Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Hundley’s chances hinge on the line

- Eric Baranczyk and Pete Dougherty

If the Green Bay Packers’ offensive line keeps playing like it did Monday night, Brett Hundley at least will get a fair shake in his bid to show he can win in the NFL.

The Packers’ starting line was in place for most of the game against the Detroit Lions for the first time since Week 6 at Minnesota, and no coincidenc­e, the line protected Hundley well. In fact, two of the three times Hundley was sacked, he was primarily responsibl­e.

Bryan Bulaga’s season-ending torn ACL in the fourth quarter, then, was a big blow for a group that finally got a chance to play together in the Packers’ otherwise desultory, 30-17 loss.

Playing at that level for the second half of the season will be tougher with a backup replacing Bulaga at right tackle. But after watching the video from Monday night, it still looks like if the other four starters finally can stay healthy, the line should give Hundley a fighting chance. That wasn’t the case for most of the first seven games of the season, when injuries, often at multiple spots on the line, left Aaron Rodgers and then Hundley often running for their lives.

In fact, if Hundley had slid around and stepped up in the pocket better, rather than just bolting, he might have made a few more plays. It’s on him to learn from this one and adjust going forward.

The two sacks that were on Hundley stand out because both could have turned into good or even great plays if his pocket awareness had been better.

The first came near the end of the Packers’ first drive, which had them in scoring position. On first down from the Lions 23, Hundley took a deep drop, saw blitzing linebacker Tahir Whitehead blow past running back Aaron Jones’ block and took off upfield. Whitehead sacked him for a 2-yard loss.

No question, Jones blew the block. He barely got a piece of Whitehead even though he had a clean shot at him. But the middle of the line — Lane Taylor, Corey Linsley and Jahri Evans — gave Hundley the room and time to step up and make the throw.

In fact, you might have seen the replay from behind Hundley that showed Jordy Nelson streaking wide open on a post route for what could have been an easy touchdown. But instead of keeping his eyes up field, stepping up and delivering the ball, Hundley started running at the first sign of trouble. That cost points, because the Packers came up empty on what had been an impressive opening drive when a bad snap led to kicker Mason Crosby’s 38-yard field goal getting blocked.

Similarly, the Packers were running their hurry-up offense in the final minute of the first half and approachin­g the red zone when Hundley bolted the pocket too early and was sacked for a 2-yard loss. The protection wasn’t the issue.

In an indication of just how bad the injuries have been on the Packers’ line, they’ve had nine linemen play at least 32 snaps, or about half a game. Their two best linemen coming into the season, Bulaga and left tackle David Bakhtiari, have played less than half the team’s offensive snaps. And Justin McCray, a deep backup going into the season, ranks No. 4 on the line in snaps with 322 (out of 464).

McCray replaces Bulaga for now, though Jason Spriggs, who can come off injured reserve in a week, might take over when he’s ready to play.

Rookie rush

The Packers are looking for rookies Vince Biegel (fourth round) and Montravius Adams (third round) to boost their pass rush, but the two didn’t leave much for a first impression Monday night.

This was Biegel’s NFL debut after coming off PUP (broken foot) last week, and Adams saw his first regular playing time (he had four snaps coming into the game) after having a foot injury early in the season also. Neither had a sack or quarterbac­k hit.

Biegel played 19 snaps at outside linebacker and did OK against the run. He had two tackles and was in on the goalline play when Lions halfback Ameer Abdullah lost a fumble.

But as a pass rusher, Biegel was a non-factor.

Keep in mind, Biegel hadn’t played in a football game since the Cotton Bowl on Jan. 2, and he’d been practicing for only two weeks after having been out since May because of surgery on his foot.

So this was his first experience of the speed of an NFL game. There was bound to be some rust, and he’ll need a few weeks to get into football shape. But if you were looking for a flash as a pass rusher that jumped off the video, it wasn’t there Monday night.

Adams, who had been a healthy scratch the previous four games, played 18 snaps, mostly as an inside rusher on passing downs. He didn’t show up on the stat sheet and didn’t show much explosiven­ess off the snap. He looks like he’ll need to get stronger and speed up his hands and feet if he’s going to add anything to the Packers’ inside rush this year.

Grade card

Quarterbac­k: In back-to-back games, Brett Hundley hasn’t made any game-losing mistakes (no intercepti­ons) but didn’t make many plays, either. Grade: C-minus Offensive line: The starting unit got in 42 snaps together before Bryan Bulaga’s season ended (torn ACL). This group protected well and was a bright spot on an otherwise bad day. Grade: B

Tight ends: With Martellus Bennett out (shoulder), Lance Kendricks dropped a pass that hit him in the hands, and he and Richard Rodgers combined for only three catches. Grade: D

Running backs: Aaron Jones and Ty Montgomery combined to average 4.5 yards on 10 carries, which isn’t bad, but Jones missed a big block in pass protection and didn’t play enough thereafter to be a factor. Grade: C Wide receivers: Their numbers were padded in the fourth quarter when Hundley found a rhythm running hurry-up against a Lions defense protecting a three-score lead. They made only one big play (Randall Cobb’s 46-yard slant) and missed a couple blocks in the run game. Grade: C

Defensive line: Same story every week. Kenny Clark and Mike Daniels are gumming up the run, but they need to collapse the pocket more because the outside rush isn’t there. Grade: C

Linebacker­s: Blake Martinez, Clay Matthews and Nick Perry played well against the run. But Martinez was a liability in coverage, and Matthews and Perry produced no sacks. Grade: C

Cornerback: Despite Matthew Stafford’s big numbers (132.4 rating, 361 yards passing) this group (Kevin King, Davon House, Damarious Randall) played OK. They contested a lot of passes, and it took exquisite throws to beat House and Randall on the two touchdowns. Grade: C-plus

Safeties: Josh Jones’ tackling was suspect at times, and he might have had a shot at an intercepti­on if he weren’t so intent on destroying tight end Eric Ebron on one play. Grade: C-minus

Special teams: Long snapper Derek Hart botched his first snap, which led to a block of a Mason Crosby field goal. That can’t happen. Trevor Davis made a couple questionab­le calls returning kickoffs from the end zone. The hurry-on-to-the-field and make of a 35-yard field goal in the final seconds of the first half was impressive. Grade: C

 ?? DAN POWERS/USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN ?? Brett Hundley finished 26 of 38 for 245 yards.
DAN POWERS/USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN Brett Hundley finished 26 of 38 for 245 yards.

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