Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Game-saving pick puts stamp on huge day for corners

- Ryan Wood

GREEN BAY – Jaire Alexander, diamond-studded earrings with his No. 23 in both ears, eye black still covering his cheeks, plopped himself on a table next to his locker. The sweat had barely dried from hair peaking over his black, NFL headband. He rested two bare feet on cushioned seats.

The Green Bay Packers cornerback was feeling himself in this moment. That sweat was replaced with swagger. It was oozing as Alexander stared into cameras and didn’t hold back.

“You check out my one-on-one coverage,” he said. “I was on them boys all day.”

Down the locker room, Kevin King wasn’t feeling too bad, either. He perched himself atop a clothes hamper, feet dangling, chilling after the Packers’ 21-16 win against the Minnesota Vikings.

King had the signature play Sunday. It was a play that started with him being beat. In the end zone, Vikings receiver Stefon Diggs had a step on the Packers’ third-year cornerback. King knew Diggs was open. He knew Vikings quarterbac­k Kirk Cousins was throwing him the football.

A lesser cornerback might have panicked. “We’ve had some guys over the years,” Aaron Rodgers would later say, “when that big, stud receiver was coming to town, they might not be up for that challenge.” So here was the Vikings’ big, stud receiver, open in the end zone, the Packers clinging to their five-point lead. Just five minutes left in the fourth quarter.

“He had a step on me,” King said. “I looked at the quarterbac­k and knew he was going to throw it. So I just put my head down and tried to run to it, and the ball was there.”

King closed with his 4.43 speed. He used his size to create leverage, shrinking Cousins’ throwing window. Then he did something that has eluded him over the years, jumping over Diggs to make a play on the football.

A week ago, King dropped what would’ve been a critical intercepti­on in Chicago, a turnover that would have given the Packers’ struggling offense a short field. Falling in the end zone Sunday, two hands clutched on Cousins’ pass, King cradled this intercepti­on to his chest. The ball popped out after his back touched the ground. There was a replay review.

Was King ever worried he’d dropped another intercepti­on?

“No,” he said, sitting atop that hamper, “I wasn’t nervous. Hell yeah, I knew I caught it.”

And he did.

King’s second career pick put a signature stamp on what was an overwhelmi­ngly impressive day for the pair of young Packers cornerback­s. In the past, Vikings receivers Diggs and Adam Thielen have turned Lambeau Field into their own personnel playground. Thielen had at least 125 yards and a touchdown in both games against the Packers last season. He had 202 yards and two touchdowns on 12 catches in a Christmas Eve game at Lambeau Field in 2016. Diggs hasn’t been far behind. The last time he was in Green Bay, Diggs was catching nine passes for 128 yards and two touchdowns.

The Packers didn’t shut out Diggs and Thielen for four quarters. Against maybe the NFL’s best receiving tandem – they were the only teammates to each catch 100 passes last year – that rarely happens. Diggs had just one catch on seven targets, but it was a 45-yard touchdown. Thielen added 75 yards on five receptions.

What the Vikings tandem did to the Packers secondary Sunday – six catches, 120 yards, the touchdown – was nowhere near the kind of production they’ve gotten in the past. For that, the Packers could thank their pair of blossoming cornerback­s. Alexander, who had two defended passes and almost added an intercepti­on that would have ended the game, knew what he and King had just accomplish­ed.

“Kevin King, he’s a baller,” Alexander said. “He’s hot right now. Shoot, I mean, he’s putting everybody on notice as well. Me and him, shoot, the best tandem in the league, I feel like. Go watch the play-by-play.

“We strapped them boys up.” Bombastic? Perhaps. Cocky? Of course. But Alexander’s confidence certainly isn’t unreasonab­le.

While the Packers’ newfound pass rush has given their defense a huge face lift, the lockdown coverage in the secondary is every bit as valuable, if not more.

Best cornerback tandem in the league? That’s bold. If both can stay healthy, a big if given King’s extensive injury history, it might be attainable.

“Why not?” Tramon Williams, the secondary’s elder statesman, asked. “… Talented, man. Very talented. Both want to be great. Both have the ability to be great. And both will be great. This foundation is really set.”

 ?? WM. GLASHEEN/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Packers cornerback Kevin King intercepts a pass in the end zone that was intended for Vikings wide receiver Stefon Diggs (14) during the fourth quarter on Sunday at Lambeau Field.
WM. GLASHEEN/USA TODAY NETWORK Packers cornerback Kevin King intercepts a pass in the end zone that was intended for Vikings wide receiver Stefon Diggs (14) during the fourth quarter on Sunday at Lambeau Field.

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