Packers manhandle Cardinals backups
Arizona coach Ken Whisenhunt took a cautious approach, Green Bay's
Mike McCarthy kept the Packers at full bore most of the day.
The result was a 33-7 Green Bay rout of the NFC champion
Cardinals in their regular season finale on Sunday.
In a few days, the teams will meet again on the same field in
the first round of the playoffs. The outcome will determine which
coach took the right approach.
"We wanted to come out here to win the game, keep our razor
sharp and gain some momentum going into the playoffs,'' McCarthy
said. "It didn't matter who we were playing. I understand Arizona
had a different agenda. ... We like the way we played the last
eight weeks and it was very important for us to maximize this
opportunity.''
McCarthy knew he was taking a risk that one of his key
players might get hurt.
Aaron Rodgers played three quarters, mostly against Arizona
reserves, completing 21 of 26 passes for 235 yards and a touchdown.
Charles Woodson, who later left with a shoulder injury
McCarthy said wasn't serious, returned an interception 45 yards for
another score as the Packers (11-5) won for the seventh time in
eight games.
It was the most one-sided home loss for Arizona in
Whisenhunt's three seasons with the Cardinals, and many of the
Packers didn't think it was meaningless.
"They've got a lot to think about,'' Green Bay defensive end
Johnny Jolly said.
Cardinals defensive tackle Darnell Dockett, however, said the
game "kind of really didn't mean anything.''
"I guess if they want to celebrate it they can go ahead,''
Dockett said. "But us personally, we know we've got some work to do
and our main focus is next weekend.''
Arizona (10-6) sat quarterback Kurt Warner after one quarter.
Backup Matt Leinart completed 13 of 21 passes for 96 yards and was
intercepted twice.
Most of Arizona's first-team defense played only one
possession.
The Cardinals lost standout cornerback Dominique
Rodgers-Cromartie to a bruised left kneecap on the third play of
the game.
Whisenhunt said he had two game plans ready. The one he would
use was determined by the outcome of the Minnesota-New York Giants
game. When the Vikings won, ending any chance for Arizona to get a
No. 2 seed, Whisenhunt opted for the bland option.
"I can't speak to what they were doing,'' Whisenhunt said of
the Packers. "I know we had a plan going in about what we were
going to do if the situation was the way it ended up being. It was
very difficult to stick to that plan. All I can say is hopefully it
will pay off for us next week.''
Whisenhunt thought his team let down before the game even
started after seeing the Vikings win in a rout.
Rodgers noted the Cardinals never blitzed after the starters
left, giving little evidence in this game what they might use in
the next.
"We'll look at the film obviously and critique it,'' Rodgers
said, "but the body of work we'll focus on is really the last four
or five games they played before this one.''
Woodson left the game with a jammed shoulder late in the
first half. McCarthy said he expects his star defender to be ready
for the playoff opener.
"Just when he was walking off the field he told me right then
'I'll be fine,''' McCarthy said. "So I wasn't concerned after
that.''
In addition to Rodgers-Cromartie, Arizona wide receiver
Anquan Boldin (right ankle) and defensive tackle Calais Campbell
(thumb) also were injured.
Rodgers-Cromartie, selected to the Pro Bowl in this his
second NFL season, was carted off after his knee came down on the
cleat of Green Bay tight end Jermichael Finley less than two
minutes into the game.
The loss of the player teammates call "DRC'' would be
devastating against Rodgers.
"It's feeling a whole lot better than when it first
happened,'' Rodgers-Cromartie said. "It's just real sore.''
Still, he insisted he would play next weekend.
On the possession before he left, Woodson picked off
Leinart's errant pass and raced down the left sideline, diving in
for the touchdown to make it 26-0 with 4 1/2 minutes left in the
half.
It was his third interception return for a TD this season, a
franchise record.
He also broke the Packers' record with his eighth career
defensive touchdown since joining the team in 2006 - seven
interceptions and one fumble return. He had shared the mark with
Herb Adderly (1961-69) and Darren Sharper (1997-2004).
Woodson set a career best with his ninth pick of the season.
He has 45 in his career.
Arizona barely avoided its first shutout loss since the
second week of the 2003 season.
Ralph Brown intercepted Matt Flynn's pass and returned it 80
yards to Packers 8. After a penalty, Brian St. Pierre threw his
first NFL touchdown pass on the next play, a 3-yarder to Larry
Fitzgerald, with 2:59 to play.
Notes: Rodgers fell 26 yards shy of the Packers'
single-season record for yards passing. ... Boldin passed 1,000
yards receiving for a franchise record fifth time. ... The
Cardinals' Ben Graham had three punts inside the 20, tying the
record of 42 for a season set by San Francisco's Andy Lee in 2007.
... Fitzgerald, who played the entire game, set a career high with
his 13th TD catch of the season. ... Green Bay beat Arizona in the
preseason 44-37, leading 38-10 at halftime.