San Diego Union-Tribune

PACKERS PICK OFF WIN LATE AT MIAMI

- BY ALANIS THAMES Thames writes for The Associated Press.

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla.

Packers cornerback Jaire Alexander knew the secondary needed to start playing better against the Miami Dolphins after defensive backs coach Jerry Gray surprising­ly yelled at them at halftime.

“That woke us up for sure,” Alexander said. “He doesn’t really yell, but he was yelling at us then. And you see the results. He probably needed to yell at us at the beginning of the game.”

Gray’s motivation­al effort worked: The Packers intercepte­d Tua Tagovailoa three times in the fourth quarter to complete their comeback and defeat the Dolphins 26-20 to keep their playoff hopes alive.

The Packers had a seasonhigh four takeaways in the game — three intercepti­ons, one fumble recovery. Alexander caught one of Green Bay’s three intercepti­ons early in the fourth.

“That’s how it is. You get one pick, more are going to come,” said cornerback Rasul Douglas, who caught the game-sealing pick. “Keep catching those, and you keep getting them. I’m just glad we caught them.”

Aaron Rodgers threw for 238 yards and a touchdown and was intercepte­d once, helping the Packers (7-8) to their third straight win. The team is looking to make a playoff push after starting the season 4-8.

After losing four straight, Miami (8-7) now needs two wins or a win at New England and the New York Jets to lose to Seattle in Week 17 to make the postseason.

“I did not foresee that happening,” Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel said of the end result. “I felt strong going into halftime and where our guys were at. I didn’t foresee standing up here in this situation. I know the team feels the same way. It’s another gut check.”

After leading by as many as 10, the Dolphins trailed by six points with a chance to take the lead in the final two minutes, but Tagovailoa threw his third intercepti­on in three possession­s to end Miami’s comeback bid. He threw a pick with about six minutes left that set up a Packers field goal.

Packers kicker Mason Crosby made the go-ahead field goal early in the fourth after back-to-back turnovers by both offenses.

Undrafted Miami rookie Kader Kohou intercepte­d a pass by Rodgers intended for Allen Lazard, but the Dolphins gave it right back when Alexander intercepte­d Tagovailoa on the next play.

Miami’s defense held the Packers to six points off turnovers in the second half, and held Green Bay to two TDs and three field goals in five trips to the red zone.

“It wasn’t pretty, certainly,” Packers coach Matt LaFleur said. “I think a lot of times, when you kick a bunch of field goals, that’s usually just enough to get you beat.”

A.J. Dillon led the Packers with 36 yards rushing on 11 carries. Lazard had 61 yards on five catches.

Tyreek Hill had four catches for Miami to give him 113 for the season, setting a Dolphins’ single-season receptions record previously held by Jarvis Landry.

But Miami spoiled those big receiving days with turnovers. Raheem Mostert fumbled in the first half, and Tagovailoa’s three intercepti­ons were the most he has thrown all season.

“It’s tough,” Tagovailoa said. “You get an opportunit­y to play on Christmas Day against a really good team. I go out there and don’t put my best foot forward for our team.”

Miami built a 20-13 halftime lead after an 84-yard TD by Waddle and 1-yard TD run by Jeff Wilson.

The temperatur­e at Hard Rock Stadium was 46 degrees Fahrenheit (8 degrees Celsius) at kickoff, which marked the second-coldest home game in Dolphins history. The coldest was played on Christmas Eve in 1989 against Kansas City in 40-degree weather. The Chiefs won that game 27-24.

 ?? JIM RASSOL AP ?? Packers cornerback Rasul Douglas (29) enjoys gameclinch­ing intercepti­on of Dolphins’ Tua Tagovailoa.
JIM RASSOL AP Packers cornerback Rasul Douglas (29) enjoys gameclinch­ing intercepti­on of Dolphins’ Tua Tagovailoa.

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