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Green Bay Packers lose NFC Championship

Sun, Jan 18, 2015

The Packers made several bad plays in the game that contributed to one of the "greatest" playoff collapses in NFL history.

Even when GB was up 19-7, it was no more than two scores, so anything is possible in the NFL, which is why I stayed with the game. Incredibly, some Seahawk fans left the game early and had to watch the comeback and the overtime win outside the stadium because of a no-re-entry rule.

When the deficit is no more than two scores, the losing team has a chance. It didn't seem like Seattle had a chance, since they were down 12, and they had only scored 7 points.

But Green Bay's offense failed to put the game away in the first quarter and in the fourth quarter. Too many blown chances.

Aaron Rodgers claimed that the best team lost that game, which is false, because the best team would not settle for so many field goals. The best team would kill the clock at the end of the game when having the lead.

Seattle was the best team because they played all 60 minutes of regulation. The Packer defense surrendered three touchdowns in a matter of minutes of football time.

The Packer defense played a fantastic game until the final moments of regulation and in overtime. Until the end of the fourth quarter, the only Seattle score occurred against the GB special teams when Seattle perfectly executed a fake field goal.

Despite playing well at times or much of the game, the Packers special teams, defense, and offense contributed to their loss. And the Packers coaching stuff also contributed to the loss.

Box Score

In the first quarter, GB kicked two field goals that were shorter than an extra point after Seattle basically gave GB two gift turnovers, allowing GB to start drives deep in Seattle territory. Credit Seattle's defense for keeping GB out of the end zone, unlike GB's defense at the end of the game and in overtime.

Green Bay got the opening kickoff and drove to the Seattle 29. On third and 10, Rodgers threw a pass to the end zone, and Seattle DB R. Sherman intercepted for a touchback.

On Seattle's first offensive series, Wilson's pass was intercepted on 3rd and 7. The pass should have been caught, but it clanged off the receiver's hands and popped up into the air, and it was easily intercepted by a GB DB who returned the ball to the Seattle 4 yard line.

But instead of 1st and goal at the 4, a bonehead GB defensive lineman got into an opponent's face after the intercepted play ended, and the GB lineman was flagged for taunting. That's a 15-yard penalty. So GB started at the Seattle 19. That's still amazing field position, but what a moronic penalty.

The Packers gained 12 yards on first down, giving GB first and goal at the Seattle 7. On first down, RB Lacy ran for 6 yards up the middle.

So now it's second and goal at the Seattle 1.

J.Kuhn up the middle for 1 yard, TOUCHDOWN. The Replay Official challenged the runner broke the plane ruling, and the play was REVERSED.

Kuhn's elbow was ruled down at about the half-yard line. GB was definitely inside the Seattle 1-yard-line.

Now it's third and goal from the half-yard line or closer, maybe the one-foot line. Lacy ran for no gain. I thought that because GB was so close to the goal line, Rodgers, who was under center, would sneak it. Lacy seemed to run too tentatively on that third down play.

It seemed that Lacy was looking for a hole to run through instead of just slamming into the line of scrimmage as fast and as hard as possible, especially when the line of scrimmage was only 12 to 18 inches from the goal line.

On the 2nd down and 3rd down rushing attempts, neither Kuhn nor Lacy tried to stretch the ball out to break the plane. Credit the Seattle defense for stopping those two rushing attempts from inside the 1-yard-line, but some fault goes to Lacy's lackluster rush on 3rd down.

On 4th and goal from the 12- to 18-inch line, P

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