Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Nelson a new slot machine

- PETE DOUGHERTY

Green Bay — The scary Green Bay Packers’ offense is back.

It had been absent a while, going back to last season and really through 10 games this year. But during their current five-game winning streak, the Packers’ vibe is by the week feeling more and more like 2011 and 2014.

If you don’t remember, they led the NFL in scoring both those years.

They’re back because they have Aaron Rodgers playing like an MVP again. Watching him torch the Minnesota Vikings, 38-25, on Saturday, it was hard to imagine anyone in the NFL playing better over the past month.

So now they’re the league’s hottest team and headed to Detroit to play for the NFC North title next week, and they’re here because of three key developmen­ts: turning Ty Montgomery into a full-time running back; tight end Jared Cook’s return from injury; and playing Jordy Nelson more as a slot receiver.

Montgomery was the key, because his ability to run like a real running back opened up everything. On a lot of downs, it’s like the Packers have six skill players on the field. Defenses have to cover five receivers and deal with a real runner at the same time, because Montgomery is both. That’s a big problem.

Cook’s return from an ankle injury then has added a big, athletic target this offense has missed for a few years.

And Saturday, we saw more than ever what a devastatin­g weapon Nelson has become working much of the time from the slot instead of his former role as mainly an outside receiver. He and Rodgers dominated this game. How’s this for a stat? When Rodgers targeted Nelson on Saturday, he had the maximum 158.3 passer rating (9 for 11 for 154 yards and two touchdowns).

Randall Cobb didn’t play because of an ankle injury, but did you even notice? Davante Adams (four catches for 44 yards) and undrafted rookie Geronimo Allison (four catches, 66 yards) aren’t the fastest guys in the world, but they’re good-sized targets on the outside. Rodgers and Nelson did the rest.

In just a few weeks, this offense has evolved from dink and dunk to eating up nice chunks of mid-range yardage. And the 6-foot-3 Nelson lining up in slot-type positions and roaming the middle of the field has been a crucial figure. With all that field to work with, his chemistry with Rodgers, especially when plays break down, is, well, exceptiona­l. Probably better even than what Brett Favre had with his best receivers a generation ago.

“Anytime (Nelson) is in the middle, he presents a big target,” Rodgers said, “and he’s just got such a great feel for zone coverages.”

Said coach Mike McCarthy: “(Rodgers) releases the ball much earlier to Jordy, and that in itself speaks volumes of their relationsh­ip as far as the number of reps, the trust, the timing and so forth.”

This has implicatio­ns for the rest of the season and beyond. Nelson didn’t play strictly from the slot Saturday, but post-ACL that’s become his best position. Going forward, that has to be where he lines up more often than not, right?

Cobb is a good, tough player, and presumably will be back from his injury next week at Detroit. There’s always a way to get good players on the field, so Cobb will have some kind of role for the rest of this season, however long the season lasts.

But Cobb is scheduled to make $9.5 million in salary and bonuses next year. He’s strictly a slot receiver, and a smallish one (5-101⁄4) at that. There’s no way the Packers can pay him that salary in 2017 with Nelson proving to be a game changer at his position, plus Adams, Allison, Trevor Davis, a possible draft pick and even Jeff Janis to man the outside. Absent a big pay cut, it’s getting tougher and tougher to see why the Packers would bring Cobb back next year. You can’t pay everybody, and there are only so many snaps to go around. But that’s a decision for the offseason.

Because these Packers still might have a lot of football to play. With a win at Detroit they’ll win the division and host a playoff game. And with the way this offense is humming, who knows what might happen?

In two of the last three weeks they’ve put up 38 points against scoring defenses that going into the weekend ranked No. 2 (Seattle) and No. 6 (Minnesota) in the league. Sure, the Vikings are collapsing, and one of their most important players, safety Harrison Smith, played on a bum ankle Saturday. But they still have a lot of talent on that side of the ball and one of the game’s best defensive coaches in Mike Zimmer. So 38 points is 38 points.

So much of it comes down to Rodgers. McCarthy always says his offense is built around making his quarterbac­k successful, and after about a year of up-anddown results in that regard, the coach has found an attack that has his quarterbac­k peaking in this season’s stretch drive.

The Packers have to feel especially good that Rodgers looked remarkably close to full strength as a scrambler only two weeks after injuring his right calf against the Seahawks. He was much more mobile than last week at Chicago.

And then there was the way he threw darts all over the field Saturday, some from the pocket, others on the move. After the game, he described what he felt like, and it was the textbook definition of a player in “The Zone.”

“From the first throw today, I was in a different head space,” Rodgers said. “I just felt that I was, for whatever reason, at a heightened awareness and focus and I was seeing things better. I was playing slower in my mind from the start. A good place to be at. You wish you could harness that every single game.”

He’s kind of been there for a few weeks now. That has to scare the rest of the NFL.

CHRISTMAS PRESENTS

Only Kobe Bryant and Oscar Robertson have scored more than 300 points on Christmas in their NBA careers. Cleveland’s LeBron James and Chicago’s Dwyane Wade might join the club Sunday.

Wade enters this year’s Christmas Day quintupleh­eader as the league’s leading active scorer, with 277 points. It’s unlikely he’ll still have that designatio­n when his game starts in San Antonio, given that James and the Cavaliers host Golden State immediatel­y before that matchup — and James enters with 270 points in his Christmas career.

Bryant is the all-time Christmas leader with 395 points. Robertson scored 377, Wade is third for now, followed by Shaquille O’Neal (272) and James rounding out the top five.

Associated Press Holiday miracles: The Browns won a football game. That means the 2008 Lions can crack open the flat champagne. Teddy Ballgame: Ted Thompson probably could tell you Rudolph’s 40-yard dash time off the top of his head. Resolution­s:

Santa looks a little soft around the middle. Maybe Eddie Lacy can show him how to use P90X.

Illegal use of hands:

Which was more physical on Saturday, the Packers’ run defense or the last-minute shoppers at the mall? Jan. 1 “To me, I’ve said this, he’s really a great cheerleade­r guy. I don’t know what he does. I don’t think he is a great coach at all.”

WISCONSIN BADGERS FOOTBALL

Jan. 2

MILWAUKEE BUCKS

Monday Wednesday

MARQUETTE GOLDEN EAGLES BASKETBALL

Wednesday

WISCONSIN BADGERS BASKETBALL

Tuesday

UW-MILWAUKEE PANTHERS BASKETBALL

Thursday

MILWAUKEE ADMIRALS

Monday

MILWAUKEE WAVE

Saturday Chicago 3:05 p.m. No TV x-Cotton Bowl in Arlington, Texas

NOTE:

MU women’s basketball: UW women’s basketball: UWM women’s basketball:

(Radio: AM-920)

UW men’s hockey:

AM-920)

Ben Steele vs. W. Michigan-x at Washington at Detroit Georgetown Rutgers at Youngstown St. Chicago Michigan State, 8 p.m. Jan. 6 (TV: BTN; Radio:

UW women’s hockey:

Noon

6 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m. ESPN

FSWis FSWis

FS1 ESPN/2 No TV No TV

at Villanova, 11 a.m. Wednesday Michigan, 2 p.m. Jan. 1

Wright State, 7 p.m. Thursday at Lindenwood, 7 p.m. Jan. 6 AM-920

AM-620 AM-620

AM-540 AM-920 AM-1130 FM-105.7 No radio

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 ?? RICK WOOD / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Wide receiver Jordy Nelson (left) and quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers celebrate a touchdown by Nelson on Saturday.
RICK WOOD / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Wide receiver Jordy Nelson (left) and quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers celebrate a touchdown by Nelson on Saturday.
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