Baltimore Sun Sunday

Packers’ LaFleur continues to bloom

- By Dave Campbell

MINNEAPOLI­S — Sure, the Packers haven’t picked up many style points in this first season under coach Matt LaFleur.

They’ve been outscored in the second and fourth quarters. Only four of their 11 wins have come by more than one score. Their team rankings in rushing and passing yardage on offense and defense are all in the bottom half of the league.

Here they are, though, needing only one victory over their final two games to take the division title. What’s more, a first-round bye for the playoffs remains well within reach. Whatever the outcome of their visit to Minneapoli­s on Monday night, this rookie year for the inexperien­ced LaFleur and his staff could hardly be recorded as anything but a job well done.

“This was the goal, to win the NFC North, and this is the game that can do it for us,” said LaFleur, the offensive coordinato­r for the Titans last season and who turned 40 last month.

From quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers on down the roster, players have raved about the contributi­on that the chemistry of this team has made to the stellar won-loss record and late-game resiliency. Beyond that, though, there aren’t any secrets to this success for the Packers (11-3).

They have the second-fewest turnovers in the NFL with nine, and their rushing attack spearheade­d by Aaron Jones has ably complement­ed Rodgers in his up-and-down attempt to help his young wide receivers hit their stride. The defense has the third-best intercepti­on percentage in the league and the fifth-best red zone rate, allowing fewer than half of opponent possession­s inside the 20 to cross the goal line.

There were plenty of questions, both internal and external, about how Rodgers would work with LaFleur, but their initial relationsh­ip has by all accounts been a healthy one.

“He allowed for the leadership to kind of naturally come together. He empowered guys that need to be empowered, allowed his coaching staff to do the same, and I think naturally there’s been kind of a group within the group that’s formed from a leadership standpoint that we all hold ourselves, especially in that group, to a really high standard,” Rodgers said. “Because we have to set the tone for the rest of the squad, and Matt has fostered that ability I think by keeping things very simple.”

Though the Vikings (10-4) didn’t win the division until their second season under coach Mike Zimmer in 2015, that ode by Rodgers to the power of simplicity would translate across the border in some ways, too. Though Zimmer is a defensive expert, not an offensive one like LaFleur and the majority of their peers across the league, the Vikings have developed a consistent identity under his leadership even as their offense has changed hands and styles multiple times.

“I like this team. I like how they’re playing,” Zimmer said, adding: “I think we’re doing a good job scheming offensivel­y. Defensivel­y we’ve played a little bit better the last couple of weeks. If we can ever get it to the point where I really feel good about it, we could do some damage.”

Making that deep push through the playoffs will be more difficult on the road, of course, which is where the Vikings will be headed unless they get some improbable help in Detroit on the final day of the regular season.

The last non-division winner to reach the Super Bowl was the Packers nine years ago, and the only way the Vikings can win the NFC North is if the sputtering Lions beat the Packers in addition to Vikings victories in their last two games.

They host the Bears on Dec. 29, with the chance to go 8-0 at home for the first time in 10 years. The Packers have yet to win at U.S. Bank Stadium, which opened in 2016.

“I feel like our fans are some of the best fans in the world, so playing at home in that atmosphere, it’s going to be a lot of fun,” Vikings wide receiver Stefon Diggs said.

“I look forward to it.”

 ?? DYLAN BUELL/GETTY ?? The relationsh­ip between Packers first-year coach Matt LaFleur and veteran QB Aaron Rodgers appears to be well.
DYLAN BUELL/GETTY The relationsh­ip between Packers first-year coach Matt LaFleur and veteran QB Aaron Rodgers appears to be well.

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