Like Tommy DeVito before him, Baker Mayfield wins NFC Offensive Player of the Week after facing Packers

Joe Barry and the Green Bay Packers defense went back-to-back: Baker Mayfield won NFC Offensive Player of the Week just one week after Tommy DeVito won it facing the Packers.

Joe Barry and the Green Bay Packers defense went back-to-back in producing weekly awards.

Following in the footsteps of New York Giants quarterback Tommy DeVito, Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Baker Mayfield was named NFC Offensive Player of the Week after completing 22 passes for 384 yards and four touchdowns in a 34-20 win over the Packers in Week 15.

Mayfield was an easy choice after producing a perfect 158.3 passer rating, which made him the first ever visiting quarterback to have a perfect passer rating at Lambeau Field.

DeVito won the award in Week 14 after rushing for 71 yards, completing 17 of 21 passes and leading the Giants on a game-winning field goal drive to beat the Packers on “Monday Night Football.”

Over the last two weeks, the Packers allowed 39 completions on 49 attempts for 542 yards and five touchdown passes while producing zero interceptions. DeVito and Mayfield combined for 611 total yards.

Up next? No. 1 overall pick Bryce Young, who has struggled through a difficult rookie season with the Carolina Panthers. Young has thrown only nine touchdown passes and has just one game with multiple touchdowns. He also has just one game with a passer rating over 100.0 and four games with 200 or more passing yards. Will the Packers get things turned around on defense to start a pivotal three-game stretch, or will Young have a breakout performance like DeVito and Mayfield? Tune in Sunday to find out if Barry and the Packers can go 3-for-3.

Report: ‘Heat is on’ Packers defensive coordinator Joe Barry to finish 2023

ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler can confirm what is already being assumed by many: the job of Green Bay Packers defensive coordinator Joe Barry is on the line to finish the 2023 season. 

ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler can confirm what is already being assumed by many: the job of Green Bay Packers defensive coordinator Joe Barry is on the line to finish the 2023 season.

According to reporting from Fowler, “the heat is on” Barry, and the Packers’ defensive coordinator job is “on the radar of many in the coaching industry.”

Coach Matt LaFleur stuck with Barry despite the defense giving up 34 points and a perfect passer rating to Baker Mayfield in a 14-point loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Sunday at Lambeau Field.

Over the last two weeks, Mayfield and New York Giants quarterback Tommy DeVito — who led a game-winning drive over the Packers — were named NFC Offensive Player of the Week after facing Barry’s struggling defense, dealing a major blow to the team’s playoff chances.

The Packers were once 6-6 and cruising toward a potential playoff spot as a wildcard team in the NFC, but a pair of crushingly disappointing defeats to teams with losing records has the Packers at 6-8 and on the outside looking in with three games to play.

Fowler’s report suggests Barry can still save his job over the final three weeks. The Packers play Bryce Young and the Carolina Panthers in Week 16, a backup quarterback for the Minnesota Vikings in Week 17 and Justin Fields and the Chicago Bears in the season finale. Green Bay likely needs to win all three to make the postseason.

Maybe the most intriguing part of the report is Fowler’s point on other coaches tracking the situation. With high draft picks and established veterans on the defense and a young, improving offense with a quarterback and playcaller in place, the Packers situation could be an attractive one for a defensive coordinator candidate in 2024. And if LaFleur makes the right hire, the defense could get turned around quickly, potentially making the Packers a legitimate contender next season.

At this point, it’s unclear if LaFleur would have to fire Barry after the 2023 season or if Barry’s contract would simply be left to expire. Most coordinators get three-year deals, and this season is Year 3 for Barry in Green Bay. If Barry’s deal is about to end, it’s difficult to imagine LaFleur and the Packers be willing to give him a new deal to return.

Matt LaFleur sticking with Joe Barry as Packers defensive coordinator to finish 2023

Matt LaFleur is sticking with Joe Barry as Packers defensive coordinator to finish the 2023 season.

