Green Bay Packers Injury Fallout Hits Charles Woodson Hardest
The injury bomb fell on Green Bay, Wisconsin this Sunday, and the fallout will surely hit Charles Woodson the hardest. Just as many Packer fans were marveling at the relative good health of this team, Aaron Kampman and Al Harris, two Packer stalwarts that have had few injuries throughout their careers, were hit hard by misfortune.
The first question that comes to mind is, ” Will these injuries have the same devastating effect on the Packers defense as Nick Barnett’s and Cullen Jenkins’ injuries did last season? With the improvement this year in personnel and scheme, I wouldn’t expect that drastic a drop-off.
What hurts as much as anything is that the two players whose seasons have just ended might have been the Packer’s two least-injured players.
When Kampman missed the Packers’ Nov. 15 win over Dallas because of a concussion, it was the first game since 2003 Aaron had missed. Harris has only missed 4 games in his entire career, all last season when he suffered a ruptured spleen. For his part, an adamant Al Harris says he’ll be back in six months.
The fallout from these injuries will affect the Packers in many ways: For one, the inexperienced Brad Jones and much-maligned Jarret Bush suddenly will see a lot more playing time and another cornerback will probably be brought in. As I am writing this, I see that it’s already happened. On Monday, they worked out and signed Josh Bell, a former Denver Broncos backup who started five games last year.
With Dom Capers’ propensity for playing nickel, Jarret Bush will now see significant playing time as the nickel back, as Tramon Williams moves into Harris’ spot. That also means Brandon Underwood will see action when the Packers go to the dime package.
Jeremy Thompson, the OTA marvel that looked so impressive in shorts and helmets, but disappeared once the pads came on, will now be active on game day for the Packers. The Packers are unlikely to look at free agent linebackers, as they feel that is a position of depth and they also have Cyril Obiozor waiting on the practice squad.
The leadership quotient on the Packers has also taken a big hit. The veterans Kampman and Harris were fixtures on defense and in the locker room. As Nick Collins said, “Guys were ready to step up, but not hearing their voices out there, it was tough, because they’re so vocal out there and they’re leaders and everybody feeds off their passion for the game.”
This also ratchets up the pressure on the offense to score more points and be more efficient in the red zone. Few people doubt the Packers ability to chew up yardage (they are currently seventh in the league in total yardage), but they currently have scored a touchdown only 52% of the time from the Red Zone (18 of 34). That’s a lot of points left on the table that has kept some games unnecessarily close. The margin for error will now just get considerably smaller.
But the biggest impact, I fear, will be on Charles Woodson (AKA Superman). Can Dom Capers afford to let Woodson loose as he did in the Dallas game, where Woodson single-handedly ruined any plans Tony Romo had for a Cowboys victory?
For your answer, watch the replay of the 49er game. Two plays after Harris went out, Capers blitzed Underwood and Woodson. The result; touchdown to Vernon Davis over the top on a vertical route, covered man-to-man by Clay Mathews with too-late help from Jarret Bush.
After the game, Capers said he decided to stop calling for pressure packages at that point to keep Woodson exclusively on Vernon Davis. So for everyone clamoring to know why the Packers stopped blitzing, there’s your answer. Of course, with a straight four man rush and no blitz pressure, Alex Smith had the time to quickly march the 49ers down the field for a touchdown to bring the game to a one score differential. Fortunately, the offense was able to move the chains and kill the clock on their final possession.
So the question I’ll be asking myself every week is WWCD? What Would Capers Do?
Regardless of WWCD, there can be no question about one thing: the Packers defense has been at its best when they have been aggressively attacking opposing quarterbacks. A huge part of that was due to Charles Woodson. I hope this doesn’t mean we’ve lost that.
————————————
You can find more of Jersey Al Bracco’s articles on several sports websites: Jersey Al’s Blog, Packer Chatters , Packers Lounge, Bleacher Report and of course, NFL Touchdown . Al Bracco is the Green Bay Packers Draft Correspondent for Draftek.com.
You can also follow Jersey Al on facebook and twitter.
I think GB can survive these injuries better than they did the Jenkins and Barnett losses last year. They simply have more depth in these positions. Kampman was struggling anyway. Harris was hurt a little last year and his backup, Tramon Williams, did a good job filling in. I’m not losing hope.
No one’s losing hope, but this will change and restrict some of the things Capers will be able to do. he will have to find the right balance, while minimizing the exposure for Jarret Bush and Brandon Underwood.
Good analysis- I wish both Harris and Kampmann all the best, class acts both of them! This will surely be a huge hurdle to overcome. But you are forgetting the point that brandon Chillar will be back from injury, and beeing the best sover LB, replacing hawk/jones with him in passing situations will restrain opposing TEs alot more than asking CM3 and barnett to do it.
I am a strong believer in giving guys chances of stepping up, and this surely will give a lot of DBs this chance. Lets see how Bell respond to start working out again, but in my oppinion he should be the nickelback sooner than later, because Bush has shown us several times that he is a special teamer, and Underwood probably still is too raw. But lets give them a chance to shine.
All good points, Peter. With Chillar coming back, you will probably see more of the Packers “Big Oakie” defense, where he plays like a third safety.
And BTW, I think Matthews is very good in coverage, but it wasn’t fair to ask him to cover Vernon Davis one-on-one down the field.
Thanks for stopping in all the way from Denmark!