Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Pressure on Packers vs. winless Browns

- Pete Dougherty

On Nov. 17, 1997, the Green Bay Packers took the field at the RCA Dome as 13-point favorites over the Indianapol­is Colts.

The Colts, coached by Lindy Infante, were in freefall. They were still winless (0-10) more than two months into the season. Their quarterbac­k, Jim Harbaugh, was sidelined because of a broken hand, so their starter opposite Brett Favre that day was Paul Justin.

Full disclosure: I covered the game, and when I looked it up this week, Paul Justin didn’t even ring a bell.

But if the Colts’ quarterbac­k was forgettabl­e, the game was memorable for one very good reason. The Colts picked up their first win of the season by beating the Super Bowl-bound Packers, 41-38, on a short field goal on the game’s final play.

“You just don’t want to be that one team that they beat,” lamented LeRoy Butler, the former Packers safety who had the third of his four All-Pro seasons that year, in an interview Wednesday.

This week, the 2017 Packers find themselves in a similar position as their ’97 team. They play Sunday in Cleveland against the 0-12 Browns, who are four losses from being only the second franchise in NFL history to go 0-16.

The Browns are the undisputed worst team in the NFL. They’ve won only one of their last 31 games.

The Packers, playing on the road with a backup starting at quarterbac­k, are a 3 1⁄2-point favorite. That’s nothing like the 13-point favorite they were in ’97, but it’s the first time they’re been favored in three road games with Brett Hundley at quarterbac­k.

While the Packers have to be happy to see the Browns on their schedule for what could be Hundley’s last start before Aaron Rodgers’ return, a different kind of pressure sets in. If they lose, they’ll have to live with the stigma.

“If the worst team in the league beats you, (everybody is) going to say you’re a terrible team,” Butler said.

It doesn’t matter that they’ve already won two games with Hundley at quarterbac­k. A loss Sunday would be unforgivab­le.

From a psychologi­cal standpoint, coach Mike McCarthy is fortunate this is essentiall­y a must-win game for his 6-6 team — a loss all-but-mathematic­ally would knock them from the playoff race.

“We need to be seven wins when we get on that plane coming back from Cleveland,” McCarthy said this week in a comment clearly meant for his team.

So what kind of chance do the Browns have of picking up that first win Sunday?

Six weeks ago, I asked a personnel executive for an NFL team to compare the Packers’ and Browns’ rosters, minus the quarterbac­k position. His conclusion was that the Packers were better, but not by much.

The point of the exercise wasn’t so much that the Packers’ roster is bad. Yes, general manager Ted Thompson mostly has failed in his many attempts to upgrade his defense via the draft, and the Packers’ personnel top to bottom isn’t anything like it was in 2010 and ’11.

But the point was that not much separates the rosters of most NFL teams, except for the quarterbac­k.

For most franchises, if you switched quarterbac­ks with another club the records would travel with them.

So when the executive guessed the Browns would be a 10-win team if Rodgers were their quarterbac­k, he probably was right.

The executive also said the Packers are better coached than the Browns. That could be a factor Sunday, too.

But the game very likely comes down to whether Hundley (70.6 passer rating) plays better than DeShone Kizer (58.1), the No. 52 pick overall in this year’s draft.

To be sure, the Packers are going to get the Browns’ best shot.

Catching the Packers without Rodgers is a huge break and rallying point. That’s why the first half of this game will be so important.

“Get in front and then the (Browns’) doubt sets in,” Butler said. “But if you let them get out in front or stay competitiv­e, that’s when the pressure sets in.”

That’s what Butler remembers from that ’97 Colts game. The Packers led by 11 early, but then the lead changed hands twice in the second quarter, and they were up only 28-27 at halftime. It was still a one-point game at the start of the fourth quarter.

When it was that close that deep into the game, the pressure was all on the Packers.

“Then guys play a little tight, and that’s exactly what happened,” Butler said.

The Packers have bigger things to think about than the Browns’ winless record. This essentiall­y is a playoff game.

But there’s no escaping human nature, either. Their players and coaches know Cleveland hasn’t won yet this season. That’s simply impossible to forget, and at some point Sunday, that could matter.

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