Green Bay Packers coach Matt LaFleur is sticking with Joe Barry as his defensive coordinator to finish out the 2023 season.

LaFleur confirmed Barry will remain his defensive playcaller over the final three games despite the Packers defense giving up 34 points and almost 400 yards passing to Baker Mayfield during Sunday’s crushing loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

“Yeah, that is the plan,” LaFleur said Monday.

Why will Barry remain?

“If I thought that (firing Barry) was the best solution today, then we’d make that decision,” LaFleur said.

The Packers coach went through all three phases of the film on Sunday night and came away “disappointed” with what he saw on offense, defense and special teams.

LaFleur said “poor communication” on defense was the biggest problem during Sunday’s defeat and he’ll take on a bigger role in making sure the communication problems get fixed this season.

Mayfield completed 22 of 28 passes for 384 yards and four touchdown passes. He didn’t have an interception and finished with a perfect 158.3 passer rating. The loss — Green Bay’s eighth of the season — put a big dent in the team’s playoff chances.

The Packers finish the year with games against the Carolina Panthers, Minnesota Vikings and Chicago Bears. LaFleur’s team likely needs to win out to make the postseason as a wildcard team in the NFC field.

Joe Barry-led Packers defense shredded by Bucs QB Baker Mayfield

Was Sunday’s performance against Baker Mayfield the last straw for Joe Barry as the Packers defensive coordinator?

In a de facto playoff game for the Green Bay Packers, the defense, specifically against the pass, wilted when it mattered once again.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Baker Mayfield completed 22 of 28 pass attempts for 381 yards, four touchdowns, and a perfect passer rating. Receiver Chris Godwin totaled 10 receptions for 155 yards, while Mike Evans, David Moore and running back Rachaad White all had at least 50 receiving yards each.

“They got a lot of explosion plays,” said Matt LaFleur post game, “and looking at the drive chart here, not a lot of stops. We had one three-and-out, they fumbled one time, and every other possession ended up in points, so it’s going to be tough to win a football game when that happens.”

Despite how well the Bucs moved the ball and the 34 points scored, the Packers did get after Mayfield, recording five sacks, along with an additional four quarterback hits. However, on the other 23 passing plays by Tampa Bay, they picked apart Green Bay’s secondary.

There were too many chunk plays given up by the Green Bay defense, with almost none of the passes thrown by Mayfield even being contested. It was pitch-and-catch out there for the Bucs’ offense—almost like they knew exactly what the Packers were going to do in each situation and therefore where to attack the weak parts of their zone coverage.

“Hindsight is 20-20, absolutely,” said LaFleur about Green Bay’s usage of zone coverage. “You know, we have to challenge much better on the back end in terms of, I get it, they have some good wideouts, but you have to be willing to challenge, especially if you are getting gashed, just changing it up, and I’ll go back and take a peek at it right after we’re done here.”

Not including the Bucs’ last possession of the game where they ran the clock out, they had eight possessions overall with six of them ending up in points, including three touchdown drives in the second half. The Packers forced a fumble on Tampa Bay’s second possession and a punt in the second quarter. Otherwise, the Bucs did whatever they wanted.

This performance from Green Bay comes on the heels of the Giants game, where they were unable to generate a sack against the most-sack prone offense in football, and allowed the Tommy DeVito-led New York offense to march down the field for a game-winning field goal with about a 1:30 left on the clock.

Whether or not Matt LaFleur chooses to move on from defensive coordinator Joe Barry remains to be seen, but these type of lack-luster performances in such important, playoff-like games – coupled with how the defense has performed the last two-plus seasons under Barry where little improvement or changes have been made – are the types of situations where these conversations, or thoughts, are at the very least had, to some degree.

However, at least following the game, that was not the time and place for LaFleur to discuss a change.

“Yeah, now is not the time for that, to be honest with you,” said LaFleur when asked about moving on from Barry.

