Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Tackles protecting Rodgers

Bakhtiari, Bulaga getting job done

- Former football coach and player Eric Baranczyk offers his analysis of Green Bay Packers games each week during the season.

If you watched the Green Bay Packers on Sunday, you saw just how hobbled Aaron Rodgers was because of a strained right calf.

The Packers quarterbac­k could slide in the pocket and drift outside without too much trouble. But when he tried to move fast, he couldn’t. He was a shell of himself as a scrambler.

That’s about the same as he looked when he injured his other calf late in 2014. That injury improved a little each week but still was a major limitation in the NFC Championsh­ip Game at Seattle, four weeks after he was initially hurt.

So that’s what Rodgers might be looking at again for the next month or more if the Packers qualify for the playoffs by winning out and then continue their run deep into the postseason. Keeping him upright and comfortabl­e in the pocket despite his new limitation­s will be critical to how far the team goes. So it’s a good thing Rodgers has bookend tackles in David Bakhtiari and Bryan Bulaga, who are having their finest seasons as NFL players.

That was evident again Sunday against the Bears. Granted, the bitter-cold conditions (minus-4 degrees wind chill at kickoff) at Soldier Field probably worked against pass rushers, who had difficulty getting an explosive first step with the footing uncertain. But that’s only part of the story.

The other part is that Bakhtiari and Bulaga stepped up their games on play after play to help their wounded quarterbac­k comfortabl­y scan the field for open receivers. Most of the day, Rodgers had a clean pocket and room to move a few steps to buy a little extra time.

Rodgers was sacked four times, but it’s a sign of just how well the offensive line played that it wasn’t responsibl­e for any of them. Three were coverage sacks, including the first, on which a gimpy Rodgers tried to bolt the pocket after not finding an open receiver, but was unable to escape the ponderous C.J. Wilson.

The fourth was on a corner blitz in which Rodgers was responsibl­e for the blitzer. Watching the game video, it looked like Rodgers simply didn’t see unblocked Demontre Hurst in time to get the ball out.

Bakhtiari technicall­y gave up one sack, to Pernell McPhee, but it took about 6 seconds; 2.5 seconds is the generally accepted time in which quarterbac­ks need to get the ball out or start looking to either leave the pocket or throw it away.

Bulaga basically pitched a shutout.

The play that maybe summed up their day was the one that saved the game for the Packers: Rodgers’ 60-yard pass to Jordy Nelson that set up the game-winning field goal as time ran out.

On the right side, Bulaga stoned the Bears’ sack leader, Willie Young (7 1⁄2 sacks), on an inside move. Young got nowhere. On the left side, Bakhtiari steered Cornelius Washington inside to help, then mirrored Leonard Floyd, who spied Rodgers rather than rushing. Rodgers had plenty of space to move a couple steps to his left while Nelson worked downfield, then the quarterbac­k launched the ball without anyone in his face.

Just before the start of the season, the Packers extended Bakhtiari’s contract for four years and $48 million, including a $15 million bonus. You always wonder how a player will react to such a big payday. Some get comfortabl­e and their play slips. Bakhtiari has been the opposite. He’s having his best season in his fourth year.

His game is technique and leverage. He has mastered locking his elbow and keeping rushers away from his body. His feet are fairly quick, and he plays with a low center of gravity. His big bucket first step in pass protection leaves him vulnerable to inside counter moves, but his quick hands usually allow him to recover.

Bulaga was something of a question mark coming into 2016. He’d sustained several significan­t injuries to his legs the previous six years — a fractured hip ended his 2012 season after nine games; a torn ACL ended his 2013 in training camp; and last year he had surgery to repair a torn meniscus in his knee that sidelined him for three games.

Though he’s only 27, you had to wonder if the accumulati­on of lowerbody injuries might catch up to him. They have not.

Bulaga is not a finesse or technique player; he’s a brawler. He punishes rushers with his punch and then tries to outmuscle them through the whistle. Occasional­ly a quick edge rusher will beat him at the snap, but his veteran feel for angles and aiming points usually allows him to recover and push the guy past the quarterbac­k.

One of the foundation­s of a good offense is having tackles who can protect the quarterbac­k from edge rushers. In the stretch run of the season, the Packers are as strong there as anywhere on their roster.

Cook’s county

We saw Sunday what the Packers envisioned when they signed tight end Jared Cook to a oneyear, $2.75 million contract: A big target (6feet-5, 254 pounds) who makes plays after the catch and occupies safeties to help open underneath routes for other receivers.

Two plays Sunday that illustrate­d that new dimension in the Packers’ offense came on a hurryup drive that ended with a field goal at the end of the first half. On the first, Cook got the drive going by catching a 5-yard crossing route and turning it into a 21-yard gain. Two plays later he ran an out pattern on which he used his length to reach up and snare a catch for a 12-yard gain.

He played 40 of 61 offensive snaps and had six catches for a 14.2-yard average. He made a difference even when he wasn’t targeted.

The Packers’ offense is predicated on quick underneath routes, and Cook’s ability to drive safeties back with his size and speed helps open the middle of the field.

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