USA TODAY Sports Weekly

NFC North battle:

Green Bay can win NFC North with victory

- Ryan Wood @ByRyanWood USA TODAY Sports Wood writes for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, part of the USA TODAY Network.

Packers aim to continue streak with division-clinching win against Lions.

All they needed was a win. Some momentum. A reason to believe they could save a sinking ship.

That was the collective feeling inside the Green Bay Packers’ locker room one month ago. They were heading into a Monday night game at the Philadelph­ia Eagles, desperate to escape from the rut of an embarrassi­ng four-game losing streak.

Publicly, quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers shared his belief that the Packers could run the table. When the cameras weren’t rolling? One win. Just a start.

“On that losing streak, that’s all we were talking about,” rookie defensive tackle Kenny Clark said. “‘Hey, we just need to get this win. Just worry about this week. Just take it one week at a time, and we’ll be all right.’ That’s what we were doing.

“Once we got the win, or once you start getting a couple, they just start rolling in.”

They have been rolling in for a month now. The drought ended in Philadelph­ia. A new streak started the next week against the Houston Texans. The Packers surprised everybody when they blew out the Seattle Seahawks. They survived the Chicago Bears.

Their winning streak stands at five after a Saturday stroll against the Minnesota Vikings. They control their playoff destiny. It was hard to predict in November, but not impossible.

In an interview last month for a story about Mike McCarthy, former Bears coach and longtime NFL analyst Mike Ditka put the kibosh on any questions about McCarthy’s job security. The Packers were 4-5 at the time, on their way to 4-6. It was the low point of a season that remained salvageabl­e.

“Here’s the best thing about it,” Ditka said then. “They’re in a division they can win. Once you get into the dance, anything can happen. That division right now, I don’t know where it’s going. The Bears are really struggling, Minnesota is struggling, Green Bay has been struggling.

“Detroit looks like probably the best team in the division right now. I think they have a few holes in their armor.”

There was a time this season when the Packers had a two-game NFC North deficit behind the Lions and the Vikings. Neither put the Packers away when they had a chance. After eliminatin­g the Vikings from playoff contention Saturday, the Packers could do the same to the Lions in their finale.

It’s familiar territory for the Packers. For the fourth consecutiv­e year, they will play in a de facto NFC North title game to close the regular season. Two years ago, their win against the Lions in the 2014 finale at Lambeau Field secured the NFC North title and a first-round playoff bye.

“We’ve been here before,” outside linebacker Nick Perry said. “It is what it is now. We’ve got to go out there and get a W. I think the team is prepared for that and just ready to go.”

The Packers would secure the NFC’s fourth seed with a win against the Lions, assuming the Seattle Seahawks (9-5-1) win their finale at the San Francisco 49ers. It would set up a rematch against the New York Giants, whom they beat in October at Lambeau Field.

With a loss in Detroit, the Packers would need help. But the simplest path is what the Packers will focus on. Win in Detroit, and they’re in.

“Feels like the best thing we could hope for,” Rodgers said. “We had some adversity, and we stuck together. I’m really proud of the character of the football team. We talk a lot about identity and character and how it’s been one of those trying seasons where it hasn’t quite come together at the right time. But over the last five weeks we’ve shown a lot of mental toughness, a lot of grit, and guys sticking together when there could have been some fracturing.

“So I think that’s the identity of this football team. ... We’re going to stick together and believe in each other.”

 ?? DAN POWERS, USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Linebacker Nick Perry hits Vikings quarterbac­k Sam Bradford during the Packers’ 38-25 Week 16 victory, Green Bay’s fifth win in a row. The Packers sacked Bradford four times.
DAN POWERS, USA TODAY NETWORK Linebacker Nick Perry hits Vikings quarterbac­k Sam Bradford during the Packers’ 38-25 Week 16 victory, Green Bay’s fifth win in a row. The Packers sacked Bradford four times.

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