Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Lewis’ remarks motivated Smiths

- Jim Owczarski and Tom Silverstei­n

ARLINGTON, Texas - On Saturday, Za’Darius Smith tweeted a reaction to a video clip of Ravens Hall of Fame linebacker Ray Lewis questionin­g the leadership of the Packers’ front seven on defense with a simple “Wow” response.

On Sunday, after his first sack of Dallas quarterbac­k Dak Prescott in the Packers’ 34-24 victory, Smith re-enacted Lewis’ famous pregame introducti­on dance.

Za’Darius Smith was asked about the dance and if the team needed to prove anything at AT&T Stadium, but Preston Smith — the pair do their media availabili­ties together — answered the question first.

“Every time we touch the field you’ve gotta silence the naysayers but we know at the end of the day what we’re capable of,” he said. “We’re capable of being a great defense. Of course, y’all see flashes but we’ve gotta make sure we’re being consistent with it. At the end of the day, we were disrespect­ed by somebody saying there was no leadership up front and we’re not going to say the name and make him more famous.” Za’Darius Smith then interjecte­d. “It’s cool. I’m going to hit on that,” he continued. “Just to have that comment come in; what we did was I told the guys it’s more than being a leader on this defense. We’re all going to have to be leaders at some point. To be able to do that we focused on that the whole week. We actually printed out some papers and put them in the defensive room. So to have the motivation, man, it all worked out for us and we’re 4-1. Four-and-one.”

Za’Darius had two sacks Sunday, bringing his season total to five. Preston Smith had one sack to up his season total to 51⁄2.

Improvisat­ional theater

Those direct-snap plays to running back Aaron Jones looked like a nice twist coach Matt LaFleur added to the offense.

Turns out they were backup center Lucas Patrick’s doing.

“They weren’t meant to be,” quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers said. “Both times, it was when he (Patrick) was going left, he was kind of throwing it a little bit right.

“The first time, I can’t believe he (Jones) caught it. It was literally outside the frame of my body and he caught it. After that, I said, ‘Hey, just be alert for the snap here. You never know if it’s going to happen again.’”

Indeed, it did.

Jones handled it nicely and on one beat cornerback Chidobe Awuzie around the corner for a 15-yard gain.

Patrick was forced into the game after Corey Linsley left with a concussion.

Injuries piling up

Heading into Sunday’s game, the Packers were without star wide receiver Davante Adams (toe) and backup cornerback and special teams gunner Tony Brown (hamstring). Then against the Cowboys they lost Linsley, safety Darnell Savage (ankle), tight end Robert Tonyan (hip) and inside linebacker B.J. Goodson (neck).

According to multiple reports, Savage sustained a high-ankle sprain but no structural damage was found.

LaFleur offered no updates on the injured players.

“There was a lot going on,” LaFleur said. “There was a lot of that going on. You have to adjust in this league, and I thought our coaches did a pretty good job. But again, there’s still a lot out there to clean up. That’s what we have to do moving forward.”

Cornerback Kevin King played through a groin injury suffered against Philadelph­ia but bruised a knee. Outside linebacker Za’Darius Smith tweaked an injured knee suffered in the Denver game on multiple occasions, though he did finish the game.

“One thing that I didn’t do, I didn’t put my brace on before the game,” Smith said. “I thought I was going to be OK, but as you can see when I went down I had to come out. They actually put the brace on for me. I think I went down another time and that’s when the brace kept sliding off. I just had to rejuvenate it and get myself back together.”

Next man up

All week it looked like rookie running back Dexter Williams would be the one filling in for running back Jamaal Williams, who was ruled out Friday with a concussion.

On Saturday, the Packers elevated running back Tra Carson from the practice squad and cut defensive lineman Fadol Brown. Carson wound up being active and Dexter Williams was not, leaving Carson in line to play the first offensive snaps of his NFL career.

“It was crazy,” said Carson, who entered the NFL as an undrafted rookie in 2016 and played special teams for two games for the Packers last season. “I get the call up and I’m active playing in the game. Earlier this week, I was on practice squad.

“I really appreciate the coaches for trusting me and putting me out there.”

Carson carried six times for 14 yards and caught four passes for 18 yards. Most importantl­y, he was solid in picking up the blitz on passing downs and didn’t turn the ball over.

“I felt good,” he said. “During the preseason, I ran with the ones the whole time (because Jones and Jamaal Williams were hurt). I’m just happy they trusted me and put me out there.”

Crosby battles hip tightness

Just 6 minutes into the game it looked like the Packers might have an issue on special teams when kicker Mason Crosby dove to tackle Cowboys kick returner Tony Pollard along the Dallas sideline on a 27-yard return. After Crosby committed to going low, Pollard tried to cut back and he kneed Crosby in the left hip.

“It was like a dead leg,” Crosby said. “I went to push up and I was like oh, just gave myself a sec. Once I started moving it, it was tight. I didn’t like how it felt the whole game but since it was early on it was a little bit of a bummer, but I’m good.”

Crosby laid on the turf initially and then had his left hip looked over by the Packers’ medical staff. But he did not miss a kickoff or place-kick opportunit­y and went 2-for-2 on field goals and 4for-4 on extra points.

“I was happy it was my left leg, honestly,” Crosby said. “Because it was up high, kind of up in that hip area and left leg I could kind of fight through some of that tightness. The guys covered (kicks) great after that one. We covered great, a lot better this game after that kick for sure.”

If Crosby were to have missed time, punter JK Scott would have attempted field goals and backup quarterbac­k Tim Boyle would have been the holder. While Crosby was being attended to, Scott, Boyle and long snapper Hunter Bradley did get some precaution­ary snaps in on the sideline.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Packers outside linebacker Za’Darius Smith celebrates after sacking Cowboys quarterbac­k Dak Prescott during the second half.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Packers outside linebacker Za’Darius Smith celebrates after sacking Cowboys quarterbac­k Dak Prescott during the second half.

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