All Things Packers...THE GREEN BAY PACKERS

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I might as well start a permanent thread for all things Packers.

I have an extensive collection of old photographs ect. that I have collected over the years.

It's not much fun to sit on it...might as well share it with other Packer fans and NFL nuts.

Please feel free to share any discussion, news, photos, memorabilia...all things Packers.
 

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Sounds great!!

Been a Packer Backer since 1967.

Look forward to the thread and I will add a few things also.

FH
 

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The start of one of the greatest stories in professional sports history.

The 1919 ACME Packers.

Happy 90th Birthday to the Green Bay Packers.

1919-team.jpg
 

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[FONT=arial, helvetica][FONT=Times New Roman, serif]Aug. 11 is 90th anniversary of Green Bay Packers' founding[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman, serif]
By Jeff Ash
jash@greenbaypressgazette.com
[/FONT]
[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica]It was just a bunch of young guys sitting around, shooting the breeze on a Monday night. They all played football, and they wanted to put together a good team.[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica]Not long after they met — 90 years ago tonight, on Aug. 11, 1919 — their team became known as the Green Bay Packers.[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica]They gathered at the office of the Green Bay Press-Gazette, then at 315-317 Cherry St., where the Associated Bank parking lot is now.[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica]They got together at the newspaper because its office was a meeting place for the community and because Press-Gazette sports editor George W. Calhoun was a tireless booster for football in Green Bay.[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica]Among the best players in town was Earl "Curly" Lambeau, who had been a star at Green Bay East High School. At 21, he was working for Indian Packing Corp. after spending a month at the University of Wisconsin in 1917, then a semester at the University of Notre Dame in 1918.[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica]Somehow, perhaps over beers, perhaps in a chance meeting on a street corner, Lambeau and Calhoun came up with the idea for the new team. Calhoun promised plenty of publicity if Lambeau would help organize it.[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica]The players agreed that Monday night to meet again later in the week, on Aug. 14. That Thursday night, Lambeau was elected the team's captain.[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica]Lambeau persuaded his employers to spend $500 for uniforms, and the company even set aside a practice field near its plant on Morrow Street on Green Bay's near east side.[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica]By its second game, the Indian Packing Corp. team became known as the Green Bay Packers. Even though the Indian Packing Corp. became the Acme Packing Corp., the team's name stayed.[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica]A story about that second meeting — which also took place at the Press-Gazette — promised "the greatest football team in the history of football in Green Bay." That promise came true.[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica]The Packers almost instantly became one of the best semiprofessional teams in Wisconsin. They went pro in 1921, joining what became known a year later as the National Football League. They have won 12 NFL titles and are known around the world.[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica][SIZE=+2]About that name[/SIZE][/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica]Though its official name was the Indian Packing Corp. football team, it didn't take long for Green Bay's new semiprofessional team to become known as the Packers.[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica]The Green Bay Press-Gazette referred to the football team as "the Packers" for the first time on Aug. 27, 1919.[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica]Two days later, as the football team gathered at the Press-Gazette office to finalize plans for the season, the headline on the story about the meeting referred to the team as the "Indian Packers."[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica]The word "Packers" was used only in headlines for the next three weeks, with the Press-Gazette's stories still referring to the team as the Indian Packing Corp. squad.[/FONT]
[FONT=arial, helvetica]But by the second week of the 1919 season, the team simply became known as the Green Bay Packers, with no further mention of the Indian Packing Corp.[/FONT]


[FONT=arial, helvetica]http://www.greenbaypressgazette.com/article/20090810/PKR01/308100102/1058
[/FONT]
 

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It's official...Brett's a sperm head now.



Honestly...I'm ok with it. I was pissed last year...I'm over it.

If he really wants to play...go for it Brett.

$25 million for 2 years...I don't blame him...and he blew off training camp. LOL.

Good work if you can get it.
 

