Limping into the playoffs after two consecutive defeats, your Green Bay Packers (10-6, and the fifth seed) travel next weekend to Landover, Maryland where they will take on NFC East champion Washington (9-7, the fourth seed and winners of 4 straight to close out their regular season).
Next Sunday, January 10, 3:40 LFT, at FedEx Field, on FOX.
Washington surprised nearly all observers by winning their division, albeit with a 9-7 record which is the worst of any division champion this season. They were led by Kirk Cousins, who in his first full first season as a starter racked up some strong numbers: 379-543 (69.8%) passing, 4,166 yards, 29 TDs, 11 INTS, and a 101.6 rating. Washington made the playoffs without a single victory over a team with a winning record.
Packers vs. Redskins:
- All-time regular season: 18-13-1
- All-time postseason: 1-1
- All-time, in Washington: 4-8-0 (includes one postseason meeting)
- Streaks: The Packers have won five of the last six meetings.
- Last meeting, regular season: September 15, 2013, at Lambeau Field; Packers won, 38-20.
- The Packers first met the Redskins (then Boston Braves) in 1932, five days after Franklin D. Roosevelt won his first presidential election.
- The two clubs met several times in the early years, most memorably in the 1936 NFL championship game. That year, Redskins owner George Preston Marshall, upset with his fans’ lack of support, was moving his team to Washington and didn’t want to host the championship in Boston. So, the NFL moved the game to New York’s Polo Grounds, where Green Bay claimed its fourth title, 21-6.
- In the other playoff meeting in the series, an NFC divisional game on Christmas Eve 1972, Bill Kilmer hit Roy Jefferson on a 32-yard TD pass, and Curt Knight kicked three FGs in a 16-3 Washington win, spoiling the Packers’ Central Division crown.
- The Packers and Redskins played the highest scoring game in Monday Night Football history on Oct. 17, 1983, at Lambeau Field, in a game that featured 11 TDs and six FGs. Facing the defending Super Bowl champions, Green Bay won, 48-47, in a game that is still the highest-scoring contest ever on MNF as well as in Packers history. Packers President/CEO Mark Murphy started at free safety for the Redskins in that game.
The Packers go on the road having faltered in the latter two thirds of the season, and face a Washington team that is physical, confident, and exuberant heading into a most unexpected NFC playoff berth.
For the Packers to make any serious noise in these playoffs, it's on you, big man.