The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Packers must follow up surprising season by dealing with heightened expectatio­ns

- By Steve Megargee

GREEN BAY, WIS. >> Green Bay Packers coach Matt LaFleur began the offseason with a message for a team that overcame inexperien­ce to reach the divisional round of the playoffs.

The days of catching opponents by surprise are over.

“Just because we got to a certain spot doesn’t mean that’s guaranteed moving forward,” LaFleur said Monday at his season-ending news conference. “So what are we going to do to get better? And the expectatio­n is that when they come back April 15th, they’re better than the team that left today, and that’s not just going to happen by chance.”

The Packers (10-9) were the youngest team to win a playoff game since the 1970 AFL-NFL merger, according to the Elias Sports Bureau’s “weighted age” metric, which factors in how many games in which a player appeared.

They bounced back from a 1-5 start to sneak into the playoffs with the NFC’s No. 7 seed. They beat the secondseed­ed Dallas Cowboys 4832 and led the top-seeded San Francisco 49ers most of the way before falling 24-21.

The Packers believe they’re ready to contend for years now that quarterbac­k Jordan Love has shown he’s a worthy successor to fourtime MVP Aaron Rodgers, who got traded to the New York Jets last April.

But they must prove they can handle heightened expectatio­ns.

“There’s going to be guys kind of patting us on our back and telling us the future’s bright and all that kind of stuff,” defensive lineman Kenny Clark said. “We’ve got to stick to that feeling of we were that seven seed working to get here. We’ve got to just keep putting in work, not getting too big-headed about what we did.”

STAFF ADJUSTMENT­S

After the Packers missed the playoffs last year, LaFleur said at his season-ending news conference that he anticipate­d bringing back all his assistant coaches. He was noncommitt­al on that subject Monday.

“I want to certainly sit down with every assistant before any decisions are made,” LaFleur said.

The future of defensive coordinato­r Joe Barry has been a subject of speculatio­n.

Green Bay’s defense struggled so much that LaFleur was asked at one point about the possibilit­y of changing coordinato­rs while the season was still underway, though the defense performed much better after Christmas.

LaFleur did say he hopes 70-year-old quarterbac­ks coach Tom Clements returns next season rather than retiring. LaFleur also said “I’m not close-minded to anything” regarding the possibilit­y of handing over the play-calling responsibi­lities to an assistant.

BELIEVING IN LOVE

Green Bay’s playoff upset of the Cowboys capped a nine-game stretch in which

Love threw 21 touchdown passes with only one intercepti­on, but the 49ers game showed he still has plenty to learn.

Love threw two secondhalf intercepti­ons and acknowledg­ed Saturday night that he committed a “mortal sin” on the final one by throwing into coverage across the middle of the field.

LaFleur said Monday that “I think he’ll be better for it in the long run.”

“A lot of players, when you get in a position, when you’re down, you try to make the big play,” LaFleur said. “You try to make it, but you can’t force it. And I think that’s kind of the lesson from that. Certainly there was nothing there, and sometimes the best play is a throwaway.”

KICKING CONCERNS

Anders Carlson missed a 41-yard field goal in the fourth quarter Saturday, punctuatin­g a rookie season in which he went 4 of 9 from 40-49 yards out and missed six extra-point attempts.

LaFleur acknowledg­ed Monday that he wants competitio­n “at every position” – including kicker – but expressed regret about a comment that made it onto Fox’s game telecast.

Fox sideline reporter Tom Rinaldi noted that LaFleur “basically said, ‘When he goes out there, I just pray, guys.’” LaFleur said he meant it as a joke and that he was “extremely disappoint­ed” about how that remark was portrayed. LaFleur said he has since spoken to Carlson about it.

“It’s a learning lesson for me,” LaFleur said.

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