Packers shut out Saints to clinch playoff berth for fifth

  • Rob Demovsky

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    Rob Demovsky

    ESPN Staff Writer

      Rob Demovsky is an NFL reporter at ESPN and covers the Green Bay Packers. He has covered the Packers since 1997 and joined ESPN in 2013. Demovsky is a two-time Wisconsin Sportswriter of the Year as selected by the NSSA. You can follow him on Twitter at @RobDemovsky.
  • Katherine Terrell

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    Katherine Terrell

    ESPN Staff Writer

      Katherine Terrell came back to ESPN to cover the New Orleans Saints in the summer of 2022. She left the company in 2019 after joining in 2016 to cover the Cincinnati Bengals. Katherine is a graduate of LSU and a Baton Rouge, Louisiana, native, and she has covered the NFL since 2013. You can follow Katherine on Twitter: @Kat_Terrell

Dec 23, 2024, 11:20 PM ET

GREEN BAY, Wis. — All Matt LaFleur does is make the playoffs. Well, most of the time anyway. The Green Bay Packers clinched a playoff spot with Monday’s 34-0 win over the New Orleans Saints, which means they are going to the postseason for the fifth time in LaFleur’s six seasons as their head coach.

The only time the Packers have missed the playoffs under LaFleur was in Aaron Rodgers‘ final season, 2022, when they went into the final game of the season needing a win to qualify and lost to the Detroit Lions.

If the Packers (11-4) win their remaining two regular-season games — at the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday and home against the Chicago Bears in Week 18 — it would give LaFleur his fourth 13-win regular season.

The Saints, with backup Spencer Rattler starting at quarterback in place of the injured Derek Carr (hand) and without several of their top players, including running back Alvin Kamara (groin), didn’t put up much resistance early on.

The Packers got out to an early 21-0 lead, scoring touchdowns on their first three drives for the first time since Week 17 of the 2020 season at the Bears.

Patrick McDermott/Getty Images

Promising trend: At this point, it’s gone beyond a trend. Josh Jacobs scoring a rushing touchdown is now an expectation. Jacobs’ 2-yard scoring run in the second quarter made it his sixth straight game with a rushing touchdown. That ties the second-longest streak in Packers history behind only Paul Hornung (seven in 1960). Jacobs finished with 13 carries for 69 yards and one touchdown, plus four catches for 38 yards.

Promising trend II: When Keisean Nixon got home on his cornerback blitz late in the second quarter, strip-sacked Rattler and defensive end Rashan Gary recovered the fumble, it gave the Packers their 27th takeaway of the season. Safety Zayne Anderson‘s third-quarter interception, the first of his career, moved them into a tie for third in the NFL with the Bills and Texans with 28 takeaways. Last year, they had only 18 takeaways all season.

Most surprising performance: We know the Packers like to run the ball. They came into the game running by design on 48% of their plays this season, the second-highest rate in the NFL this season, according to ESPN Research. But this was unusual even by the Packers standards. Nine different players had at least one rushing attempt, including tight end Tucker Kraft converting a sneak on third-and-1 and Chris Brooks with his first career rushing touchdown. The last time the Packers had nine players with at least one rushing attempt in a game was 1953.– Rob Demovsky

Next game: at Vikings (4:25 p.m. ET, Sunday)

AP Photo/Mike Roemer

The Saints were officially eliminated from playoff contention prior to Monday night’s game against the Packers, and they played like it.

Interim coach Darren Rizzi needed the team to have a solid showing in Green Bay to build his case for a removing the interim tag and becoming the head coach. But the Saints were never truly in the game, falling into a 21-0 deficit and failing to move the ball into the red zone the entire game.

According to ESPN Research, it was the first time the Saints had been shut out of the first half of consecutive games since 1997. They lost 20-19 to the Washington Commanders last week after failing to score in the first two quarters.

The Saints have two games left, but they showed they have a lot of work to do in the offseason to become a competitive team. The Saints have now lost double-digit games for the second time in three seasons. Prior to 2022, they had not lost 10 or more since 2005.

Troubling trend: The Saints, who started the rookie Rattler, are now 0-5 when starting backup quarterbacks this season and have averaged only 12.8 points per game in those five matchups, as opposed to 24.5 points per game under Carr. He is under contract for two more seasons, and he’ll count $51.4 million against the salary cap in 2025 if the Saints choose to keep him without restructuring his deal.

Most surprising performance: The offense was always going to have a challenge without their starting quarterback, running back (Kamara), and big play receiver (Chris Olave). But the defense simply failed to show up. The Packers were able to pick the unit apart at will, and the Saints didn’t help themselves with missed tackles, penalties and explosive plays — the story of their season.

QB breakdown: The Saints went back to Rattler as their starter after Jake Haener was benched last week following one half and 39 net yards of offense. Rattler was able to make some plays with his feet and had a few nice throws against the Packers, but the offense certainly didn’t pick up where it left off against Washington last week. He has now been sacked 17 times in his five games this season. — Katherine Terrell

Next game: vs. Raiders (1 p.m. ET, Sunday)

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