From the Boston Globe.
FOXBOROUGH — When Mike McCarthy glanced up at the giant Gillette Stadium sign Sunday night, he saw five Super Bowl banners hanging below it. Amazingly, the New England Patriots had to undergo stadium renovations just to make room for the fifth banner following their win in the 51st Super Bowl.
It wasn’t long ago that McCarthy and the Green Bay Packers’ faithful were talking about multiple championships and dynasties themselves. My, how things have changed.
New England defeated Green Bay, 31-17, Sunday night. In the process, the Patriots proved once again why they are the NFL’s gold standard, while the Packers crept one game closer to the end of the McCarthy era.
Creativity. Imagination. Vision. Resourcefulness.
The Patriots bested the Packers in every category, won their sixth straight game, and improved to 7-2. Green Bay, meanwhile, fell to 3-4-1, the first time it’s been below .500 at the midway point since McCarthy’s rookie year of 2006.
“It’s very frustrating,” Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers said afterward.
Packer Nation has been awfully frustrated for years now.
In February 2011, the Packers defeated Pittsburgh, 31-25, in the 45th Super Bowl, and many were talking about another dynasty in Green Bay. Rodgers was just 27 years old. The rest of the roster featured young, budding stars like Clay Matthews, Greg Jennings, Jordy Nelson, and B.J. Raji. And McCarthy and his staff seemed ahead of the curve.
But New England’s win over Green Bay Sunday was simply a microcosm of why the Patriots have won five championships and played in eight Super Bowls since 2001, while the Packers will be remembered as the dynasty that never was.
New England played without Rob Gronkowski, the best tight end in football. The Patriots didn’t have standout rookie running back Sony Michel and their top offensive lineman, Shaq Mason.
Green Bay, on the other hand, began the game with all 22 preferred starters.
It didn’t matter.
New England head coach Bill Belichick turned Cordarrelle Patterson into a running back, he had wide receiver Julian Edelman throw one of the biggest passes of the game, and he outcoached McCarthy at every turn.
It was just another example of why the clock on McCarthy’s tenure is about to expire.
“We did a lot of good things,” McCarthy said during a four-question postgame press conference that saw him make a beeline from the podium as soon as reporters took a breath. “We just weren’t as clean as we needed to be in the fourth quarter.”
That’s been the story in Green Bay since its 2010 Super Bowl season. The Packers have had some impressive accomplishments in that time but have failed in their biggest moments.
Green Bay went to the playoffs eight straight years from 2009 to ’16. Aside from 2010, though, the Packers have wasted countless golden chances to enter the NFL highrise where the Patriots are sole residents.
Green Bay began the 2011 season 13-0 and went 15-1 in the regular season. Then the Packers lost their first playoff game to the New York Giants when Eli Manning thoroughly outplayed Rodgers.
In 2014, Green Bay led Seattle 16-0 at halftime of the NFC championship game and 19-7 with 3:07 remaining. They had a 99.9% chance of winning at that point. Those Packers, of course, made a comedy of errors down the stretch — including a botched onside kick — and fell to the Seahawks in overtime.
The Packers went back to the NFC championship game in 2016 but were routed by Atlanta, 44-21.
Today, the Packers are mired in mediocrity, and McCarthy’s seat is one of the hottest in football.
The Packers are just 24-25-1 in their last 50 regular season games. They are in 10th place in the 16-team NFC.
And while the folks at NBC tried to put Rodgers in the same conversation with Brady as the greatest quarterback of all time, any football fan with mediocre intelligence saw right through that charade.
Brady, of course, is the unparalleled GOAT, the man with five rings who’s still going strong at 41. Rodgers has put up big-time fantasy football numbers throughout his career, but he’s won just one title and is showing major signs of decline this season.
“He’s had an incredible career, been the gold standard at quarterback for the better part of two decades,” Rodgers said of Brady afterward. “He’s a great player.”
Brady is just that, a great player who leads the finest sports franchise of the 21st century.
It wasn’t long ago Green Bay believed it could be that franchise. But Sunday provided another cruel reminder of what a real dynasty looks like, and how the Packers missed their chance of becoming one.