Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Rodgers, Packers too much for Rams

Quarterbac­k leads Green Bay to the NFC title game at Lambeau

- By Steve Megargee Green Bay, Wis.

Aaron Rodgers made sure he’d play an NFC Championsh­ip Game at home for the first time in his Hall of Fame-caliber career.

Rodgers threw two touchdown passes and also ran for a score as the top-seeded Green Bay Packers defeated the Los Angeles Rams 32-18 in an NFC divisional playoff game on Saturday.

Green Bay’s potent offense overpowere­d the Rams’ vaunted defense for much of the day. The Packers didn’t allow any sacks despite playing without injured All-pro left tackle David Bakhtiari, while Green Bay sacked Jared Goff four times.

The Packers reached the NFC Championsh­ip Game for the fourth time in the past seven seasons as they chase their first Super Bowl berth in a decade. It will be their first at Lambeau Field since hosting for the 2007 season, when they fell to the New York Giants 23-20 in overtime.

Green Bay won the Super Bowl for the 2010 season as the NFC’S No. 6 seed, and has lost at Seattle, Atlanta and San Francisco in its past three conference championsh­ip game appearance­s.

Saturday’s game showed what a home-field advantage can mean, even with far less than capacity on hand due to the pandemic. The Packers played in front of 8,456 fans — a crowd that included paying spectators for the first time all season — but that small crowd made plenty of noise as the Packers built an early lead with snow flurries falling for much of the first half.

“It’s special. There’s absolutely nothing like it,” Rodgers said. “We have really missed that part of this experience. To run out of the tunnel tonight with fans was unbelievab­le. It’s hard to explain how much the presence means on the field and just having that energy from the crowd.”

That crowd chanted “MVP, MVP” during the closing minutes to salute All-pro quarterbac­k Rodgers.

Buoyed by that crowd, the Packers (14-3) often seemed on the verge of putting the game away. But the Rams (11-7) continued to hang around. Green Bay finally sealed the victory with a 58-yard completion from Rodgers to Allen Lazard with 6:52 left.

Rodgers went 23-for-36 for 296 yards, while Aaron Jones ran for 99 yards and a touchdown on just 14 carries. Goff was 21-for-27 for 174 yards and a touchdown less than three weeks after undergoing thumb

surgery, and Cam Akers rushed for 90 yards and a touchdown.

The Packers scored on each of their first five series and led 25-10 early in the third quarter.

After the Rams finally forced a punt midway through the third quarter, they capitalize­d

with Akers’ 7-yard touchdown run on a direct snap. They cut it to 25-18 with a nifty 2-point conversion: Van Jefferson caught a pass from Goff and lateraled to Akers, who strolled into the left corner of the end zone.

 ?? Matt Ludtke / Associated Press ?? Packers quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers was never sacked Saturday despite some pressure from Rams lineman Aaron Donald on this play.
Matt Ludtke / Associated Press Packers quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers was never sacked Saturday despite some pressure from Rams lineman Aaron Donald on this play.

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