only on vertical throws.

“It’s hard for a team to have one player that’s doing extremely well, and they’re only relying on that one person,” said Watson on Wednesday. “So the more that everyone else can make plays, the more plays we can make in the run game, the more it sets up everybody else in the other phases.”

Slowly, the Green Bay offense is beginning to find some sort of traction. However, it’s difficult to envision a scenario where this group finds consistency and reaches its potential without Watson being an important factor.

No, the season hasn’t gone as hoped for him, and there are definitely areas to be better in, but if the run game can keep progressing and other pass catchers continue to make big plays, it will help take some of that playmaking burden off of Watson’s shoulders.

“My message to Christian is to keep the confidence,” said Love on Wednesday. “Don’t let that other stuff ever let your confidence waver. I’ve got complete trust in Christian. I know he knows this. I trust all my receivers. The ball is going to come out regardless.

“I told him just keep that confidence up,” added Love. “Keep making plays and move on to the next one. A lot of it isn’t his fault. I can be better for him. Just keep his confidence. I trust these guys, and we are going to go up from here.”