J. Kapp 11 wrote: ↑Thu Oct 31, 2019 1:31 pm
We need to be at least two games better than Green Bay the rest of the way. It's the only way we win the division.
Let's win out and hope Green Bay loses to someone else, like the 49ers. But if they don't lose to S.F. ... could you imagine us being a 14-2 wild-card team? Could happen. Yikes!
I remember one year when the Vikings started 6-0. I think Mike Tice was the head coach. They were 6-0 and heading into a game against a winless Giants team at home, and they ended up losing. It wasn't a fluke loss, either. They were soundly beaten.
That happened because the 6-0 record was more than a little deceiving. The team had benefited from several factors that went their way early, but they were nowhere near as good as that record indicated and, when they came back to earth, they came back hard.
Now I'm not saying the Packers are the same as that team, but there are similarities. The Packers got some significant help in some of their wins, including the games against the Vikings and Lions, plus they got to face a Mahomes-less KC team. They squeaked by the Bears to open the season, and took a home loss against an Eagles team that has been drubbed by other NFC opponents.
If you look at the league stats, you see more evidence of this. The Packer offense is middle-of-the-pack (no pun intended) overall, ranking 13th in yards per game, 8th in passing yards per game, 18th in rushing yards per game, and 7th in scoring. Not bad, but hardly great, either. Defensively, the Packers rank 22nd overall in yards per game, 19th against the pass, 24th against the run, but somehow 11th in scoring.
Do those stats indicate a team should be 7-1 at the midpoint of the season? I bet most people would say no, including most Packers fans, if they didn't know the team to which those stats belong.
I highly doubt the Packers finish this season with a single loss, or even with just 2 losses assuming the Vikings beat them in the rematch in Minnesota. More than likely, the law of averages is going to catch up to them at some point this season. They will be the ones who suffer at the hands of some questionable calls by the refs in a game or two that cost them points. They will be the ones who watch an opponent string together a few big plays that lead to a key score or scores. More than likely, they'll be the ones who come up short or unlucky or both on the injury front in a key matchup. It's not certain any of that will happen, but its far more likely than their hot streak continuing.
If the Packers were statistically aligned with their record, I'd buy the talk about a 14-2 record for the Vikings turning them into a wildcard. Suffice it to say, if the Vikings do somehow manage to finish this season 14-2, I predict they'll be the #1 seed in the NFC.