Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Cook showing he can move chains

Tight end a threat on third down

- RYAN WOOD USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN

Green Bay — Aaron Rodgers shimmied to his left. He barely had time to think, much less react, before Chicago Bears linebacker Nick Kwiatkoski’s right hand was draped around his right shoulder.

This was the Green Bay Packers’ initial thirddown attempt Sunday, and it was off to a bad start. Kwiatkoski came unblocked on a blitz. Rodgers, gimpy right calf and all, scrambled to save a play.

After a couple steps, Rodgers lofted a pass to his big tight end. Jared Cook rewarded his quarterbac­k’s trust with a first down.

“A matchup concern,” coach Mike McCarthy called Cook. “I think that’s obvious, just the way when you line him up in different spots, how they react to him. You go to the first third-and-3 there, and the matchup he has on the corner route.

“When they give you those opportunit­ies for those matchups, he’s a

tough guy to handle.”

Cook caught a pair of thirddown conversion­s on the Packers’ opening touchdown drive against the Bears. After his size against Bears defensive back Demontre Hurst gave Rodgers a bigger target, Cook used his speed to separate from Kwiatkoski on a 10-yard out route three plays later.

The Packers’ next thirddown conversion didn’t come until Rodgers heaved a 60-yard pass to Jordy Nelson on their final offensive play before a spike and a winning Mason Crosby field goal.

In between, there were seven consecutiv­e failed third downs Sunday at Soldier Field. It was one of the few blemishes for an offense that had no turnovers and just two penalties, but it became a big problem.

Rodgers’ long completion to Nelson bailed out a defense that would have had some tough explaining to do if the Packers left Chicago without a victory. But defense hardly was the lone culprit responsibl­e for squanderin­g a 17-point fourth-quarter lead. Both sides of the ball played their part.

“It definitely felt like our third down was pretty bad,” right guard T.J. Lang said.

Third down didn’t hurt the Packers on the scoreboard. They dropped 30 points on the Bears, a number that’s good enough to win most weeks. In the third quarter, they strung together a pair of touchdown drives without facing a single third down.

But their inability to convert third down derailed their fourth quarter. Twice, the Packers responded to Bears touchdowns with three-and-outs. While the Packers needed to keep Chicago out of the end zone, any defense is better when its offense moves the chains.

“They come score a touchdown,” Lang said, “and we try to rebound and kind of keep the momentum. We go three-andout, and they score again. Then we go three-and-out.

“We just allowed them to keep the momentum there in the fourth quarter with the three-and-outs. We’ll learn from that. We’ll get better.”

Rodgers’ lack of mobility coupled with tight coverage from the Bears’ secondary was perhaps the biggest issue. Rodgers was sacked three times on third down, with one overturned because of a defensive holding penalty, and failed to convert two more as a runner.

That’s where Cook could have helped more. While he caught six passes for 85 yards, second on the Packers only to Nelson, he wasn’t targeted on a third down after the opening drive.

“He’s another element (we) can add to the game,” Nelson said. “We saw it in Washington, and it’s something that defenses have to adjust to, and we adjust to throughout the weeks. The more guys that we have out there that can make plays, obviously the better situation we’re in.

“He’s a big target. He can move. He can cover a lot of ground. Obviously the more plays he makes and gets more time back on the field, the confidence grows with Aaron.”

Among the Packers offense’s biggest improvemen­ts since last season has been third-down conversion. They rank third in the NFL behind New Orleans and Washington, converting 46.2% of their third downs. That’s a major jump from ranking 27th in the league with a 34.1 conversion rate a year ago.

As their season turned with four straight wins, their thirddown conversion trended the opposite direction. The Packers are tied for 24th in converting 33.3% of their third downs over the past three weeks. They converted 4 of 12 against Houston, 4 of 11 against Seattle and 3 of 10 against Chicago.

McCarthy bristled Monday when asked whether the Packers should more consistent­ly get Cook involved in the passing game, but Cook might provide the easiest solution. Tight ends are valuable on third down because of the mismatches they create against defensive backs and linebacker­s.

Since Cook returned from a two-month absence because of an ankle injury, most of his production has come on third down. Cook has seven catches for 147 yards on third down in five games. On first and second downs, he has 17 catches for 84 yards. In those games, Cook has caught 7 of 8 third-down passes Rodgers has thrown to him.

It’s the kind of consistenc­y a good third-down offense largely has lacked the past three weeks.

“I feel like I’m there for Aaron whenever he needs me,” Cook said. “Me and him are continuing to build our rapport and get better as tight end and quarterbac­k. He just stays in my ear. We just communicat­e, and whenever he sees things, we just make sure we stay on the same page.

“When you know the sticks, when you know third-down situations and you know what he needs, you’re able to get there. And you’re able to get what the team needs to keep the chains moving.”

 ?? RICK WOOD / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Packers tight end Jared Cook signals first down after a third-down catch in the first half against the Bears.
RICK WOOD / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Packers tight end Jared Cook signals first down after a third-down catch in the first half against the Bears.

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