“Because now is not the time,” said LaFleur when asked again. “I’m trying to find solutions, and I have to go back and take a look at the film.”

Perhaps LaFleur meant in that specific moment, at the podium, just minutes after the loss, he was not going to discuss moving on from Barry. Or perhaps LaFleur meant that with only three games left in the season, he isn’t looking to make a change in this final month. That sort of open-ended answer will only fuel speculation, but LaFleur didn’t dismiss the idea either. He just said, now is not the time.

One of the questions we always have to ask ourselves in these situations is, if a move is made, who is the in-season replacement? This is a defensive coaching staff where there is no obvious answer. I wouldn’t even know who to guess.

Green Bay also still finds themselves technically alive in the NFC playoff race. On one hand, maybe they want to avoid a major change. But on the other, the 10-3 Philadelphia Eagles just made a change at defensive coordinator following a two-game losing streak.

At the end of the day, LaFleur is the head coach and he is responsible for this entire Packers team. This style of defense is what he wanted in Green Bay. He signs off on gameplan going into each game—it’s not as if Barry is going rogue with what he’s putting together. But whether it’s a lack of situational awareness, adjustments that are either too little or too late, the execution, or players not knowing their responsibilities, which we saw twice in the secondary against Tampa Bay, there is a disconnect between what LaFleur wants this unit to be and where it actually is.

“It’s all concerning when it looks like there’s some confusion going on back there,” said LaFleur. “You’ve got to be so coordinated and so in tune on all three levels. Every guy plays off one another and when there’s any types of miscommunications, you can get gashed. That’s what happened. 22 completions for 381 yards, that’s not good enough.”

Whether LaFleur makes the change this week or in mid-January, I don’t think it makes much of a difference—unless the moral of the locker room were in jeopardy, but there isn’t any visible sign of that being the case. With that said, keeping the status-quo on the defensive side of the ball going into 2024 is not acceptable.

It’s been almost three full seasons now with Barry at the defensive helm. We know what this defense is at this point, and if schematic changes were going to made, they should have happened well before Week 15 of this season, regardless of how the last three games go. To put it simply, it just hasn’t been good enough.

“All I know is this,” added LaFleur, “we’ve got three weeks left. We’ve got three games and every game is a playoff mentality. Who knows what will happen. We can’t get it all back at once. You’ve got to earn it every day. We’ve got to get back to practice and give it our best shot from here on out.”

Matt LaFleur noncommittal on Joe Barry’s future after blowout loss to Buccaneers

Matt LaFleur didn’t want to talk about a potential change at defensive coordinator following Sunday’s loss to the Buccaneers.

Green Bay Packers coach Matt LaFleur repeatedly said his team got out-coached but mostly avoided the line of questioning when asked if he would be making a change at defensive coordinator following Sunday’s 34-20 loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Joe Barry’s defense gave up 452 total yards and six scoring drives, including 381 passing yards and four touchdown passes by Bucs quarterback Baker Mayfield.

LaFleur didn’t want to talk about an immediate coaching change and said he wanted to watch the tape before proceeding. At no point in the press conference did LaFleur commit to Barry as defensive coordinator moving forward.

“Now’s not the time for that, to be honest with you,” LaFleur said. “I’m trying to find solutions. I have to go back and take a look at the film.”

Barry has been the defensive coordinator in Green Bay since 2021. Sunday at Lambeau Field — the site of a pivotal December game in the NFC playoff race — might represent rock bottom.

The Buccaneers took the first lead 3-0, led 13-10 at halftime and then scored touchdowns on three straight possessions to open the second half.

“They whooped us in every phase. They out-coached us, out-played us. It’s disappointing,” LaFleur said. “We have to play better, have to coach better.”

LaFleur pointed to allowing too many explosive plays and not producing enough stops as the biggest problems defensively. Mayfield averaged over 17 yards per completion and had a perfect 158.3 passer rating.

