PDA

View Full Version : The Importance of Momentum By Mike Woods



coolman3
12-24-2007, 12:03 AM
http://www.packersnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071223/PKR07/71223054/1989

Mike Woods column: Lions game becomes a must-win


We’ve come to believe there are certainties in life. The sun will rise, Paris Hilton will do something stupid and the only creatures on earth guaranteed to excel in arctic conditions are polar bears and the Green Bay Packers.


Well, we can now cross one of those off the list.

Yeesh. In a game stuffed with significance at a time of the year when you need to be crossing your T’s and dotting your I’s, the Packers suffered a meltdown of nuclear proportions as they were ripped by the down-on-their-luck Chicago Bears 35-7 today at the icebox more commonly recognized as Soldier Field.

You can, if you wish, just write this one off as one bad afternoon. The first clunker of the year. It was bound to happen. Now it’s over and done with and it’s onward and upward.

Those, however, are all excuses. Nothing more.

If you care to take a closer, and more realistic, look, this a second straight subpar performance. These guys are on the elevator going down and they need to discover a way to get off.

“Frankly, some of the things that manifested today, in my opinion, showed up last week against St. Louis,’’ Packers coach Mike McCarthy said. “I thought we addressed it this week in practice but I didn’t get that done and that’s my responsibility.

“We need to clean our house starting Wednesday. We need to go out and perform well against Detroit.’’

Well, that will take a lot. This is a team that gave up an 18-play scoring drive on the Bears’ first possession. They couldn’t effectively stop the poor man’s Adrian Peterson. They allowed Bears’ third-string quarterback Kyle Orton to look like, well, Jim McMahon.

They couldn’t run consistently themselves, couldn’t pass worth a lick and looked like hopelessly lost tourists on special teams, with two punts blocked.

“Concentration is the biggest thing in conditions like this,’’ Packers quarterback Brett Favre said, “being able to focus on the task at hand at that particular moment. It’s easy to lose focus when conditions are like that.’’

The Packers’ collective brain freeze is probably the biggest concern after this affair, for if they are displaying significant lapses in mental toughness late in December, it doesn’t bode well for early January.

It would seem to be imperative that McCarthy take the necessary steps to ensure his team regains its footing next week against the lowly Lions.

But here’s the rub. The loss cemented the Packers’ playoff position as the No. 2 seed in the NFC, which means they could chose to rest those in need next week.

But do they even dare after this? Do you want to head into the playoffs with the possibility of two straight losses to end the season, and with the knowledge that your last meaningful game was an unmitigated disaster?

I would think not. But McCarthy was noncommital about his plans for who will play and who will sit.

Favre, at least, offered his two cents.

“I can look at it two different ways,’’ he said. “I think it’s important, based on what we did today, or didn’t do. Also I think it’s not as important when you look at it from the injury standpoint or what you stand to gain.

“If it were me, I think we need to look at it like it’s no different than preseason. I think you need to go into the playoffs with some momentum. I don’t think today, as bad or as ugly as it was, doesn’t make or break your season. It’s like the preseason to me in that you’d like to go into the season on kind of on a roll as a player and you would like to go into the regualr season feeling good about what we’re doing. Or what we can hang our hat on. I don’t look at this as much different.’’

In game that too often had the Packers looking as if they did not know what they were doing, then the choice seems to be clear. They cannot afford to approach this final regular-season game as an opportunity to rest the weary. The need to approach it as if it’s game they must win in order to restore confidence.

After today, that much seems to be certain.

FritzDontBlitz
12-24-2007, 12:50 AM
I think you should always play to win. I also think you should recognize what happened today and take it for what it was: a bad day in horrid conditions that hindered your style of play more than it hindered your opponents. Adapt your offensive philosophy to make your team better suited to wintry conditions. Going into panic mode and saying the last game of the season is a "must win" game could end up backfiring if key players get injured. I will also point to the last game the Chicago Bears played in 2006. All week long Lovie claimed it was a "must win" game and the Packers kicked their asses. They still ended up playing in the Super Bowl. Apparently Mr. Woods has amnesia about this....

BF4MVP
12-24-2007, 12:56 AM
I agree

coolman3
12-24-2007, 01:06 AM
I think you should always play to win. I also think you should recognize what happened today and take it for what it was: a bad day in horrid conditions that hindered your style of play more than it hindered your opponents. Adapt your offensive philosophy to make your team better suited to wintry conditions. Going into panic mode and saying the last game of the season is a "must win" game could end up backfiring if key players get injured. I will also point to the last game the Chicago Bears played in 2006. All week long Lovie claimed it was a "must win" game and the Packers kicked their asses. They still ended up playing in the Super Bowl. Apparently Mr. Woods has amnesia about this....

Recall 2003 (or 2004, somebody do the research), the Pack went to NY with a chance to lack up a bye, lost to the Jets, lost momentum and lost their 1st playoff game???

Momentum is important. Next week's game is important. Injuries are part of the game. The Pack must use next week's game to prepare for their 1st playoff game. The starters should play the whole game next week unless that Pack are up 30 something at the start of the 4th quarter.

Mike Woods is a good writer.

MJZiggy
12-24-2007, 01:11 AM
Can I get a link?

coolman3
12-24-2007, 01:13 AM
Btw, a Packer fan comparing his beloved Pack to the wretched Bears????

Wow.

coolman3
12-24-2007, 01:14 AM
Can I get a link?

http://www.packersnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071223/PKR07/71223054/1989

FritzDontBlitz
12-24-2007, 02:50 AM
Btw, a Packer fan comparing his beloved Pack to the wretched Bears????

Wow.

You completely miss my point because you are too focused on a popular misconception. I used the Bears to show that the "we gotta win our last game to build momentum for the playoffs" analogy isn't necessarily true. If you want to spend the next week fretting about a fluke of a loss in week 16 by comparing it to a week 17 loss in 2002 to New York, so be it. Like I said, being healthy is more important than winning your last game. The Packers were seriously banged up by the end of the Jets game you keep bringing up. They are not nearly as crippled going into their final game this season.

Tarlam!
12-24-2007, 05:10 AM
(...) being healthy is more important than winning your last game. The Packers were seriously banged up by the end of the Jets game you keep bringing up. They are not nearly as crippled going into their final game this season.

I think we need to play our starters and have at it for all least the first 3 quarters. That includes Brett playing that long.

I would only take someone out of the game earlier if they get a ding and we don't want to make it worse.

We were dominated last night worse than we dominated the Bears last year and, unlike last year, we had something to play for besides our pride.

I hope we can dominate Detroit like we did earlier in the year.

mmmdk
12-24-2007, 06:24 AM
Momentum is paramount in december going into january; especially when you have something to play for. Packers had a lot to play for at soldier field and a loss like that will linger until the divisional game and knaw in the back of their minds. I think Packers will need a quick start or it's another early playoff exit.

Packers is having a great season and I'm kinda, sorta glad that I got a wakeup call now. I hope Packers do well and not get scorched in the playoffs - build towards a NFL championship in the near future. I just don't think 2007 is it - too early and hopefully Packers will grow and get stronger, tougher.

Carolina_Packer
12-24-2007, 10:16 AM
Recall 2003 (or 2004, somebody do the research), the Pack went to NY with a chance to lack up a bye, lost to the Jets, lost momentum and lost their 1st playoff game???

You're thinking of 2002 when they got beat by the Jets 42-17 when homefield was on the line. That was the year they choked the Wildcard game at home against Atlanta 27-7.