Packers offense only thing standing in way of NFC supremacy

© Jeff Hanisch-USA TODAY Sports

Aaron Rodgers carried the Green Bay Packers to the playoffs during the peak of his NFL career. No other quarterback came close to matching his ability and he led Green Bay to deep runs in the postseason, where the defense often fell short.

The big picture: Green Bay now has a defense capable of carrying it to the postseason. If the Packers want to return to NFC supremacy, it’s time for Rodgers and this offense to start showing up.

Offseason additions pay off: Packers GM Brian Gutekunst made improving this defense a priority this offseason and the early results are outstanding.

Defensive dominance: The impact from Green Bay’s offseason acquisitions has bolstered a defense that already possessed young talent on the rise.

Green Bay’s defense is loaded with playmakers at every level and is also receiving contributions from safety Adrian Amos, cornerback Kevin King and rookie defensive lineman Rashan Gary.

Shutting down the passing game, putting pressure on quarterbacks and creating possessions for the offense is a staple of this defense. Unfortunately, the offense isn’t living up to its end of the deal.

Rodgers’ inconsistency: There are moments this season when Rodgers shows the jaw-dropping ability to make unspeakable throws on the run and fit footballs into impossible windows.

Rodgers also goes through long stretches when he can’t hit wide-open receivers and drags down this offense right on the verge of momentum.

Rodgers is better than he was last year at taking short, safe throws when deep passes are erased. However, inconsistent mechanics are still resulting in far too many overthrows and rockets into the dirt. If he can’t clean up the lazy mechanics and baffling decisions, this won’t be a championship-caliber offense.

Early issues for Matt LaFleur: It takes time for a new coach to fully install his scheme, for players to acclimate to it, and for him to adjust to what players do well.

Marquez Valdes-Scantling is the No. 2 receiver and the talent differential to the next closest receivers is glaring. Green Bay would greatly benefit from adding another impact receiver to complement Davante Adams, but LaFleur is trying to make the best of it until then. Of course, he has no other choice given Gutekunst ignored the position in the offseason.

The future: There’s reason for optimism for Green Bay’s offense. Timing and execution are everything in the NFL and that should improve in the weeks to come.

A 1-2 record would have put the Packers behind a few contenders but still in the early hunt if the offense regrouped. Green Bay currently sits atop the conference and we aren’t seeing them execute in all three phases.

The bottom line: This current team has a great chance of making the playoffs. If Rodgers taps into his old form more consistently and elevates this offense, we’re looking at squad that could make it to Super Bowl LIV.

If his prime is truly behind him and LaFleur’s questionable in-game decisions and bizarre faith in certain players continues, Green Bay will flame out and waste its best defense in years.

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