Flustered Aaron Rodgers refocuses on mastery of rival Bears
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[September 15, 2022] Green
Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers showed visible frustration
when the team's first offensive play of the season went awry.
A would-be 75-yard touchdown pass slipped through the hands of
rookie wide receiver Christian Watson, a harbinger of sorts for an
offense that stalled during a 23-7 road loss to Minnesota in Week 1.
Green Bay (0-1) hopes another week of practice brings cohesion to
the passing game as the Packers prepare to host the NFC North rival
Chicago Bears on Sunday night. It should also help matters to have
perceived No. 1 wide receiver Allen Lazard back following a one-week
absence to heal his awkward ankle injury.
As Packers coach Matt LaFleur sees it, Rodgers has taken it upon
himself of getting the newest members of the receiving corps up to
speed.
"He's done a great job demanding the urgency of those young guys,
yet putting his arm around them at the same time," LaFleur said.
"Because we know there's going to be a learning curve. You can't
expect it otherwise."
One thing LaFleur and his team have going for them is their
opponent. Rodgers' 61 career touchdown passes vs. the Bears are his
most against any team. His past four starts versus the Bears have
been especially solid, with Rodgers accounting for 15 touchdowns, 14
through the air, to go with a 141.5 passer rating.
And last season Rodgers spiced up the rivalry in Week 6, yelling "I
still own you!" in the direction of a Bears fan at Soldier Field.
Green Bay was en route to earning a 24-14 road victory which
preceded a 45-30 home win against the Bears in Week 14. That game
marked Green Bay's 20th victory in the past 23 regular-season
meetings with Chicago. The Packers have also won 12 the last 14
meetings at Lambeau Field.
But many of Rodgers' current receivers are new to the historic
rivalry.
"The most important thing is to communicate with them. And figure
out what style works best for them," Rodgers said on Wednesday.
Lazard, a limited participant in Wednesday's practice, missed the
Minnesota loss after being stepped on by a teammate in practice.
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"It wasn't a good feeling, physically or mentally,
given the situation and everything," he said. "I always look at
injuries as a positive, in a sense of like, yes, it was an
unfortunate situation but maybe if I would've kept practicing, maybe
if I would've played in the game on Sunday, then a more detrimental
injury would have taken place or something like that."
Bears rookie defensive back Kyler Gordon, for one, is embracing the
challenge of facing Rodgers, who has seen his share of defensive
fronts in his career.
"Just try to make it as hard as humanly possible, whether that be
disguise or playing into that," the second-round pick out of
Washington said. "Playing your own mind game or head game or
whatever you can do to throw him off his own game. Just making it as
hard as we can on him."
Chicago (1-0) is coming off a 19-10 upset of San Francisco in the
season opener. Playing on a soggy Soldier Field and navigating
persistent rain, the Bears benefited from a pair of Justin Fields
touchdown passes as the team won in Matt Eberflus' debut as head
coach.
Offensive coordinator Luke Getsy got the right rhythm with a deluge
-- an estimated 4.2 inches of rain fell in the area, mostly during
the 1 p.m. ET-4 p.m. ET game window -- that might've helped slow the
49ers' strong pass rush. Getsy might glance at the forecast for
Green Bay with mixed emotions as more rain is in the forecast for
Sunday night.
Green Bay is hoping for good news on left tackle David Bakhtiari and
left guard Elgton Jenkins, who were also limited Wednesday and
didn't play in Minnesota.
Running back David Montgomery looks to get going for the Bears after
gaining 50 scrimmage yards against San Francisco. Montgomery has
averaged 90 scrimmage yards in five career games against Green Bay.
--Field Level Media
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