But look on the bright side - a few more games like this, and we don't have to worry about someone poaching Hafley after the season for a head coaching job!
To me, that was one of the most encouraging things about the entire game.
First of all, Love had a phenomenal game statistically, and let's pause to take a look at those stats before going on....
31/43
337 yards
3 TDs
0 INT
completion percentage of 72%
QB rating of 118
11/15 on 3rd/4th down (and most of those 3rd downs were 3rd and medium)
And by comparison, Dallas was 4/10 on 3rd down.
Probably one of the 5 best games of his young career.
But beyond the stats... the unmeasurables....
Jordan Love stepped up in this game and put the team on his shoulders, more so than (IMO) any time since the last half of 2023. I posted, when we got the ball back late in the 4th quarter,
"We need leadership to step up and lead. This may be Jordan Love's "it's time" moment." And by god, he did.
My biggest concern with Love is that he often does not seem to play with passion, with fire, with intensity... with absolute determination, fueled by a fundamental
refusal to be defeated, like we saw with both Favre and Rodgers. But whether I noticed it or not through most of the game last night, it seems as though that was exactly what he was doing at the end of that game. He showed tremendous leadership, and the team bought into it. The offense trusted him, fell in behind him, and followed him all the way down the field twice.
And as much as I hate to say it, I thought I saw something else.... a major degree of disconnect between Love and Lafleur. Love was doing everything he needed to do to win that game, and I think Lafleur was holding him back because he didn't trust him. And I think Love is getting really frustrated by it. He was
not a happy camper; he was stampeding down the field at every opportunity, until they got close and Lafleur dialed it back to play it safe and not risk losing the game.
We've seen this before, many times; and ironically, one of the best examples was against the Cowboys - in 22, Rodgers was on a roll, dominating Dallas in Green Bay, and Lafleur tried holding him back to play safe. Rodgers erupted on the sideline, and later, when asked what it was he disagreed with, he said this...
"Just every single play call, probably," he said of his frustrations. "I felt like we were like 30 yards from ending the game in regulation, and also felt like it was two minutes, so I was going to be calling those, and I was in a pretty good rhythm. Obviously, I didn't have a ton of attempts, but felt like I was in a pretty good rhythm. I felt like I threw the ball just about exactly where I wanted to, so I wanted a chance to go win the game."
Ok, yeah, it
was on you Matt. But did you learn a damned thing from it? 3 years later, are you doing anything differently?
You have a quarterback who has the potential to be a Top 5 in the league, and he was having one of the best games of his entire
career - and doing his absolute best to lead your team to a victory, in spite of your bizarre playcalling and clock management theories.
I understand his play has been spotty so far this season, but the guy was on an absolute roll that night, and instead of recognizing that, trusting him, and riding the hot hand you played it safe - and showed him no confidence at all. You chose to hold him back, restrain him, because you were so scared of losing.
Coaches like that may win division titles, but they rarely win championships. And they have a much harder time building a rapport and trust level with their quarterbacks. When the leader of your team is on a roll, you need to recognize that and turn it over to him - show not just
him but the entire team that you trust him, and that they should too.
Not hold him back.
Bart Starr: "I think I can run it".
Vince Lombardi:
"Then run it, and let's get the hell out of here!"
Yep, that was this year's Big Whoop, and I let myself get all excited about it too. I've seen them trying, but I haven't noticed very many footballs changing hands. One more year of big noise in July and August and deafening silence come September, maybe?
We dare not risk a ticket. Best to play it safe.
I agree, but sometimes I worry a bit that Love is too passive to stand up to Lafleur and say, "
I'm your quarterback,
I'm the one running the offense out there on the field, and if I see an unexpected problem or opportunity, I'm gonna change the call. Because that's the job you're paying me $55,000,000 a year to do."
Unfortunately, I don't envision Love doing that very easily. He just doesn't seem like that sort.
I dunno. Maybe he'll surprise me. I kimd of hope so, because I'm starting to worry a bit that Lafleur's timid "play it safe" coaching style at the stages of the games that matter the most may throw a wet blanket over Jordan's career.
And FTR, I am on the same page. I don't "hate" the man at all; I think he's a pretty damned good coach and a very damned good guy.
I just would maybe prefer that he was a pretty damned good
guy and a very damned good
coach. I'm just not seeing him grow into that slot yet. But, every day is a new day, and every Sunday is a chance to change the course of your career.