Milwaukee Journal Sentinel - Packer Plus

PACKERS 21, VIKINGS 16

Summary, box score, game report, insider, analysis

- Keith Jenkins

Green Bay — All that mattered to Aaron Rodgers on Sunday was that the Packers won.

That’s it.

Rodgers threw two early touchdowns and Green Bay held on for a 21-16 victory over the Minnesota Vikings.

“The biggest thing is that we’re 2-0,” he said. “I know we owe a lot of that to our defense and (defensive coordinato­r) Mike Pettine and his staff and those guys for being opportunis­tic and making plays when they had to. But I think there’s still a lot of great potential in this offense.”

On a day when the Packers honored late Hall of Famer Bart Starr at halftime, Rodgers put on quite a show – particular­ly early. Rodgers completed nine of his first 10 passes for 134 yards and two touchdowns and had a perfect 158.3 rating through the first quarter. He finished 22 of 34 for 209 yards.

Rodgers and new coach Matt LaFleur experiment­ed with Rodgers wearing a playcall wristband in the hope that it would speed up the play-calling process and get the offense out of the huddle quicker.

“Yeah, this is probably the wordiest offense I’ve been in since Cal,” said Rodgers, who played college ball at California after transferri­ng from Butte Community College. “I think it just helps with communicat­ion. He doesn’t have to say 12 syllables to me, and then I say 12 syllables in the huddle. It helps speed things up a little bit. But we didn’t use it a whole lot. We only used it about five or six times.”

After scoring on each of its first three possession­s, Green Bay’s offense failed to muster another point. But the hot start was enough to win.

The Packers remained unbeaten under LaFleur after opening the NFL’s 100th season with a victory at rival Chicago. They also beat the Vikings (1-1) for the fifth time in the past seven games at Lambeau Field.

Minnesota’s Dalvin Cook had a career-high 154 yards and a touchdown on 20 carries. It was the third-year pro’s second consecutiv­e game with over 100 yards rushing. Cook also had 37 yards receiving in the loss.

“We’re just trying to find our rhythm,” Cook said. “It was a hostile environmen­t. We knew what we were coming into. Tried to prepare as well as we could. You can never replicate a game. Just trying to find our rhythm. We found it, but they jumped on us pretty early.”

After throwing the ball just 10 times in the opener against Atlanta, Kirk Cousins finished 14 of 32 with 230 yards, a touchdown and two intercepti­ons. Cousins was picked off by Kevin King in the end zone late in the fourth quarter.

“You just can’t do that, can’t do that,” Cousins said of the intercepti­on. “It happened last week in our game against us. We talked about it all week, you just can’t do that. It’s uncharacte­ristic of me.”

The Vikings are 5-2-1 in last their eight meetings against Green Bay.

Rodgers and Davante Adams connected on a 39-yard completion on the Packers’ first offensive play. Rodgers found running back Jamaal Williams for a 15yard touchdown to cap a four-play, 75yard drive.

Adams finished with 106 yards on nine catches.

“We started off a lot faster,” Adams said. “That’s definitely what we were after this week.”

It took Green Bay’s offense all of 12 minutes to score more points (14) than it did in the season opener at Chicago (10).

After a missed field goal by Minnesota, receiver Geronimo Allison, who did not see a single pass against the Bears, gave the Packers a two-score advantage on a 12-yard strike from Rodgers.

Green Bay took over at the Vikings 33 after defensive lineman Kenny Clark sacked Cousins, forcing a fumble. Dean Lowry recovered the loose ball.

The Packers took a commanding 21-0 lead with 2 minutes to play in the first half on 2-yard run by Aaron Jones.

“We came out hot,” said Jones, who finished with 116 yards on 23 carries. “We thought we could do no wrong. We’ve just got to continue to work at it because the fourth drive, fifth drive, sixth drive, we want points on those as well.”

After rushing for 111 yards and two touchdowns in a win last week against the Falcons, Cook broke out for a 75-yard score following a missed tackle by rookie safety Darnell Savage.

“Eventually one of us was going to make a play to get this game rolling, and it was just me that made a play,” Cook said. “Whatever to get a team rolling, to get this thing going, that was the play to do it.”

Stefan Diggs scored the Vikings’ other touchdown with a 45-yard grab with 9:12 to play in the third.

“Disappoint­ing loss today,” Vikings coach Mike Zimmer said. “We fought hard, but we didn’t play well enough to win. We had some dumb penalties. … The intercepti­on at the end of the ballgame hurt.”

 ?? DAN POWERS / USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Packers quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers celebrates after a 21-16 victory over the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday. Rodgers completed nine of his first 10 passes.
DAN POWERS / USA TODAY NETWORK Packers quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers celebrates after a 21-16 victory over the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday. Rodgers completed nine of his first 10 passes.

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