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Favre, who threw a career-low seven interceptions last season, has 17 of them this year. Opponents have taken his 22 turnovers and turned them into 71 points over 10 games, and the Vikings -- who entered the weekend last in the NFL in giveaway-takeaway ratio -- watched their turnover differential fall to minus 13.
With 10 players and five starters lost for the season on injured reserve, plus a stiff second-half schedule featuring a trip to NFC-leading Atlanta next week, McCarthy and the Packers have plenty of work in front of them.
But the steam and swagger they regained in their 28-24 win over the Vikings on Oct. 24 is making them look more like the Super Bowl contender they were purported to be this summer. The Dom Capers defense has yielded just 10 points in three games since beating the Vikings the first time.
"We've got a foot on the gas, hands on the wheel and we're looking straight ahead," McCarthy said. "That's what you have to do in November."
The Vikings pressured Rodgers early the way they needed to, the way they did last season, after failing to take him down at all in last month's loss. But he found a rhythm once the strong rush forced him from the pocket and delivered at just the right times.
Rookie cornerback Chris Cook had a rough game, getting beat for a 39-yard reception by Jones on third-and-10 from midfield. Safety Husain Abdullah had trouble, too, dropping a must-have interception at the goal line and then letting Jennings get in front of him on the next play for an 11-yard touchdown catch after Rodgers ran left to flee the rush to make it 10-3.
Then after the interception by Williams and the response from Rodgers right before the half, it took less than three minutes after halftime for the Packers to put the game away. Rodgers found Jennings wide open up the sideline, and he jogged in for a 46-yard pass and a three-touchdown lead. The Vikings defense was a mess, with Cook seen shouting at Ray Edwards and Ben Leber on the bench.
The Vikings couldn't do anything right at that point. Jim Kleinsasser's holding penalty wiped out Ryan Longwell's 51-yard field goal on the next possession, and they punted instead.
[Associated Press;
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