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Rodgers making fast progression to elite QB

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By Charles Robinson, Yahoo! Sports Aug 18, 1:19 pm EDT

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GREEN BAY, Wis. – On Sunday morning, an AFC personnel executive was sitting in front of a television, fast-forwarding through replays of that week’s preseason NFL games. Unlike most NFL fans, he skimmed the first quarters, flitting past starting units in favor of scribbling notes on reserves likely to be cut in the coming weeks.
He had been sailing along until he saw Aaron Rodgers(notes).
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1250614049.jpg
Rodgers completed 5 of 10 passes with a TD against the Browns.
(Jeff Hanisch/US Presswire)​

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Five years earlier, the executive had taken a trip to see Rodgers in person, when the Green Bay Packers quarterback was putting together his pièce de résistance as a junior at California-Berkeley. He came away moderately impressed, but his franchise would end up going another way, watching as Rodgers slipped to the 24th pick in the 2005 NFL draft. More than four years later, he found himself eyeing Rodgers again in rapt attention.
“[Green Bay’s] game against Cleveland was the only one that I saw most of the first quarter,” he said. “You can see how far he has come right away. His decisiveness and the way he goes through his [progressions]. I don’t want to overstate it, because he was a first-round pick. But he’s become a pretty special player.”
How special?
“I think he might be one of the two or three best quarterbacks under 30, and there are some good ones in that group,” the executive said. “I’d take him before [Jay] Cutler, who went to a Pro Bowl last year. Give him another season and I might even take him before Eli [Manning]. And that’s a 100-million-dollar guy with a [Super Bowl] ring – good company.”
That’s a rapid ascent for a player who is only heading into his second starting campaign. However, Rodgers has wasted no time refining his game and defining his image, something that might be even more impressive considering it comes in the NFL cradle of Green Bay. What was once a fiefdom lorded over solely by his predecessor, Brett Favre(notes), Rodgers has finally gained the embrace of the community and fan base. That might only make this preseason even sweeter, with Favre’s moniker dangerously close to becoming “He Who Shall Not Be Named If He Plays In Minnesota.”
But just how close is Rodgers to entering the elite conversation? After all, it’s a sizeable leap going from one superb individual season (4,038 passing yards and 32 total touchdowns), to being mentioned with the likes of Tom Brady(notes), Peyton Manning(notes), Ben Roethlisberger(notes) and Drew Brees(notes).
“I think he’s an elite quarterback right now,” said Packers cornerback Al Harris(notes). “He can make every single throw. He can put it on a line. He’s got touch. His decision making is good. He’s quick. He goes through his progressions really quickly. I think he’s very underrated by the people in the league and the so-called experts. Once he wins a Super Bowl, I guess that’s maybe what changes that perception.”
Still, for those who have watched Rodgers closely during the last four years, there is no denying the significant transformation.
“Look at his body. He didn’t look like that three years ago,” Packers coach Mike McCarthy said. “His body fat is way down. He’s a much more conditioned athlete. He’s much stronger. His ball has more velocity. … He’s a lot more athletic than I realized coming out of Cal.”
Indeed, after a series of injuries early in his career, Rodgers has reconstructed his physique through rigorous offseason training. This has been aimed at replicating what “elite” quarterbacks do: play 16 games, not wear down late in seasons and be the most dependable cornerstone on the roster.
But the transformation runs deeper. Arguably as recent as two years ago, Rodgers was still languishing under a perception that had dogged him since the 2005 draft, when he was supposedly neck and neck with Alex Smith for the right to be the No. 1 overall pick.
Midway through his junior season at Cal, he seemed to be the odds-on favorite in many NFL quarters. But Smith’s rise and a litany of questions about Rodgers’ mechanics and pedigree (some executives were already wary of Jeff Tedford quarterbacks) began to create cracks in an otherwise superb résumé. It didn’t help that negative stories began to leak out about Rodgers coming off as arrogant or cocky in some interview sessions. Even McCarthy noted the perception while he was serving as an offensive coordinator for the San Francisco 49ers and helping to hash out the Smith vs. Rodgers debate.
In spite of seeing what he now calls “maybe the best workout I’ve seen live,” McCarthy said the mental makeup of Rodgers and Smith became one of the overriding factors in the 49ers’ decision making.
“That was a concern for both of them – which one of these guys can handle being a No. 1 pick in the NFL draft?” McCarthy said. “There was a lot of conversation about that. … [Former 49ers coach] Mike Nolan and I, we got into a conversation and he says to me, ‘OK, Rodgers is not a western [Pennsylvania] kid. He’s a northern California kid. I know you can’t relate to that.’ We had a lot of conversations about that. But you know, the arm and talent was always there.”
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1250614137.jpg
Rodgers with McCarthy doing a camp practice earlier this month.
(Jeff Hanisch/US Presswire)​

