Updated: Wednesday, 04 Nov 2009, 3:37 PM CST
Published : Wednesday, 04 Nov 2009, 3:37 PM CST
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) - The hits just keep on coming for Green Bay Packers quarterback
Aaron Rodgers, who has experienced a season's worth of sacks in
seven games. All that punishment is beginning to take its toll.
Rodgers limped away from Sunday's loss to the Minnesota
Vikings with a sprained toe on one foot and a nagging sprain on the
other. Packers coach Mike McCarthy said Rodgers could miss time in
practice this week but is expected to play Sunday at Tampa Bay
without losing mobility.
Rodgers has been sacked a league-worst 31 times this season,
including six by Minnesota on Sunday.
"Our sack numbers are clearly out of balance," McCarthy said.
"That's something we'll continue to work through."
But Rodgers' inability to stay upright is only one of the
glaring problems facing the Packers (4-3), who were put in their
place - a distant second place in the NFC North - by their former
quarterback, Brett Favre.
"Their quarterback has made a big impact," McCarthy said of
Favre. "That's something, that quarterback productivity, they
haven't had in the last three years that we have played them."
Meanwhile, the Packers keep showing they're not quite ready
for prime time.
They're smarting from yet another round of costly,
preventable penalties and trying to quell criticism of Dom Capers'
new 3-4 defense from yet another veteran player.
Beyond that, McCarthy said linebacker Brandon Chillar has a
broken hand and was scheduled to have surgery Monday. He is
expected to miss at least two weeks before returning to play with a
club cast, and his role will be filled by A.J. Hawk or Desmond
Bishop. The so-called "Big Okie" package, where Chillar plays in
place of a safety, is on the shelf for now.
McCarthy was typically measured in his assessment of the
Packers' play Monday, but had sharp words for defensive lineman
Johnny Jolly, whose personal foul head-butting penalty wiped out a
third-down stop and set up the Vikings' first touchdown of the
game.
Jolly didn't seem particularly repentant Sunday night.
"It is what it is," Jolly said. "That didn't cause (us to
lose) the game."
Jolly's comments didn't sit well with McCarthy, who has drawn
some criticism for his team's penchant for penalties over the last
two-plus seasons.
"There's no reason for it, there's no explanation for it,"
McCarthy said. "He needs to be more accountable for that."
McCarthy said he planned to have discussions with Jolly and
fellow defensive lineman Cullen Jenkins, who said after Sunday's
game that the defense - which failed to sack Favre in two games -
was "in handcuffs" in Capers' scheme.
"It's tough," Jenkins said. "You come into the season with
new stuff and you're told we're going to give you opportunities to
do this and do opportunities to do that, and then you're not given
them."
McCarthy seemed to suggest that Jenkins' comments sounded
selfish.
"I'm not interested in having Pro Bowl players and having a
27th-ranked defense," McCarthy said. "Our interest and our focus is
on being a top-three defense in the league. It's utilizing all of
our players. Sometimes players are asked to do things, to sacrifice
so someone else can benefit from it, and that's part of the deal.
That's the way we operate. We have a lot of good players on
defense. It's not about one guy getting his."
Cornerback Charles Woodson took issue with Capers' play
selection after the Packers' first loss to the Vikings Oct. 5,
earning him a talking-to. Woodson didn't speak out after Sunday's
game.
Capers said he had spoken with Jenkins, and was confident
that everyone was on the "same page."
As for not putting enough pressure on Favre, McCarthy said a
team's defensive scheme or game plan doesn't matter if players
aren't consistently beating the guy in front of them.
"It's about winning one-on-ones, whether you are run blocking
or you're in a pass rush," McCarthy said. "That's football."
Meanwhile, McCarthy did not commit to a starting offensive
line, saying he would take the week to examine his options.
McCarthy had veteran tackles Chad Clifton and Mark Tauscher
active on Sunday, but chose not to replace rookie left tackle T.J.
Lang or third-year right tackle Allen Barbre. Vikings defensive
ends Jared Allen and Ray Edwards combined for five sacks on Sunday.
In all, McCarthy said the season isn't lost but the Packers
must improve.
"We're 4-3 for good reason," he said. "I think we have not
handled two prime-time games very well. I'm confident that we'll
learn from these experiences. I thought we would have learned more
from the first game (in Minnesota) to this one. We had some
repeated mistakes. That's frustrating, and something that we take
with full accountability as coaches."