“We have to challenge much better on the back end,” LaFleur said.

The Packers have lost back-to-back games after disappointing defensive efforts against the New York Giants and Buccaneers.

“Right now, we’re looking for solutions. I want to go back to it,” LaFleur said. “You have to give me time to go back and look at it.”

The Packers face Bryce Young and the Carolina Panthers next week.

“We haven’t found solutions that are good enough,” LaFleur said. “It’s extremely disappointing.”

Situational football key area of improvement for Joe Barry and Packers

Joe Barry wants his Packers defense to be better situationally during the 2023 season.

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Consistency, tackling, and limiting the big play are all areas that defensive coordinator Joe Barry told reporters on Tuesday that the Green Bay Packers defense could improve. However, his biggest emphasis will be on making his unit better situationally.

Situational football includes third downs, red zone defense, and the two-minute drill — all key moments and plays within a football game, and also all areas where the Packers have to clean things up.

“Situational football,” said Barry when asked where the Green Bay defense has to improve. “Usually, NFL football games, they’re close games. There’s very few blowouts in this league, and most of the time, those games come down to four, five, or maybe six or seven plays. And if the result of those handful of plays are different, that’s the difference between winning and losing a football game. A lot of times, those go into situational football. It goes into third down, it goes into the red zone, it goes into two-minute.”

On third downs, the Packers actually got off the field quite well, ranking eighth in third down conversion rate last season. Where that stat may be misleading, however, is that opponents often didn’t even have to get to third down against the Packers. The 11.4 third down attempts per game that Green Bay allowed were the fewest in football.

What this means is that, oftentimes, opponents either moved the chains on first or second down, or the Packers were able to put them in third-and-long situations and then frequently got a stop. So it’s not third down where Green Bay has to improve, but on early downs, and that begins with being better against the run, where they ranked 28th last season, allowing 5.0 yards per carry, along with being a more sound tackling team.

As a red zone defense, the Packers again didn’t rank all that bad, finishing above league average, allowing the 11th fewest red zone touchdown rate in 2022. But again, to take this one step further, they did rank in the bottom third in red zone scoring attempts per game allowed, further illustrating the inconsistencies that came with trying to get their opponents off the field.

Prior to the Packers’ defensive turnaround following their late bye week, they were the worst team in football in the two-minute drill. Following their loss to the Eagles, Green Bay had surrendered 60 points within the final two minutes before halftime. That averages out to five points per game or nearly one full touchdown — talk about a momentum swing. Too often in these situations, the Packers became conservative, didn’t bring pressure, and in an effort to limit the explosive passing play, they left a lot of room underneath and over the middle for offenses to pick up chunk plays and move into scoring position.

In years past, if the defense didn’t get off the field, gave up a two-minute touchdown, or couldn’t get that red zone stop, Aaron Rodgers was often there to erase those blemishes. Realistically, as the Packers transition to Jordan Love this season, Green Bay isn’t going to have that luxury — the margin for error is going to be very small. Expectations are sky-high for a defense that has eight first-round picks on it, and the Packers are, in all likelihood, going to have to rely much more heavily on this unit to get them victories than they have previously.

“I’m very aware of the draft status of all of our players,” Barry said via Packers.com. “But expectations are and should be high all the time. And this year will be no different. There’ s absolutely no doubt about that.”

Packers want Devonte Wyatt to be ‘all-around disruptive player’ in 2023

Joe Barry on what he wants from Devonte Wyatt: “Just to be an all-around disruptive player. He has that ability, he has that quickness, he has that athleticism.”

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The Green Bay Packers are expecting 2022 first-round pick Devonte Wyatt to make a big jump in Year 2 and become one of the defensive front’s top playmakers and disruptors in 2023.

“With anybody up front, you want playmakers,” defensive coordinator Joe Barry said Tuesday. “But specifically for defensive linemen, a three-technique, you want disruption…Just to be an all-around disruptive player. He has that ability, he has that quickness, he has that athleticism. Just be a disruptive force in the passing game and the run game as well.”

