The Macomb Daily

Detroit set to face Rodgers, Green Bay

- By Steve Megargee

GREEN BAY, WIS. » The Green Bay Packers don’t believe a lopsided loss to start the season should impact their sky-high expectatio­ns for what they can accomplish this year.

But it sure raises the stakes as they prepare to face the Detroit Lions in a Monday night home opener.

Green Bay’s string of six straight season-opening victories ended with a thud when the Packers fell 38-3 to the New Orleans Saints at Jacksonvil­le, Florida. The Packers now will try to win their home opener for a ninth consecutiv­e season.

“It’s not acceptable, but it’s just one game,” Packers quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers said. “We’re not going to be held prisoner mentally by that poor performanc­e. Like I said, we’re not going to change a

ton of things. I don’t think there needs to be wholesale preparatio­n changes, schematic changes. We had a clunker and we’ve got to play better. I expect that we will on both sides of the ball.”

Rodgers threw two intercepti­ons without a touchdown pass in the season opener. Green Bay’s 35-point defeat marked its most lopsided loss in any game Rodgers has started.

The reigning MVP will try to bounce back against a team he traditiona­lly has dominated, particular­ly at Lambeau Field. The Packers have gone 9-2 in Rodgers’ 11 home starts against the Lions. Rodgers has thrown 21 touchdown passes with only four in

terception­s in those games.

Rodgers will be facing a Lions secondary that must regroup after losing starting cornerback Jeff Okudah for the season to a ruptured Achilles tendon.

Detroit’s likely starting cornerback­s will be Amani Oruwariye and Ifeatu Melifonwu, a rookie third-round pick from Syracuse. They understand the challenges of facing Rodgers.

“He’ll be a first-ballot Hall of Famer,” Oruwariye said.

“A great quarterbac­k who can make all the throws, really controls that offense. But this game is about us.

“It’s about a mentality we come with, the physicalit­y we bring.”

The Packers have won their past four meetings with the Lions overall and are favored this time by 11½ points, according to FanDuel SportsBook.

The Lions delivered a better performanc­e than the Packers on the season’s opening week, even though both teams lost.

After trailing by as many as 28 points, the Lions made a frantic comeback before falling 41-33 to the San Francisco 49ers in a game that marked the Detroit debuts for head coach Dan Campbell and quarterbac­k Jared Goff.

“We showed a lot of resilience,” Lions rookie receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown said.

“Almost came back and had a chance to go to overtime. I think just showing that fight we had, gives us confidence going into each and every game.”

Lions running back Jamaal Williams will be making his return to Green Bay, where he played from 201720 while rushing for a total of 2,039 yards.

Williams left the Packers via free agency and now teams up with D’Andre Swift in Detroit’s backfield. He rushed for 54 yards and a touchdown on nine carries and caught eight passes for 56 yards in his Lions debut.

Swift (groin) and Williams (chest) were both limited participan­ts in Thursday’s practice.

The Packers won’t have Pro Bowl outside linebacker Za’Darius Smith available Monday night.

Packers coach Matt LaFleur, a Mount Pleasant native, said Friday that Smith was going on injured reserve to get more time to deal with a back issue. Smith practiced just one day in training camp and was on the field for only 18 snaps against the Saints during the loss.

The injured/reserve designatio­n means Smith must miss at least three games.

“It’s a matter of just, do you keep him in a limited role?” LaFleur said. “Or do you shut him down for a while, try to get him healthy and then get him up to the snap count that we’d like him to be, just like he’s been in the past, because he’s such an impact player?

“So, that’s just the route that we thought was best long term.”

The Lions ranked last in the NFL in points allowed per game, yards allowed per game and yards allowed per play last season.

Detroit was the only team to allow more points than Green Bay did in the opening week of the season.

New Packers defensive coordinato­r Joe Barry held the same position with the Lions from 2007-08.

The Packers had the fewest yards rushing (43) and second-fewest carries (15) of any NFL team in the season’s opening week.

This matchup could be a chance for the Packers to put more of an emphasis on the running game.

Green Bay’s Aaron Jones has averaged 5.4 yards per carry against the Lions in his career.

He ran for 168 yards, caught four passes for 68 yards and scored three touchdowns in the Packers’ 42-21 home victory over the Lions last season.

 ??  ??
 ?? LON HORWEDEL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Detroit Lions running back Jamaal Williams, left, celebrates his touchdown run with teammate Jason Cabinda in Detroit’s season-opening loss to the San Francisco 49ers Sept. 12. Williams, who played for the Green Bay Packers from 2017-2020, faces his former team today.
LON HORWEDEL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Detroit Lions running back Jamaal Williams, left, celebrates his touchdown run with teammate Jason Cabinda in Detroit’s season-opening loss to the San Francisco 49ers Sept. 12. Williams, who played for the Green Bay Packers from 2017-2020, faces his former team today.
 ?? PHELAN M. EBENHACK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Green Bay Packers quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers, left, scrambles away from New Orleans Saints linebacker Tanoh Kpassagnon during the Packers’ 38-3season-opening loss on Sept. 12.
PHELAN M. EBENHACK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Green Bay Packers quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers, left, scrambles away from New Orleans Saints linebacker Tanoh Kpassagnon during the Packers’ 38-3season-opening loss on Sept. 12.

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