Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

GREEN BAY Packers win first with Philbin in charge.

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GREEN BAY, Wis. — A tough week for the Green Bay Packers ended with a sorely needed victory that relied on a familiar formula.

They beat a warm-weather team on a chilly afternoon at Lambeau Field by building a big lead and winning the turnover margin.

Aaron Rodgers threw two touchdown passes and set an NFL record for intercepti­on-free football, and the Packers beat the Atlanta Falcons 34-20 on Sunday to win their first game under interim head coach Joe Philbin.

Aaron Jones ran for a 29yard score in the third quarter. The defense forced two turnovers — their first takeaways in three games — and limited quarterbac­k Matt Ryan after a game-opening touchdown drive to hand Atlanta its fifth straight loss and guarantee the Falcons a losing record for the first time since 2014.

The Packers (5-7-1) regained some swagger with Philbin taking over for the fired Mike McCarthy. They’ve still got work to do to avoid a losing record, but at least Green Bay snapped a threegame losing streak.

“It was an emotional week, we all know that. I feel very happy for the organizati­on, players and staff that work so hard to make this a unique place,” Philbin said. “I told the team I was very proud to be their head coach today.”

In return, the team gave the game ball to Philbin.

“He’s a great man. I love Joe. I love everything that he’s about, and it was a lot of fun,” said receiver Randall Cobb, who caught a 24-yard touchdown pass with 12:44 left in the third quarter to make it 27-7.

That pass also turned out to be momentous for other reasons for Rodgers, giving him 359 consecutiv­e attempts without an intercepti­on to break the league record previously held by New England’s Tom Brady (358 in 2010-11).

Rodgers finished 21 of 32 for 196 yards and 2 scores. Linebacker Deion Jones had a couple chances to snap Rodgers’ intercepti­on streak, but couldn’t hang on either time.

“You need a little bit of good fortune when you have a streak like that,” Rodgers said.

The Falcons (4-9) had trouble keeping up after their first series. When they did, they hurt themselves with eight defensive penalties.

Atlanta found some semblance of a running game that it hoped to get to open up play action. Yet the Falcons still endured a long drought after Ryan found Julio Jones for a 16-yard touchdown pass on an easy opening series.

By the time Ryan and Jones connected for another score, from 12 yards with 13:34 left in the game, Atlanta was still down by 20.

Their frustratin­g and injury-filled season was epitomized by a botched snap in the red zone later in the fourth.

Atlanta drove to the 8 when the shotgun snap from center Alex Mack hit Mohamed Sanu’s leg while the receiver was in motion. Bashaud Breeland recovered.

“That was tough, but that’s on me,” Ryan said. “The whole operation starts and ends with me, so I’ve got to do a better job of that and making sure that we don’t have things like that coming up.”

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