Wyatt, the 28th overall pick, played only 224 defensive snaps as a rookie. According to PFF, he produced eight pressures (one sack) and five stops over 113 run-defense snaps and 111 pass-defense snaps. The counting stats were limited because opportunities were limited, especially early in the season. Wyatt played 92 of his 224 snaps over the final three games of 2022.

With Jarran Reed in Seattle and Dean Lowry in Minnesota, Wyatt has an opportunity to be a full-time player in 2023. And the Packers need him to be productive; Reed and Lowry combined for 50 pressures and 46 stops last season.

Is a big leap possible?

Barry said all rookies go through the college-to-NFL transition differently, but Wyatt finished his rookie season strong and has since been in the building every day for the offseason workout program.

“He’s in great shape,” Barry said.

Wyatt, who has a 1.66-second 10-yard split at 304 pounds, has the athletic profile of a prolific interior disruptor. And over his last three seasons at Georgia, Wyatt was a consistent producer, creating 63 pressure and 37 stops while playing a little under 1,000 snaps for one of college football’s best defenses.

Now, the Packers need Wyatt to turn his athleticism and penetrating ability into disruption and production at the NFL level. Barry’s defense is light on options along the defensive line behind Kenny Clark, especially in terms of experience. For line of scrimmage players, affecting the quarterback remains the name of the game.

Opportunity won’t be an issue this season. Barring an injury, Wyatt could play 500 or more snaps during his second year in the NFL. Was his finish to 2022 a harbinger of things to come in a bigger role in 2023?

The statistical case against the Packers retaining defensive coordinator Joe Barry

The numbers paint a clear picture: Joe Barry’s Packers defense just wasn’t good enough in 2022.

The disappointing Green Bay Packers defense improved in a few important areas but also failed to improve or regressed sharply in many other statistical departments during the 2022 season.

Joe Barry’s defense retained every important contributor from the 2021 team and even added a few high draft picks, but the inconsistent and mediocre results over a 17-game season present a strong case for Matt LaFleur moving on and finding a new defensive coordinator in 2023.

The Packers ranked second in cash spending on defensive players this season. Talent was never an issue. Expectations were rightfully high. The failures were too many. The goal is always to improve, but the Packers didn’t do nearly enough of it on the defensive side in 2022.

Even so, LaFleur said he is anticipating Barry returning as his coordinator next season.

The Packers coach pointed to a strong end of the season and the desire for continuity as his top reasons for keeping Barry. It’s hard to endorse the idea. Should a decent stretch including games against two terrible offenses (Bears 23rd in scoring, Rams 27th), one half against a concussed Tua Tagovailoa and an implosion from Kirk Cousins erase a stretch where the Packers gave up 27 or more points five times during the 1-7 midseason funk?

The numbers paint a clear picture: the Packers defense wasn’t good enough.

Fittingly, the season ended with the Packers unable to get a stop on either of the final two drives against the Detroit Lions, who marched for a go-ahead touchdown and then killed the rest of the fourth-quarter clock following an interception. On 4th-and-the-season, Jared Goff picked apart a zone coverage, found the converting completion and called game.

Does the Packers coordinator have enough built-up equity in the job to survive?

Here’s the statistical case against retaining Barry:

