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Go San Fran
In beating Packers, 49ers and DeMeco Ryans showed it isn't always about the quarterback

There wasn't anything to dislike about the NFL's divisional playoff games, but one contest really stood out to the few of us who still view this league as a team sport played by 32 rosters that include 1,664 players who aren't starting quarterbacks.
49ers 13, Packers 10.
The Packers supposedly had it all this year.
No. 1 seed and home-field advantage? Check.
Great young, offensive-minded head coach with a 39-10 regular-season record? Check.
First-ballot Hall of Fame quarterback about to be named four-time league MVP? Check.
Improved defense run by a new coordinator to erase the bad taste of back-to-back NFC title game losses? Check.
Strong special teams unit? Nope. Not … even … close.
Legendary NFL reporter Rick Gosselin has been covering this league for 49 years. He's the guy Bill Belichick — not exactly a fan of reporters — credits for alerting him to the pass-catching potential of an undersized college quarterback named Julian Edelman.
Heading into the playoffs, Gosselin was the first to post a giant red flag on the 2021 Packers when he released his widely revered NFL special teams rankings.
Bringing up the rear overall was the Packers. Last in punt returns was, yep, Green Bay.
"Goose" sure nailed that one. The 49ers knotted the score 10-10 on a blocked punt for a late touchdown and then beat the Packers on another special teams snap when Robbie Gould stretched his career playoff perfection to 19-for-19 with a 45-yard walk-off game-winner in the Lambeau Field snow globe.
Rodgers was at his smug, er, most-confident best to open the game. Sixty-nine yards in 10 plays, the last being an A.J. Dillon touchdown run.
The rout, it seemed, was on. Except Kyle Shanahan has the toughest, most physical team in the league. Sorry, Zim. You say San Fran holds on every play. We'll call it kicking an offense's butt on enough plays to reach the Super Bowl as the sixth seed the Vikings could have had if they had known how to finish.
San Francisco's personality is not personified by its quarterback — Jimmy Garoppolo — but rather a first-team All-Pro receiver — Deebo Samuel — who doubles as perhaps the league's most determined running back.
In a quarterback-crazed-and-driven league, Rodgers, the league's greatest player the last two seasons, got the ball with 4 minutes, 36 seconds left and the score tied 10-10 after the blocked punt.
At home. Prime time. Single-digit weather. Nasty windchill. Against a California club whose QB had never played in a game below 32 degrees.
What did this all-time great quarterback do with this opportunity? He went three-and-out.
He was no match for the 49ers pass rush or its first-year defensive coordinator, DeMeco Ryans, a 37-year-old who was still playing linebacker for the Texans in 2015 and interviewed for the Vikings head coaching job on Sunday night. Ryans prevented Rodgers from hitting Davante Adams deep on third and long, thus getting the ball back for Shanahan.
After the Packers' opening touchdown drive, Ryans' defense held Green Bay to 194 yards and 3 points in nine possessions. How's that for a resume builder, Zygi?
Six plays after getting the ball back on that Green Bay three-and-out, Shanahan faced third-and-long. His play call would have gotten him torched on social media anywhere but San Francisco.
He took the ball out of his quarterback's hands — probably wise since they belong to Jimmy G — and put it in Samuel's hands. Yes, a run call on third-and-7 from the Green Bay 38 with a minute left, the score tied and the 49ers probably needing the first down to put Gould in realistic field goal range.
What happened? Samuel muscled out 9 yards. Three plays later, Gould kicked the game-winner.
The 49ers' offense was held to a measly 212 yards and 6 points. Garoppolo had a pitiful passer rating of 57.1. And yet San Francisco ushered Rodgers into another offseason of uncertainty because the mighty Packers and their MVP were undone by the league's worst special teams.
#it'sstillateamgame.
https://www.startribune.com/packers-49er...600139201/

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Packers make pitch to Aaron Rodgers: 'No plans for a rebuild,' Matt LaFleur says
By STEVE MEGARGEE Associated PressJanuary 25, 2022 — 7:33am
Aaron Rodgers says he doesn't want to be part of a rebuilding project.
Apparently, neither does his current coach.
"There's no plan for a rebuild," Packers coach Matt LaFleur said Monday, two days after the Packers' season ended with a 13-10 loss to the San Francisco 49ers. "You get this close, obviously win a lot of football games, and we know in order for there not to be that, he's got to be a part of this thing. I don't think that's anybody's intention."
The Packers are about $40 million over the salary cap according to overthecap.comand have plenty of players whose contracts are expiring, including two-time All-Pro receiver Davante Adams.
That could impact whether the 38-year-old Rodgers is back in Green Bay, where the 2005 first-round pick has spent his entire career. Rodgers said after the 49ers game that he doesn't want to be part of a rebuild.
"There's obviously a lot of decisions to be made," the quarterback said. "There's a lot of players whose futures are up in the air, so definitely it'll be interesting to see which way some of those decisions go. But I'll have some conversations with (general manager) Brian (Gutekunst) in the next week or so and get a little bit more clarity and think about my own future and how much longer I want to keep doing this."
Rodgers earned All-Pro honors and is a leading contender for his fourth MVP award, and second in a row. But his postseason results haven't matched his extraordinary regular-season performances. Rodgers led Green Bay to a Super Bowl title in the 2010 season, but the Packers have gone just 7-9 in his 16 playoff starts since.
Even so, the Packers clearly want him to return.
"This guy has done so much for such a long period of time for this organization, for this city, for this team," LaFleur said. "And so, I want to be respectful of his process. Whatever he needs to go through to make the best decision for himself, and certainly we would love for him to be a Packer and be a Packer to the day he decides to retire."
LaFleur said Gutekunst, executive vice president/director of football operations Russ Ball and president/CEO Mark Murphy share that opinion.
While he acknowledged the organization has some difficult choices ahead, LaFleur expressed confidence the Packers will have a roster capable of winning a title.
"There's ways to move money and to make sure that we get the bulk of our key contributors back," LaFleur said. "Are there absolutely going to be some tough decisions? No doubt about it. But I'm really confident in Russ' ability and Gutey's ability and us collectively to figure out a way to do this thing."
Rodgers said after Saturday's game he would try to make a decision before the start of free agency and hasn't ruled out retirement, as well as requesting a trade or returning to Green Bay. Rodgers' situation remained unclear heading into this season until he reported for training camp.
"I'm hopeful that it doesn't drag on quite as long," LaFleur said. "And we'll make the necessary decisions once we kind of find out where he's at."
https://www.startribune.com/aaron-rodger...600139180/

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