Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Long day for Packers’ defense after early success

- MICHAEL COHEN

GREEN BAY - His intercepti­on of Drew Brees warranted a celebratio­n, so Green Bay Packers cornerback Davon House tossed the football to the ground and flattened it with an elbow drop straight out of World Wrestling Entertainm­ent.

Brees had entered Sunday’s game with only two intercepti­ons through the first five games, but that number doubled when House outpositio­ned wide receiver Michael Thomas to deaden a promising drive.

The defensive party had begun on the previous possession, the first of the game for the New Orleans Saints, when cornerback Damarious Randall notched his third intercepti­on in as many weeks to extend one of the more ironic subplots. Randall ran vertically down the middle with Brandon Coleman, a bigger and stronger receiver, but reacted quickly to an underthrow­n ball and secured it in the end zone for a touchback.

On an afternoon when the Packers craved turnovers to lessen the burden on their own quarterbac­k, Brett Hundley, who was making the first start of his career, the secondary had ripped the ball away from a future Hall of Famer twice on its first two possession­s.

“Those two turnovers, Damarious and House taking the ball away, were huge,” outside linebacker Clay Matthews said. “… I felt for the most part we did a pretty good job. Unfortunat­ely, in the second half it was night and day.”

An afternoon that might have offered emotional ballast as the Packers enter the bye week devolved into an unwelcome reminder of numerous defensive inefficien­cies. Brees awoke from his heinous start to throw for 331 yards and a touchdown, the most passing yards allowed by the Packers this season. His two tailbacks, Mark Ingram and rookie Alvin Kamara, combined for 217 total yards and averaged 5.4 yards per touch. His aging speedster, wide receiver Ted Ginn, outraced the Packers’ secondary for 141 yards on seven catches.

When it ended the visitors had outgained the Packers by 225 merciless yards.

“Not good enough, not good enough,” House said. “… We want to be a top-10 defense, and that’s not what a top-10 defense will do. We’ve got to get better.”

The first hint of the Packers’ impending problems arose near the midway point of the first quarter, when coach Mike McCarthy burned an early timeout on defense. On the shoulders of Brees, whose mental acuity for the game is not unlike that of Aaron Rodgers, the Saints rolled through numerous personnel groupings within the context of each possession, taxing defensive coordinato­r Dom Capers.

When the Saints scored their first points of the game on a 12-yard run by Ingram, the Packers had only 10 players on the field defensivel­y.

“It was difficult out there,” inside linebacker Blake Martinez said. “I think overall we did well, but there were some times where we were kind of mixed up.”

Ingram (22 carries, 105 yards) and Kamara (14 touches, 107 total yards) enjoyed the majority of their success in the first half, even as Brees’ turnovers limited the Saints to a single score. And it was their ability to pepper the Packers for consistent yardage that laid the groundwork for a second half enlivened by playaction passes.

Ginn and Thomas (seven catches, 82 yards) were the beneficiar­ies of effective play fakes behind the line of scrimmage. At 32 years old, Ginn retains the majority of his trademark speed that was clocked at 4.28 seconds during his collegiate career at Ohio State. He thrives on deep crosses that force defenders to run laterally across the field, and Brees found him for a 47-yard gallop in the third quarter that triggered a field goal to give the Saints the lead.

“Majority of the time they just try to run away from you,” House said. “If we’re man to man, not too many people can keep up with him with how fast he is.”

If Ginn thrived on yards after catch, especially as he outran House and rookie Kevin King on the 47-yard gain, Thomas played the role of possession receiver. He hauled in passes of 13 yards, 21 yards, 9 yards, 20 yards and 5 yards in the second half alone, two of which converted third downs of 6 yards or more.

The inability to get off the field on third down infuriated the Packers, who allowed conversion­s on eight of 15 attempts Sunday, three of which were in excess of 9 yards. The Saints converted three third downs in the fourth quarter alone to surge in front with a two-score lead.

“I don’t know,” House said of the third-down issues. “It’s depressing though.”

Brees took the field five times in the second half and scored on four of them. On the fifth, he kneeled three times to preserve a win.

 ?? WM. GLASHEEN/USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN ?? Packers defensive back Kentrell Brice is callled for a horse collar while tackling Saints running back Mark Ingram on Sunday.
WM. GLASHEEN/USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN Packers defensive back Kentrell Brice is callled for a horse collar while tackling Saints running back Mark Ingram on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States