2022 2021 Improve/regress
Points per game 21.8 (17th) 21.8 (14th) Same
Yards per game 336.5 (17th) 328.2 (9th) Regress
Yards per play 5.8 (28th) 5.4 (15th) Regress
Takeaways 24 (12th) 26 (9th) Regress
Scoring% 38.2 (23rd) 36.6 (15th) Regress
TDs allowed 42 (20th) 44 (16th) Improve
Passer rating allowed 88.3 (15th) 86.9 (10th) Regress
Sacks 34 (27th) 39 (16th) Regress
Tackles for loss 68 (24th) 52 (32nd) Improve
Yards/attempt 7.4 (28th) 6.7 (7th) Regress
Yards/carry 5.0 (28th) 4.7 (30th) Regress
Interceptions 17 (4th) 18 (6th) Regress
3rd down% 37.6 (8th) 42.9 (24th) Improve
4th down% 57.9 (23rd) 45.5 (7th) Regress
Red zone TD% 53.7 (13th) 67.3 (30th) Improve
Average yards/drive 33.0 (23rd) 32.1 (18th) Regress
Average points/drive 2.07 (26th) 2.12 (20th) Improve
Penalties 100 (25th) 88 (4th) Regress
DVOA 2.7% (20th) 3.6% (22nd) Improve
PFF grade 67.7 (21st) 76.8 (3rd) Regress
EPA -63.86 (20th) -55.57 (16th) Regress

Barry never made it to Year 3 in his previous two stints as a defensive coordinator. He was two years and out in Detroit, and he was two years and out in Washington. Will Barry be around for a third season in Green Bay? Barring a change of heart from LaFleur over the next few days, it looks likely.

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Matt LaFleur expecting Joe Barry to remain Packers defensive coordinator in 2023

Matt LaFleur on if Joe Barry will return as Packers defensive coordinator in 2023: “That’s what I anticipate, yes.”

Green Bay Packers coach Matt LaFleur confirmed he is expecting Joe Barry to return as his defensive coordinator in 2023.

“That’s what I anticipate, yes,” LaFleur said Monday. “I don’t really anticipate a whole lot, if any, staff changes at all.”

LaFleur said he hasn’t sat down with any of his coaches individually to discuss the future, but that process will begin this week.

Barring something unforeseen, Barry will get a third season coaching the Packers defense in 2023.

The Packers defense finished 17th in the NFL in points allowed (21.8), 28th in yards allowed per play (5.8) and 23rd in scoring percentage (38.2) during the 2022 season. Green Bay gave up the same amount of points (371) as 2021 but regressed in terms of yards per game, yards per play, scoring percentage and takeaways in 2022.

LaFleur said the Packers defense started “to improve as the year went on” and the defense developed “more of an identity” down the stretch. He is also prioritizing continuity within the coaching staff as a pillar of success moving forward.

“I do believe in the people, not only in the locker room, but our the coaching staff,” LaFleur said. “It’s my intention to try and have everybody back. I think continuity is a big part of having success in this league. When you feel good about the people, then you gotta work to improve. We have to challenge each other.

LaFleur said the Packers will have more “projects” this offseason in terms of studying other teams and trends around the league.

“You have to try and stay in front of everything. We certainly didn’t do that this year,” LaFleur.

The Packers allowed 20 or fewer points in each of the final five games of 2022. Green Bay gave up 27 or more in six games and finished 1-5 in those games.

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Packers’ recent defensive adjustments may have saved their season

The Packers’ defense has been a different (and better) animal over the last four weeks. Laurie Fitzpatrick dives into the tape to tell us why.

The Green Bay Packers went from a 4-8 record in the beginning of December to 8-8 and in control of their own destiny. If they can win their last game of the season against the Detroit Lions, they are onto the playoffs!

There are several factors that go into the Packers recent success: and no, it’s not Aaron Rodgers’ haircut.

On the offensive side of the ball, they have been handing it off more to their pair of tanks in the backfield, Aaron Jones and A.J. Dillion. But the biggest impact for the Packers has been on the defensive side of the ball.

Up until the Packers’ Week 14 bye, the defense had just 10 interceptions with six dropped interceptions. But over the last three weeks alone, they have seven interceptions with only one drop. From weeks 10-13, they went from a defensive DVOA of 17.2% which was 29th in the league. Since Week 15, they have the third-highest defensive DVOA at -24.2%..

There are several reasons for the sudden uptick in production from the Packers’ secondary. So let’s dive into the film to see where it began and what changes they’ve made over the last few weeks!