Las Vegas Review-Journal

Respect runs deep between veterans Sherman, Rodgers

- By Josh Dubow The Associated Press

As two of the best players at their position in their generation, San Francisco cornerback Richard Sherman and Green Bay quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers have formed a relationsh­ip built on deep respect.

They have nothing but praise for each other’s games and will exchange texts after one of them does something special. With all that they have accomplish­ed that can happen often.

“Just checking if he has a great game or I see something on tape where he’s in his bag and doing something crazy like some of the Hail Mary’s that he’s thrown,” Sherman said. “I text him like, ‘Man, that’s crazy. I don’t know what you were thinking right there.’ He’s a good dude.”

Sherman hopes Rodgers doesn’t pull off any of those crazy plays he’s known for on Monday night when the 49ers (1-4) visit the Packers (2-21) in the seventh meeting between the two megastars, including one in the postseason.

The two split the previous six meetings when Sherman was in Seattle, although the Seahawks won the most important in the NFC title game in January 2015. But any success Rodgers had didn’t come because he found some weakness in Sherman’s game. Instead, he approached it like most quarterbac­ks do, throwing as few passes to his right as possible, knowing Sherman will shut down that side of the field.

Rodgers has completed only nine passes for 90 yards against Sherman in those six games, according to Sportradar, targeting him just 13 times and throwing one intercepti­on. Almost half of that production came in the first meeting in 2012 when Rodgers went 4-for-5 for 44 yards.

He has avoided him almost completely since then as Sherman has allowed just five catches for 46 yards in the past five games.

“When he’s on the field, you have to be smart throwing the ball his

way,” Rodgers said. “That’s just the type of player he is. I mean, he’s a super-intelligen­t guy, he’s got incredible football instincts and he can still impact the game in a number of different ways.”

Sherman is still striking fear in quarterbac­ks at age 30 despite coming off major surgery on a ruptured Achilles tendon and nursing a calf injury that sidelined him for one game this season.

Sherman has been targeted just 10 times on 145 pass plays this season, the second-lowest rate in the NFL. Opposing quarterbac­ks have completed just two of those passes for 28 yards as Sherman has been a rare bright spot for a struggling San Francisco team.

“People aren’t targeting him. That always tells you a lot there about Richard,” Packers coach Mike Mccarthy said. “Especially where he is in his career, he diagnosis routes extremely well. I’ve always felt he was so strong at the breaking points of routes and really does a great job of playing toward his length. He’s an excellent player, always has been. I think he looks good.”

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