Miami Herald

With Rodgers out, Love to get 1st start vs. Chiefs

- From Miami Herald Wire Services

The Packers-Chiefs game Sunday was supposed to be a showdown between two teams with Super Bowl aspiration­s, each led by league MVPs under center and with rabid fanbases that expect nothing less than another deep postseason run.

Well, so much for expectatio­ns.

To start, the Packers will visit Arrowhead Stadium without the reigning MVP after Aaron Rodgers tested positive for COVID-19 this week. Instead of having a threetime All-Pro facing a downtrodde­n Chiefs defense, they’ll turn to second-year pro Jordan

Love in his first career start with all of seven regular-season passes to his name.

At least the Packers

(7-1) have a record commensura­te with expectatio­ns.

On the other side, the Chiefs (4-4) and the 2018 MVP have looked nothing like a championsh­ip contender. Patrick Mahomes leads the league in intercepti­ons and turnovers, and Kansas City needed a fourth-quarter comeback Monday night just to beat the lowly Giants and even their record eight games into the season.

In other words, the luster that was supposed to accompany Sunday’s showdown has dimmed considerab­ly.

“Nobody’s going to feel sorry for us,” Packers coach Matt LaFleur said. “They’re not going to postpone or cancel the game. We have a game to play and it’s a next-manup mentality and that’s how we’ve operated for everybody.”

Indeed, the Packers managed to overcome the loss of wide receivers Davante Adams and Allen Lazard to COVID protocols – to say nothing of a bunch of injuries on defense – to deal the Cardinals their first loss of the season last week.

It gave them a comfortabl­e 3 1⁄2-game cushion on the Vikings in the NFC Central.

“Definitely it’s time for some of the young leaders, myself included, to step up. And we’ve had a great leader to learn from,” said Packers running back Aaron Jones, who could be Love’s best friend Sunday. “So now, take that and put it to use.”

Meanwhile, the Chiefs still believe they are Super Bowl contenders after adding pass rusher Melvin Ingram ahead of the trade deadline to help their moribund defense. But they are still a halfgame behind the Chargers, to whom they’ve already lost once, and 1 1⁄2 games behind the Raiders in what has become a wide-open AFC West.

“We’re still moving the ball and doing a lot of great things,” Mahomes said, “but whenever you turn the ball over or get a penalty and get pushed back, that kind of ruins drives.”

OBJ OUT AGAIN

Odell Beckham Jr.

remains lined up outside – way outside.

The polarizing wide receiver was excused from practice for the second straight day on Thursday as the Cleveland Browns figure out their next move with him, a person familiar with the situation told The Associated Press. The team hasn’t reached a conclusion yet on what to do with Beckham, according to the person who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivit­y of the situation.

Beckham has likely played his last game in Cleveland, his exit hastened by his father sharing a video on social media criticizin­g quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield for not throwing the ball to the three-time Pro Bowler.

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