Updated: Tuesday, 10 Nov 2009, 10:51 AM CST
Published : Tuesday, 10 Nov 2009, 10:51 AM CST
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) - Packers president Mark Murphy viewed the team's 38-28 washout
against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Sunday firsthand.
But after exiting Raymond James Stadium, he was not in step
with the fervent, knee-jerk section of Packers fans who wanted
everybody in the organization fired immediately.
Murphy said Monday that he left disappointed in the way the
season has gone but confident enough in the team's structure that
it could bounce back from consecutive losses that dropped its mark
to 4-4.
"Obviously the loss to the Vikings at home (Nov. 1) was an
emotional loss," he said. "It was, I think, disappointing for our
fans, and the loss yesterday was disappointing. And it was for us.
Everybody in the organization felt it.
"I think we'll bounce back. I'm hopeful and expect that we'll
make the changes that we need to end up having a successful
season."
Whatever those changes are, they aren't going to be
implemented by Murphy. The Packers' top executive said he is in
regular contact with general manager Ted Thompson, but in no way
wants to stick his nose into the football operation at the halfway
point of the season.
Murphy played eight seasons in the NFL and was co-captain of
Washington's 1982 Super Bowl championship team, so he knows a
little about how a season can go. He also knows the team is in
danger of missing the playoffs for the fourth time in five years
under Thompson, a string that would bring the Packers back to the
dismal days of the 1980s.
But rather than act now, he said it's better for him to sit
back and let things play out before making any judgments about the
football operation. He said he would do as he did last year in his
first season as president and CEO and wait to see the final outcome
before conducting a review.
"The goal is we want to win games and championships," Murphy
said. "Right now, we're not where we want to be. But I've been
around the NFL long enough that a lot can happen in half a season.
I've seen it both ways - teams that start out great and fade and
teams that start out poorly and come on at the end.
"The right thing is to wait and do a thorough evaluation at
the end of the season."
Murphy said the job the coaches do in turning the tide on a
season in danger of going under will be part of his evaluation. He
said he believes the proper structure is in place for such a
turnaround and that it isn't necessary for him to bring in a
consultant to review the operation.
"Really, in terms of my evaluation, I think part of the job
is in terms of our coaches, do they make the adjustments and
changes that are needed throughout the year to make the team
successful at the end," Murphy said. "That's part of the process.
To have the full season to evaluate it, it makes sense. There's no
question we're disappointed where we are, obviously coming off a
very disappointing loss to Tampa.
"I think we have a great structure in place and it has
worked."
Murphy said he receives input from the executive committee
and board of directors, but he said they are an advisory board and
the decision on how the franchise moves forward is his. He said he
has heard the fans' frustration with losing twice to Brett Favre
and the Minnesota Vikings and understands their sentiment.
His response is that the season isn't over.
"The fans are extremely passionate," Murphy said. "I think
there's a sense of disappointment where the team is. Hopefully, we
can make the changes we need to get the team going in the other
direction and challenging and getting a playoff spot."
On the football side, coach Mike McCarthy said he was not
considering any changes in the structure of his coaching staff to
address a continuing problem with the offensive line and special
teams. Offensive coordinator Joe Philbin was a well-respected line
coach before moving into his present position, but he said McCarthy
has said nothing to him about directly overseeing the offensive
line.
McCarthy said that he, Philbin, offensive line coach James
Campen and assistant line coach Jerry Fontenot all have expertise
with coaching the offensive line and that he has no concerns about
how the line is being trained. He said first-year special teams
coach Shawn Slocum has changed the philosophy of previous years for
the betterment of the unit.
"Our problems to me aren't teaching and scheme," McCarthy
said. "They do not fall in that area."
McCarthy said he did not think it would do any good to bring
in somebody from outside to offer an assessment on why the Packers
lead the league in sacks allowed with 37. Both he and Philbin said
the problems aren't with players not understanding the scheme or
lacking training, but rather making physical and mental errors at
the wrong time.
"I think anytime you are in problem solving, it's about
applying solutions," McCarthy said. "It's obvious what has gone on
in our particular failures in that area. There are other options as
we move forward, and those are some of the things we'll look to in
certain situations.
"We don't need wholesale change. I'm not going to sit here
and tell you that I have all the answers, but I'm very confident in
the issues that we've had in pass protection, that they are
correctable."