Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Packers running back Aaron Jones faces marijuana-related charge,

- Eric Baranczyk and Pete Dougherty

Mike McCarthy is sticking with Brett Hundley as the Green Bay Packers’ quarterbac­k. It’s the right call.

If Taysom Hill still were around, things might be different. The Packers coach might have had to give him a shot.

But Hill’s not available. General manager Ted Thompson cut him and Joe Callahan at the end of training camp, and when the New Orleans Saints claimed Hill on waivers, Callahan was the fallback for their practice squad. Put that one on the GM. He miscalcula­ted that Hill would get through waivers.

But given the choice between Hundley and Callahan, sticking with Hundley is the way to go.

No, the picture isn’t pretty. Hundley is 1-3 as the starter, has a 63.3 passer rating and is coming off a di-

sastrous four-turnover shutout loss to Baltimore on Sunday. So, of course the possibilit­y of benching him is on the table. It has to be.

But McCarthy is justified in giving him a little more time to grow.

If you’re asking, why not try Callahan, it can’t get any worse? Well, it can. Just look at the NFL on Sunday. Buffalo rookie Nathan Peterman threw five intercepti­ons in the first half of his first NFL start, and yet Bills coach Sean McDermott says he’s considerin­g starting him again this week.

So while there’s much to admire about Callahan’s pluck and moxie, he also has physical limitation­s that have to give pause before he could replace Hundley. Callahan (75.9 preseason passer rating) reportedly measured 6-foot-11⁄8 at his campus pro day in 2016, which is below the 6-2 minimum NFL teams prefer. Anything under that makes it tough to play in the pocket, so then you need compensati­ng traits.

Yet, for an undersized quarterbac­k, Callahan also ran a surprising­ly slow 40 time of 4.98 seconds. Over the last two preseasons, he has shown good short-area quickness and has made his living outside the pocket. But outrunning backups and camp bodies is one thing; outrunning starting NFL rushers is quite another.

Hill, on the other hand, while only a half-inch taller than Callahan at 6-15⁄8, has exceptiona­l speed (4.46) and a much better throwing arm. He’s just a bigger (230 pounds to Callahan’s 216), stronger, faster guy. That gives him a better shot.

Maybe Callahan’s time will come later this year. If Hundley plays again like he did against Baltimore, it could come soon. But not this week, especially against a Pittsburgh Steelers team that’s as good as anyone in the NFL.

So McCarthy is right to give Hundley more time to figure it out. But McCarthy has to do a better job of giving Hundley a chance to succeed than he did Sunday. Go back to playing small ball, like against Chicago the week before.

Hundley also has to get a better feel for the pocket. His first instinct is to go backward. That’s not working. When he sees a defensive jersey from the left edge, he has to know he has David Bakhtiari blocking there. Bakhtiari is going to push the guy past. So there will be room to step up and to the left.

Hundley’s first of six sacks Sunday was a perfect example of not trusting what he sees. Though Hundley had a huge alley up the middle, when he felt pressure from his front side his inclinatio­n was to go backward, and he backpedale­d into a 12-yard loss. He could have avoided at least one and probably two other sacks by moving forward rather than holding his spot or going laterally.

There’s also the question of whether Hundley should run more, whether it be read option like he did in college or encouragin­g him to tuck it and take off on a pass call.

McCarthy probably has been reluctant to do that — especially the designed runs — because of the injury risk. He doesn’t want to be forced to his No. 3. But it’s looking like running has to be a significan­t part of Hundley’s game, because without it he’s not getting it done. If the Packers are going to transform into a running team, the read option is a valuable weapon. So McCarthy probably just has to emphasize to Hundley to protect himself and take his chances there.

Second chance

Devante Mays might have made history Sunday by fumbling on his first two carries in the NFL. That’s not the kind of history you want to make.

But the Packers have to stick it out with the seventh-round draft pick. They were his first two snaps at running back in the league and came on a cold day when the ball is slick. That’s not an excuse, because ball security is paramount, and it’s mind-boggling that he fumbled his first two touches.

He showed enough in preseason to get the chance to prove this was an aberration. He’s a big (230 pounds) guy. Jamaal Williams, the starter with Aaron Jones out, is a physical runner but not a battering ram. Mays could be a battering ram, if he can take care of the ball. And the two could take a toll on a defense by the second half.

McCarthy might not have a lot of choice anyway. With Jones (knee) out for multiple weeks and Ty Montgomery (ribs) possibly unavailabl­e again this week, Williams and Mays might be the Packers’ only halfbacks at Pittsburgh.

Extra points

Considerin­g the circumstan­ces, Davante Adams is playing good football. Even without Aaron Rodgers to get him the ball, he’s producing like no one else on the offense — eight catches for 126 yards against the Ravens.

» Kenny Clark’s injury Sunday is a big one for a defense that can’t afford to lose one of its best players, and it means Quinton Dial has to take on a bigger role. The news on Clark actually looks good — he reportedly sprained his ankle, and didn’t break it. But he still figures to miss a game or, more likely, games.

Dial doesn’t have Clark’s quickness to disrupt in the middle and range to pursue plays to the flat. But he’s a huge man (6-5, 318), and the next-best thing would be for Dial to manhandle blockers and win at the line of scrimmage that way.

Grade card

Quarterbac­k: Brett Hundley threw three intercepti­ons, lost a fumble, had no touchdowns and showed no pocket presence. The shutout said it all. Grade: F

Running back: Rookie Devante Mays fumbled on his first two carries, and Jamaal Williams had a quiet day (18 carries for 57 yards) against a stout Baltimore defense. Williams at least was good picking up the blitz. Grade: D

Offensive line: David Bakhtiari gave up a sack to Terrell Suggs but otherwise is in fine form and had a good game. Justin McCray at least was serviceabl­e at right tackle until getting knocked out of the game by a knee injury. Grade: CTight ends: Richard Rodgers and Lance Kendricks blocked OK. Grade: C

Wide receivers: Davante Adams made several plays, but the biggest problem is they don’t have a quarterbac­k to get him the ball. Grade: BDefensive line: Kenny Clark, Mike Daniels, Dean Lowry and Quinton Dial shut down the inside run (the Ravens averaged only 2.2 yards on 26 carries), which allowed linebacker­s Blake Martinez and Jake Ryan (15 tackles combined) to make plays closer to the line of scrimmage. Grade: BLinebacke­rs: Martinez (eight tackles) and Ryan (seven) were good in the run game. Outside linebacker Kyler Fackrell got his first sack of the year. Grade: C+

Cornerback­s: They didn’t get torched, allowed no big plays, and even the Ravens’ 21-yard touchdown pass came on an excellent throw by Joe Flacco and catch by Mike Wallace against Damarious Randall’s tight coverage. Grade: BSafeties: Josh Jones (seven tackles) had a solid game in place of injured Morgan Burnett. Ha Ha Clinton-Dix made one intercepti­on but dropped another. Grade: BSpecial teams: Didn’t give up any plays, but didn’t make any either. Grade: C

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