Sack No 6 Colledge has Allen neutralized

With the broken play, he runs smack into an Aaron Rodgers again holding on to the ball unnecessarily Sack blame: Rodgers.Sack No. 5: Aaron Rodgers drops back to throw and has excellent protection, he waits, he waits, he dances around, waits some more and finally Alan Barbre can’t hold Brian Robinson off no longer and Rodgers is sacked Sack blame: All Aaron Rodgers.Sack No 6: Colledge has Allen neutralized. Jason Spitz gets beat by a quick move and Jerry Kennedy sacks Rodgers. 7: This was the safety where Allen beats a double-team by T.J. Lang and Ryan Grant with another change-of-direction move that leaves the blockers wondering where he went Sack Blame: T.J Lang, Ryan Grant, Aaron Rodgers.Sack No 8:Jared Allen beats T.J Lang cleanly with an outside speed move Sack Blame: T.J.

Lang.So you see, after analyzing every sack, Daryn Colledge’s name comes up only once. Surprised, aren’t you And that sack doesn’t happen if Wynn sticks around a second or two longer and actually helps out.Oh, and have I mentioned recently that the Packers kept DeShawn Wynn supposedly for his blocking Did I also mention that he drops easy passes every game What You say I manage to work those into every article I write That’s not possible, is it Oh, OK Sorry... Perception No. 2 “The Packers finally found their screen game against the Vikings…”Most of you are probably thinking, finally the OL did something right Sorry to burst every one’s bubble I know you all want to believe we can run a decent screen Believe me, nobody wants that to be true more than I do. But alas, our screen game is weighed down quite simply by interior linemen that simply cannot get outside fast enough to even help out.Any yardage the Packers gained on screen passes against the Vikings was a direct result of an outstanding individual effort by the pass catcher and a great block by a wide receiver.

The lead-blocking linemen had NOTHING to do with it.The linemen can’t get out in front of the play, and even if they do, they don’t block anybody! It was uncanny seeing this on every screen play Here’s the evidence:Screen Pass No. 1:This play surprised the Vikings, who most likely were not expecting a screen pass from green Bay so early in the game. The play looks well setup and succeeds, but not why you might think. Jason Spitz is able to get out in front of Grant, but completely misses the block.Fortunately, Grant's picks the correct lane and the LB misses. Wells never come close to catching up and does what he does on a lot of plays ends up blocking nobody.