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Looking back, those might be the perceptions Rodgers regrets most, and they planted seeds in a media persona that can now seem at times to be overly cautious. His interviews can be laden with boundaries, clichés, buzzwords and phrases like “I don’t want that to be perceived as arrogant” or “I don’t want that to be seen as cocky.” These are the buffers borne of a negative draft experience and three years of trying to say all the right things while sitting behind Favre.
“That [draft] was a time in my life where I felt like I wasn’t at times being who I really was,” Rodgers says now. “I think I was always a humble guy who came from a humble background and worked hard for what I got. Then you get to the draft process and you’ve got to sell yourself as the best player that has ever walked around. That was a little different for me. And then, at the same time, a few of my poor attempts at humor [regarding Favre] have come off as arrogant. I learned you just have to watch what you’re saying sometimes.”
And yet, his talent and standing have seemingly outgrown his deference. Now it’s only his record that needs to catch up. With Green Bay’s move to a more aggressive 3-4 defense, the Packers appear ready to become a more balanced team that can rival the best from the NFC South and NFC East – the conference’s two power divisions. Because while Rodgers may have arrived emotionally, physically and statistically, he has retained a keen awareness that gaudy numbers and arm strength aren’t the only traits that qualify him for the league’s “elite” fraternity.
“Honestly, that stuff is mostly media driven,” he said. “It’s funny to me that most media people wouldn’t mention a guy like Ben Roethlisberger as an elite quarterback. Ben has won two Super Bowls, right? I know he’s laughing all the way to the trophy case and all the way to the bank.”
 

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Opinion only....Green Bay Packers will have an advantage over the Vikings when they play because McCarthy and the Packers defense knows Brett well. Brett will be seeing the 3-4 defense that the Packers are using this season for the first time. Also believe the defense will take advantage of Brett's tendency to throw interceptions and will have extra motivation to spoil Brett's return to Lambeau Field in the ugly purple of the Vikings....my prediction is that at Lambeau Field the Packers will win big against the Vikings.....JJ
 

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I think Packers will steal this division this year. People keep talking about the Bears and the Vikings, but Rodgers will have a much better 2nd season
 

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I found this link and wanted to pass it on...I haven't tried it yet, but it sure looks good. :toast:

FreeFootballRadio.com


We are your source for locating and linking to free live internet football game broadcasts.




NFL Teams

Here is a list of all the NFL teams and their standings. Just click on a team and you will go to a page displaying schedule and available radio stations with internet broadcasting.


http://freefootballradio.com/nfl.html
 

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Wow...our 1st round draft pick looked like a road grader out there tonight.

BJ Raji plays low and strong.

The Pack is looking pretty good ...even if it is just preseason there is a lot to like from what I see so far.
 

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i can see a big year for Rodgers, look out :toast:
defense has to just come along.
perhaps look for more overs this year with the pack team game totals and in their combined game totals with opponents?

<><>
 

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Born in Milwaukee (but having moved to PA) I was raised a Packers fan and nothing else. Gotta love watching them play. I can't say I cared about Favre last year, but the move to the Vikings just makes me want to see him fail in every possible way.

The defense is looking like they are getting their shit together. Wondering if they are going to take AJ Hawk out at any point, I don't think he should be starting. But Rodgers looks ready to lead that team into the playoffs. Should be a great year.

Oh, and Favre in a dome? Seriously? Did anyone look at his stats in that place before they signed him??!!
 

