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F the Bears

 

 

 

RODGERS on Bears D injuries: “My buddy who injured me last year, I think he got hurt, too.” (McClellan)

 

RODGERS: “I think it’s a talented group. They’re good at disguising. They rally to the ball… "

 

RODGERS: "Ball security is at an absolute premium when play Chicago.."

 

RODGERS: “Coldest I’ve ever been was in 2008, the night before we played Chicago. It was about minus-40. Next day was minus-25.”

 

RODGERS: on Bears defenses, there were gms when they would play 30 or 40 consecutive snaps of Tampa 2... and it was comical.

 

RODGERS: more on Bears defense, Now they're a little more aggressive. It's more of an attacking scheme.

 

 

 

 

Last edited by H5
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I wonder if the Packer players are looking at this game as a must win?   Not saying it is because it's early in the season.  But, after last week's performance I would expect the Packer intensity for this game to be sky high.  We need to be more physical.

 

Last edited by Packy

Sky high is very difficult to define and in fact may not be very high at all. It's open to interpretation where the sky actually begins. To a midget that might be your chest level?

 

Let's say we expect the intensity level to be elevated above the level of previous weeks.

 

By the way I'm making it a personal point of emphasis to remove the vagueness of comments. Like "If things don't improve at some point I could see this being MM's last year". There's a lot of wiggle room there. 

Last edited by ChilliJon

The Packers' preseason is officially over with. The D will play well, the O-line will hold, Lacy will become himself, and Rodger will find his rhythm with the receivers,  The Packers WILL win this game.  I expect nothing less.  And no, I ain't smokin a Humboldt fatty. 

 

F da Bears!  Go Packers!  

MIN and MIA are looking like two of the more winnable games on the schedule right now, so 3-3 is probably your worst case scenario if they find themselves still stalling in Chicago.

 

That's all the more reason to win it and give yourself a good shot at 4-2. Chicago should be the perfect cure for the struggling running game, and I expect the backs to top 100. That should only help with the number of free receivers I saw running through the Chicago secondary Monday Night.

 

GB run defense has looked pretty good the last two weeks, and Forte has been MIA. Their strength is definitely the pass game, but GB has done well on the back end. I like the way the strengths and weaknesses line up, and I like the Pack to bounce back.

Originally Posted by titmfatied:

Same Fox crew for Sunday’s game as last week: , John Lynch, Pam Oliver. Another regional telecast.

And on in the Twin Cities as Fox decided Minny/ATL was a better matchup (3:20 start). Problem is, Fox will likely switch over during ARodg's game winning drive...

Last edited by chickenboy

Good stuff here from Cliff Christl, team historian -- Five Best Stories From Packers v. Bears:

 

http://www.packers.com/news-an...ry_20140924_32230336

1. A haymaker delivered from the grandstand – With the Packers trailing the Bears, 30-3, in 1936 at City Stadium, an infuriated fan, Emmet Platten, rushed onto the field and toward an official who had thrown a penalty flag nullifying a late Packers touchdown. Platten was intent on delivering a punch square to the jaw of head linesman Gunner Eliott. Instead, Platten’s haymaker landed on the chin of the Bears’ 6-4, 222-pound tackle Ted Rosequist, who had tried to intercede. Bears Coach George Halas cried foul after the game. “Can’t they do something about him?” Halas asked at his interview session. The 6-4, 230-pound Platten had merely been escorted to the sidelines and was unrepentant. Two days later, he wrote an eight-paragraph letter to the Green Bay Press-Gazette justifying his actions.

OLB Clay Matthews (groin, limited)

ILB Brad Jones (quadriceps, limited)

OLB Nick Perry (wrist, limited)

CB Davon House (knee, full)  will need him to do to Marshall what he did to Johnson

WR Jarrett Boykin (knee, full)

RT Bryan Bulaga (knee, full)

 

McCarthy speaks after practice

On the no-huddle offense:

No-huddle, it's a big part of our offense. Really, the mechanics has been good, mechanics of play entry has graded out high. The biggest thing right now is the production on offense isn't what we want it to be.

I did not know that.

 

 

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