USA TODAY US Edition

Wrapping up a momentous Week 4 in the NFL season

- Pete Dougherty

4-0 Packers in enviable spot; Patriots don’t make excuses after loss; power rankings.

GREEN BAY, Wis. – Thinking long-term didn’t hurt Matt LaFleur’s team in the short run.

With a bye next week, the Packers’ coach decided to buy an extra week of rest for a couple of injured stars, most notably receiver Davante Adams, by sitting them Monday night against the Falcons.

But playing short-handed on offense, with No. 2 receiver Allen Lazard also out, didn’t slow LaFleur’s diverse and resourcefu­l attack in the Packers’ 30-16 win at Lambeau Field.

So now, with a bye about a month earlier than they’d like, the Packers neverthele­ss head into their week off with prospects as bright as anyone’s in the league. They’re one of two 4-0 teams in the NFC – Seattle is the other – and are likely to get back a fully healthy Adams and Kenny Clark (groin) when Green Bay returns to action Oct. 18 against Tom Brady and the Buccaneers.

“I like where we’re at. I really do,” Aaron Rodgers said after the game. “I like the diversity in our approach. I think again Matt (LaFleur) was really good kind of mixing it up tonight with the calls. Obviously we had to do some different things without Davante, without Allen (Lazard) and without Marcedes (Lewis), but I thought we had a nice plan and we executed really well.”

Not that all the news from Monday night was good. Cornerback Kevin King didn’t play in the second half because of a quad injury, and that’s especially a concern because of his injury history – he missed 17 games his first two seasons – and the Packers’ lack of depth at cornerback.

Quad injuries generally don’t carry season-ending implicatio­ns, so there’s no reason at least for now to think King will be out long term. But two players this team can least afford to lose are King and their No. 1 corner, Jaire Alexander, because of the drop-off in coverage talent behind them.

Still, the Packers head into their bye with an offense that leads the league in scoring (152 points total, 143 by the offense) and a quarterbac­k who’s playing as well as anyone at his position in the league.

You might have seen in the offseason the handful of analytics pundits who picked the Packers as the leading candidate to slide this year because of their 7-1 record in one-score games last season and modest point differenti­al (plus-63) for a 13-win team. History says those teams revert to the mean.

We’re only one-quarter of the way through the season, but that looks laughable now. In LaFleur’s second season as coach, Rodgers is off to an exceptiona­l start – his 147.5 rating Monday night was the sixth best of his long career.

LaFleur’s offense, built around the misdirecti­on and play action of the wide-zone run scheme, has proved it can grind through defenses in any number of ways. The stars Monday night were tight end Robert Tonyan (six catches for 98 yards and three touchdowns) and running back Jamaal Williams (eight catches for 95 yards).

LaFleur had to reach into his personnel bag for this one. His unusual personnel groupings included the occasional use of running backs Williams and Aaron Jones together, which works because both have the ability to flex out as a de facto receiver. That was a matchup problem for Falcons coach Dan Quinn.

It also wasn’t like the Packers’ run game dominated on this night; Jones, Williams and AJ Dillon combined for 84 yards on 24 carries. But run stats can deceive, because the run threat served its purpose. Atlanta couldn’t both handle the run and cover Tonyan, Williams and Jones (five catches for 40 yards). The damage on the scoreboard would have been even worse if the Packers hadn’t failed to score after getting a first-andgoal at the 6 in the first quarter.

“I do feel really good in the offense,” Rodgers said. “I feel like Matt (LaFleur) and I are really on the same page. Not that we weren’t last year, I just feel like we’re doing so much more. I think the aggressive nature has been really good.”

The Packers became the first team in franchise history to start the season with 30 points or more in each of its first four games.

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