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Getting up to speed quickly

Rodgers and defense set the tone in laugher

By Bob McGinn of the Journal Sentinel
Posted: Aug. 22, 2009
Green Bay — If there's a danger in peaking midway through the exhibition season, the Green Bay Packers definitely should be on the watch list.
Playing the game at a completely different speed from their opponent for the second Saturday night in a row, the Packers throttled the Buffalo Bills, 31-21, in the 49th Bishop's Charities Game at Lambeau Field.
"We're a long way from peaking," general manager Ted Thompson said. "It's a preseason game. It's a good start."
This is just the second summer this decade in which the Packers opened with a 2-0 record in exhibition games. The other was 2007, when the Packers surprisingly finished 13-3 and went all the way to the NFC Championship Game.
As he watched the Packers own the first half against Buffalo (1-2), Bills vice president of college scouting Tom Modrak couldn't help thinking about the impending race in the NFC North.
"It's too soon, and I'll regret saying this because it happens every year .&ensp.&ensp. but this has got to be the team to beat in that division," Modrak said. "Now three weeks from now I guess I could change my mind, but at this moment I'm thinking, 'Who's better?' I know Minnesota has done a lot of things on offense but .&ensp.&ensp."
Quarterback Aaron Rodgers played the first five series and was in fine form, completing eight of nine for 98 yards, two touchdowns and a near-maximum passer rating of 151.6.
At the same time, the Packers again mounted a highly effective ground game. Ryan Grant bounced 10 times for 43 yards as Green Bay gained 67 yards by halftime.
"There were times it looked like we had the play stopped and they still got 4, 5 yards because their backs, everybody's coming," said Modrak. "They played downhill, fast. I mean, they're coming after you. When they're hitting you, they're hitting you hard."
The Packers probably were even more impressive on defense, however, under Dom Capers, the new coordinator.
"There's no reason to be striking up the band or anything like that," coach Mike McCarthy said. "I know we're 2-0. We've got a lot of turnovers. But the reality is there's things we need to correct, too."
The Bills, playing without injured wide receiver Terrell Owens, turned the ball over on three of their first four possessions before adding another in the waning seconds of the first half. Every other starter for Buffalo played.
Green Bay's defense was without injured co-starters Jeremy Thompson and Clay Matthews at right outside linebacker as well as weak inside linebacker Nick Barnett.
"We were able to get some pressure," Ted Thompson said. "We got some turnovers. That's a very good combination. We were able to take them out of their game a little bit. That's the first time we saw the no-huddle. I thought we functioned pretty good against it."
The first-half turnovers included a deflection by Nick Collins that plopped into the hands of Brady Poppinga, a strip-sack by Brandon Chillar that caused Trent Edwards to lose a fumble into the arms of A.J. Hawk, a strip by Cullen Jenkins on a screen pass to Fred Jackson that was pounced upon by Poppinga and a strip-sack by rookie Brad Jones that was recovered by Desmond Bishop.
"I think Dom is one of the best, and I think it will help," said Modrak. "It instills aggressiveness in your team. You're bringing people all the time and you're coming after them."
Modrak equated the impact of the 3-4 on a team's mentality to what a power rushing game can mean for an offense.
"In the 3-4, you're always attacking," Modrak said. "It's an attack defense and it's good."
In addition to the turnover-causing big plays on defense, there were a host of subtle plays that told the story of a hungry new defense in Green Bay operating at fever pitch, at least for the summer game.
After the Bills rushed for a first down to open the game, Capers made a move to shut that off by standing up Jenkins and reducing Poppinga inside of him. The adjustment messed up the Bills' blocking scheme enabling Jenkins to penetrate and tackle Marshawn Lynch for minus-1. On the next play, Edwards threw his interception.
On the second series, defensive end Johnny Jolly whipped around rookie guard Eric Wood twice in the span of three plays for sacks.
On the third series, cornerback Al Harris looked like he was 24, not 34, when he charged up in run support and forced the run so quickly that Lynch could be corralled and lost 3.
On the fourth series, outside linebacker Aaron Kampman played off a block by rookie tight end Shawn Nelson, a second-round draft choice, in textbook fashion and halted Jackson at the point of attack for 2 yards.
"Johnny (Jolly) is a nice player and he's got skill," Thompson said. "Very nice hustle play by Jenkins (on the screen). Aaron's a heck of a player. I think there's good energy. I think they're enjoying playing the game."
Once again, McCarthy began the game in a double tight-end formation that took advantage of rapidly developing Jermichael Finley. In the first four series, Finley was on the field for 16 of 23 plays, or 70%.
Jason Spitz's holding penalty wiped out Finley's first reception, a 16-yard pass on a shallow crossing route. A few minutes later, matched against cornerback Leodis McKelvin, Finley left him in the dust for an 18-yard completion across the field.
When the Bills matched up against Finley with strong safety Bryan Scott, Finley beat him at the line inside and the gain was 21.
Rodgers' second touchdown pass came on a scramble right when Donald Driver broke off his route and beat cornerback Terrence McGee in the right corner.
"Excellent play," said Thompson. "That's almost impossible for a corner. Once Aaron broke contain Donald could go any way he wanted to."
Said McCarthy: "I thought that was a big-time play. For him to put that ball where he put it .&ensp.&ensp. those are the types of plays that win football games. I think he's primed for a big year."
So, perhaps, are the Packers.
 

