Milwaukee Journal Sentinel - Packer Plus
Weekly roster shuffle concerns LaFleur
Green Bay – With COVID-19 continuing its tear through the Green Bay Packers’ locker room, coach Matt LaFleur is considering how to mitigate the virus’ toll on the team’s roster.
The Packers placed offensive lineman Ben Braden, receiver Amari Rodgers, and linebackers Tipa Galeai and Ty Summers on the reserve/COVID-19 list Monday. They also placed defensive lineman R.J. McIntosh on the reserve/COVID-19 list.
Their inclusion to the list comes after five other players were placed on the reserve/COVID-19 list in the past week: receiver Marquez Valdes-Scantling, cornerback Kevin King, cornerback Shemar Jean-Charles, linebacker Chauncey Rivers and practice-squad linebacker La’Darius Hamilton.
LaFleur said he has stressed the importance of “masking up” and spacing out to his players. It hasn’t prevented COVID-19 from stressing the Packers’ roster. Now, LaFleur said, he’s considering taking even more extreme measures if the virus’ spread doesn’t slow.
“Certainly you’re trying to take every step to mitigate the risk,” LaFleur said, “especially within your building. We’re definitely going to look at how we can do that around here, just making sure that we mask up as a team when we’re inside, and then trying to keep people as spread out as possible. We’ve even contemplated potentially, if we get more of these, maybe even going to virtual meetings and then just showing up when we want to get together to go out on the field.
“We’ll look at everything, because we do know this, that the availability thing is real. When you have your football players available, I think we’re a pretty darn good football team, and we need to try to keep as many people available as possible.”
Each of the four players from their active roster placed on the reserve/COVID-19 list Monday are backups. However, the Packers’ depth could be tested Sunday against the Minnesota Vikings.
Rodgers is the team’s return specialist, and there’s no obvious replacement behind him. Galeai has played well as a rotational edge rusher, recording his first career sack against Cleveland Browns quarterback Baker Mayfield on Sunday.
LaFleur said he and general manager Brian Gutekunst have discussed potential signings to bring in reinforcements. What’s worse, LaFleur knows, is if the virus’ spread in his locker room doesn’t slow soon.
“We’ve got a plan for that,” LaFleur said. “I know that we’re going to bring in some guys and have some workouts. For the areas of concern, we will bring in some guys. I don’t think you’re ever truly OK, unless you have everybody available. That’s when you feel good, but this thing is just — you never know.
“Every time I get a text from Flea (head athletic trainer Bryan Engel), I’m always kind of holding my breath now. It’s just like, ‘All right. Who’s next?’ That’s why we’ve got to make sure that guys are trying to take every precaution that we can to make sure that we stay healthy, safe and available.”
Packers sifting through injuries
Early in the week, the Packers are still trying to finalize plans for a handful of injured players.
LaFleur said he has had discussions on whether left tackle David Bakhtiari will play this week, but no decision has been made. Bakhtiari unexpectedly was held out of practice last week after returning from arthroscopic knee surgery, the second setback in his return from a torn ACL.
“We’ve discussed that,” LaFleur said, “but nothing has been decided up to this point.”
LaFleur was similarly noncommittal when asked if the Packers planned to activate cornerback Jaire Alexander from injured reserve. The deadline to activate Alexander is Wednesday.
“We’ll see on Wednesday,” LaFleur said. “We’ll see when we get there.”
The Packers are also trying to determine whether the rest of their offensive line will get reinforcements. Right tackle Billy Turner is “working through everything” after missing the past two games because of a knee injury. The Packers might not know if he can practice until they return to the field Wednesday.
LaFleur said “there’s a chance” rookie center Josh Myers could return from injured reserve, but he gave no timeline. Myers hasn’t played since Week 6 at Chicago because of a knee injury.
Packers know benefits of home-field advantage
The Packers find themselves in a familiar position with two games left in their season.
With a win coupled by a Dallas Cowboys loss Sunday, the Packers will clinch the NFC’s top seed. At 12-3, they hold the tiebreaker over the 11-4 Tampa Bay Buccaneers (better record against common opponents) and 11-4 Los Angeles Rams (head-to-head victory).
The Cowboys hold the tiebreaker over the Packers, courtesy of a better conference record, but that will be negligible if Dallas loses this week and the Packers win. In that case, the Packers would be guaranteed to finish with a better record, regardless of what happens in their finale at Detroit.
The Packers are perhaps a bit wiser to the significance — or potential lack thereof — of home-field advantage than they were a year ago. They haven’t forgotten their NFC championship game loss to the Bucs at Lambeau Field. LaFleur says there are factors this season that preserve the importance of homefield advantage, no matter how last year ended.
“I do think it’s going to be a tremendous advantage,” LaFleur said of potentially securing the NFC’s top seed. “You’re talking about a year that’s totally different with packed stadiums. I don’t know what our attendance was for our playoff games last season, but it certainly is more impactful. And I thought our crowd did an outstanding job the other night of being loud and really supporting our team.
“That brings a lot of energy, a lot of positive energy, and I think that really translates to success on the field.”
Pro Bowl honors for Rodgers, Adams, Clark
The Packers, who own the NFL’s best record at 12-3, had three players named to the Pro Bowl last week: quarterback Aaron Rodgers, receiver Davante Adams and defensive tackle Kenny Clark.
Rodgers was named the starter for the NFC Pro Bowl team, and will be joined by quarterbacks Tom Brady (Tampa Bay Buccaneers) and Kyler Murray (Arizona Cardinals).
Adams was named a starter as well and is joined by receivers Cooper Kupp (Los Angeles Rams, starter), Justin Jefferson (Minnesota Vikings) and Deebo Samuel (San Francisco 49ers). Clark was elected alongside Aaron Donald (Rams) and Jonathan Allen (Washington Football Team).
This is Rodgers’ 10th Pro Bowl selection, surpassing Brett Favre and Forrest Gregg for the most in Packers franchise history. The selection came just days before Rodgers broke Brett Favre’s franchise record for most passing touchdowns with his 443rd Saturday against the Browns.
Entering Week 16 games, Rodgers ranked No. 1 in the NFL in passer rating (110.4), interception percentage (0.91) and touchdown-interception ratio (7.50). He is also tied for No. 5 in touchdown passes (30), No. 5 in yards per attempt
(7.9 avg.), No. 7 in completion percentage (67.8) and No. 10 in passing yards (3,487), while leading the Packers to a third straight NFC North title.
This is Adams’ fifth straight Pro Bowl selection. He was first announced as a Pro Bowl participant Dec. 20, when it was revealed he was the leading NFC receiver in the fan vote. He was eighth in total votes overall from the fans (234,600).
Through Week 16, Adams ranked No. 3 in the league in receiving yards (1,248), No. 4 in receptions (96), No. 3 in receiving first downs (66) and No. 2 in receptions of 30-plus yards (10). He had posted six 100-yard receiving games, good for No. 2 in the NFL this season.
This is Clark’s second Pro Bowl; he was an injury replacement in 2019 and was named an alternate in 2018. Entering last week, Clark led the Packers’ defensive line with 42 tackles (23 solo) and had notched four sacks, six tackles for a loss, 12 quarterback hits and a fumble recovery.
Running back Aaron Jones was named a first alternate. Other alternates were punter Corey Bojorquez, cornerback Rasul Douglas and linebacker Rashan Gary.
Alternate players will become Pro Bowl participants if someone elected to the game in their position is unable to play and/or advances to the Super Bowl. The Pro Bowl is set for Feb. 6 in Las Vegas.