Saints aggressive and physical defense will challenge Packers young offense

Packers coach Matt LaFleur sees the Saints defense as one of the NFL’s very best.

The inexperienced and currently shorthanded Green Bay Packers’ offense faces an aggressive New Orleans Saints defense this week that will challenge them at all three levels.

The Saints will arrive at Lambeau Field riding a historic streak that dates back to last season. New Orleans currently has a 10-game streak of holding their opponents to 20 points or less, which is a franchise record, according to Saints PR.

“Fast. Physical. Aggressive,” said Matt LaFleur about the Saints defense on Wednesday. “Very sound and want to challenge you on all three levels. Demario Davis is a game-wrecker. Cam Jordan. They got guys at all three levels. They’ve got complimentary pieces around that.”

You name it from a defensive stat standpoint, and the Saints probably rank well in that category. Heading into Week 3, they rank in the top 10 in total sacks, quarterback hits, and takeaways. New Orleans ranks 9th in ESPN’s run-stop win rate metric, they’ve allowed just one touchdown in seven red zone trips this season, and have the third-best third-down defense in football as well.

You get the idea.

This is a Saints defense that has talent all over the field and one that, from a play style and schematic standpoint, is very aggressive and going to challenge Green Bay on pretty much every play.

“I mean, they have a ton of players on that defense, and they challenge you,” added LaFleur. “I told our guys on the perimeter, they are going to grab and hold, and that’s what they do. But they play aggressive and you’ve got to be very fundamentally sound.

“Up front, you’ve got to do a great job of coming off the ball. Playing with great pad level because they are a physical bunch, and they play with extreme effort, and when you get effort plus scheme plus talent, you have one of the best defenses in the NFL.”

As I’ve harped on for much of the offseason and again wrote about recently, consistent success for the Packers offense as a unit begins with a sound run game to lean on–something that has alluded Green Bay through two games. The Packers’ inability to move the ball on the ground regularly has put the offense in predictable passing situations, allowing the defense to get into favorable matchups.

The use of motion and lining certain players up in the slot can help the Green Bay receivers get free releases against the New Orleans cornerbacks, but each of these pass catchers will need a game plan in regard to how they are going to handle the Saints’ aggressive play-style. We saw, especially early on last season, with Romeo Doubs and Christian Watson, the challenges that physical cornerback play can present for young receivers. This past Sunday, the Falcons were also fairly physical with the Green Bay receivers as well.

Throughout training camp, the preseason, and in these first two games, Jordan Love has struck a very good balance of knowing when to push the ball downfield or fit it into a tight window and when to take what the defense is giving him. Executing that skill set is going to be vital to the offense’s success against New Orleans.

Not only do the Saints not give up big plays, but they don’t allow many completions on intermediate routes, either. According to PFF, the Saints are allowing a completion rate of just 33.3 percent – the fourth-lowest rate in the NFL – on passes of 10 or more yards. To a degree, the Packers are going to have to be comfortable plotting their way down the field rather than pushing it and picking up chunk yards as they’ve often done through two games.

The Packers’ versatility, allowing them to mix and match personnel, and LaFleur’s game plan will create challenges for the Saints’ defense as well. Green Bay has done an excellent job through two games, throwing a myriad of looks at the Bears and Falcons, helping to create mismatches, and getting pass catchers in space. With that said, the Saints’ defense will present a very good test in just about every aspect for this young offense.

“They’re a confident group and they’ve got talent and they play extremely hard and they play well together.”

Packers coach Matt LaFleur planning to play starters in season finale vs. Lions

The Packers’ current plan is to have all available players be on the field and participating in the season finale against the Lions.

The Green Bay Packers won’t be turning Sunday’s season finale against the Detroit Lions into a glorified preseason game.

Coach Matt LaFleur said Monday that, despite his team clinching the No. 1 seed on Sunday, the Packers are going into this week preparing to play stars and any other available starters against the Lions.

“Right now, the mindset is going into this that we’re going to play our guys and we’re going to approach it like every other game,” LaFleur said Monday.

LaFleur’s reasoning for playing everyone in the regular-season finale was simple.

“I just think the reason behind that is I’m not comfortable having essentially a three-week layoff for our guys,” LaFleur said.

The Packers, by virtue of clinching the conference’s top seed, will get a first-round bye in the playoffs. If key players sat out Sunday in Detroit, the time away from the field – or the time between Sunday’s win over the Minnesota Vikings and the start of the NFC Divisional Round – would be roughly three weeks.

Both Aaron Rodgers and Davante Adams expressed a desire to play in the season finale after Sunday night’s win over the Minnesota Vikings.

Rodgers, the MVP favorite, is still recovering from a fractured left pinky toe, but the injury has healed significantly and the Packers quarterback is planning to practice at least two days this week and play Sunday. Adams is 23 yards away from breaking Jordy Nelson’s single-season receiving yards record.

The risk for LaFleur in this situation cuts two ways: Rest key players and risk the rust or “laying an egg” factor to open the playoffs, or play key players and risk a potentially season-altering injury. It’s a fine line to walk, and LaFleur said there isn’t necessarily a “right answer.”

“I’m sure if you asked a hundred different people, they’d give you a hundred different answers on what we should do,” LaFleur said. “Bottom line is whatever we do, we’ve got to go out and perform, and we know that. That’s just the way we’re going to go about it.”

LaFleur will just have to cross his fingers that no significant injuries come out of Sunday’s game and that getting on the field helps keep his top players sharp as the postseason begins.

Also, the finale might be important for a few key players recovering from injuries.

The Packers could return All-Pro left tackle David Bakhtiari and All-Pro cornerback Jaire Alexander, who will both practice this week. LaFleur said the “ideal scenario” would be having both players get snaps in the regular-season finale. But Bakhtiari, who hasn’t played this season while recovering from ACL surgery, and Alexander, who has been out since Week 4 with a significant shoulder injury, still have medical hurdles to get over before the team clears them for action against the Lions.

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