The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Packers get past Jets in overtime

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EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Aaron Rodgers refused to sit this one out, even with the playoffs out of the question. And he willed the Green Bay Packers from setting some dubious franchise history.

A banged-up Rodgers threw a 16-yard touchdown pass to Davante Adams with 6:23 left in overtime, capping an eye-popping performanc­e by leading the Packers to a wild 44-38 victory over the New York Jets on Sunday.

The win was the Packers’ first on the road this season — snapping a nine-game skid away from Lambeau Field dating to last season — and it prevented them from becoming the first Green Bay squad since 1958 to go an entire season without a win away from home.

“It’s good for the young guys to see what the locker room on the road feels like with a win, what the plane flight feels like,” Rodgers said. “How special that plane ride is after a road victory.”

And this one was all on Rodgers, who was masterful in the fourth quarter and the overtime period for the Packers (6-8-1).

He threw for 442 yards and touchdowns to Adams and Jake Kumerow, and also ran for two scores — his first since the 2016 season. That’s despite a groin issue that nagged him last week, and a knee ailment that has bothered him all season. Rodgers was intent on playing, and believed it proved something.

“That it matters, even when the record isn’t great and you’re not going to the playoffs,” he said. “That I have a lot of pride. I love competing in anything. I don’t want to look back in 20 years and wonder, `What if I had played that game? Could something special have happened? What would it look like to my teammates if they knew I kind of quit on them?’ I hope my teammates know I’m never going to quit on

them.

“I’m going to battle through anything I’ve got, and they did the same.”

They certainly did, erasing a 15-point fourth-quarter deficit and improving to 2-1 under interim coach Joe Philbin, who replaced the fired Mike McCarthy earlier this month.

“I think it speaks a lot about the character of the guys,” Philbin said. “They never stopped believing that they could get the job done.”

The loss for the Jets (4-11) overshadow­ed a dazzling performanc­e by rookie

quarterbac­k Sam Darnold, who threw for a careerhigh 341 yards — but never got a chance with the ball in overtime. Darnold was 24 of 35 passing with TDs to Robby Anderson, Chris Herndon and Elijah McGuire, who also ran for a score.

“As an offense, we’ve just got to finish,” Darnold said. “We had a chance to put the game away.”

It was also likely the final home game for coach Todd Bowles, who’s expected to be fired after next week’s game at New England.

The Jets were done in by penalties, getting called for a whopping 16 that cost them 172 yards. Bowles was critical of the officiatin­g

crew, saying some of the calls against New York shouldn’t have happened.

“I haven’t seen one like that in my 18, 19 years in the league,” Bowles said. “I thought we were playing two teams: I thought we were playing the Packers and the striped shirts.”

After the Packers won the OT toss and elected to receive, Rodgers took over — as he has so many times throughout his career.

On third-and-10 from the Packers 40, Rodgers got hit as he was throwing and his pass to Marquez ValdesScan­tling hung in the air and fell incomplete — but Trumaine Johnson was called for pass interferen­ce, putting the ball at the Jets 27. Moments later, a pass interferen­ce call on Buster Skrine gave the Packers the ball at the 6.

Rodgers ran it in — but right tackle Bryan Bulaga was called for holding. On the next play, Rodgers found Adams in the back of the end zone for the rare road victory.

“It would have been pretty pathetic if would have gone the entire season without one,” Adams said.

UP NEXT

Packers: Host Detroit next Sunday.

Jets: At New England next Sunday.

 ?? Bill Kostroun / Associated Press ?? Packers quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers, top, reaches over a host of players for a touchdown on Sunday.
Bill Kostroun / Associated Press Packers quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers, top, reaches over a host of players for a touchdown on Sunday.

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