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Packers win....my first play of the season..1-0 +$500..love our team this year. Just wonder how long will it take for Vegas to adjust the line to where we lose advantage betting Packers?? If they are getting points Friday against Arizona (0-2) am taking them.
 

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Fantasy football alert...possible value pick here. This guy is young, and starting to look very very good in practice and now on the field in preseason.

<table style="width: 100%;"><tbody><tr valign="top"><td colspan="3" class="headline" valign="top">Fantasy Football Breaking News



Jermichael Finley: Packers' Finley 'unguardable' in passing game

</td> </tr> <tr valign="top"> <td colspan="3" bgcolor="#003b2a"> Jermichael Finley - TE - GB - Aug. 7 - 10:41 pm et </td> </tr> <tr><td colspan="3" valign="top">Aaron Rodgers calls Jermichael Finley "unguardable" in the passing game, and the tight end has been making a host of "wow" plays in practice.
Coach Mike McCarthy said he "absolutely" feels comfortable with Finley in any blocking situation. Even better, tight ends coach Ben McAdoo insists Finely "absolutely" has a shot to start this season. He's becoming a prime breakout candidate. Aug. 7 - 10:41 pm et
Source: ESPN.com
</td></tr></tbody></table>
 

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GO PACK GO! I love this thread, been a Packers fan all my life. Favre has no loyalty. Jim Rome said it best, there are a lot more Packer fans than there are Brett Favre fans. Green Bay will crush the Vikes this year. I hope Brett keeps adding numbers to that interception record:dancefool
 

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Go Pack Go

The Vikings got a $4500 dollar rebate from the government for signing Brett Favre. CASH 4 CLUNKERS. :toast::toast::toast:
 

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I have a theory on Favre...of course he can't "turn it off" like many athletes have trouble with. But I'm afraid it's much deeper than that.

I'm really afraid this will all end very badly for him, some day soon.

He's still just an addict...and he's going to crash and burn when football is gone.

I hope I'm wrong, but it all fits now.
===================
playboy.com
Brett Favre: Playboy Interview
11/97


PLAYBOY: How have you managed to win two MVPs and a Super Bowl with so much on your mind?
FAVRE: Sometimes when I'm alone in my truck I ask myself that question. I think I have had to grow up more than most 28-year-olds. I'm still cheerful and happy in the locker room or when Deanna and I have guests over. But sometimes it feels like I'm faking it. At our team meeting today I looked around at the guys laughing. That was me a few years ago, when the worst thing that could happen was an interception. The games are still great. Playing football on Sunday, I'm gone. That might be why I perform so well. It's so good to get lost in the game for three hours.

PLAYBOY: Football is your escape?
FAVRE: Maybe that's how I got in trouble with pain pills. When the game ends you have to go back to thinking about all the damn things in your life. The pills help you not think.
 

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I hate the Packers but this looks to be a very interesting thread.
 

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