After two quiet weeks, Rashan Gary erupted — two sacks, four pressures, and a fourth-quarter strip that sealed the game. His power-speed blend remains elite when he’s fully engaged.
Kenny Clark dominated the interior, collapsing pockets and forcing Zach Wilson into hurried throws. Devonte Wyatt added a tackle for loss and continues to develop into a true disruptor.
The rotation, including Karl Brooks and T.J. Slaton, controlled line scrimmage despite occasional run-fit lapses.
Verdict: Physical, nasty, and clutch when it mattered.
Grade: B+
Linebackers — Grade: B
Quay Walker’s stat line (10 tackles, one pass deflection) tells only half the story. His sideline speed erased multiple Jets screens, but he bit hard on play-action twice, leading to chunk gains.
Veteran De’Vondre Campbell provided steadiness in coverage, though age is creeping in — lateral quickness fading slightly against tight ends.
The rotation with rookie Edgerrin Cooper added juice; his third-quarter blitz forced a throwaway that ended a Jets drive.
Verdict: Versatile and improving, but discipline still uneven.
Grade: B
Cornerbacks — Grade: C+
The secondary bent dangerously close to breaking.
Jaire Alexander returned from injury but didn’t look himself — trailing on crossers and missing a key open-field tackle that led to a touchdown. Eric Stokes, meanwhile, remains inconsistent; his speed covers mistakes, but instincts lag.
Slot corner Keisean Nixon provided energy and a late breakup on third down but was penalized twice.
The group benefited from pressure up front, masking communication issues that plagued them on double moves.
Verdict: Talent isn’t the issue — cohesion is. They’re a play away from dominance, or disaster.
Grade: C+
Safeties — Grade: B
This was one of the unit’s cleaner outings.
Xavier McKinney continues to justify his offseason signing — a steady voice in the secondary who rarely gets caught out of position. His open-field stop on Breece Hall in the second quarter likely saved four points.
Anthony Johnson Jr. held up well in rotation, showing progress in angles and tackling form.
Still, the deep-middle miscommunication on a 47-yard completion in the third quarter nearly flipped the game.
Verdict: Smart, physical, but vulnerable to tempo.
Grade: B
Special Teams — Grade: B+
The forgotten phase shined brightest.
Kicker Anders Carlson went 3-for-3, including a 52-yarder that sliced through cold Meadowlands wind like a blade. Daniel Whelan’s punting flipped field position twice, and coverage units smothered Xavier Gipson, limiting returns to under 20 yards.
Keisean Nixon nearly broke one on a kickoff, reminding everyone that special teams remains a weapon, not a liability.
Verdict: Solid, dependable, and quietly crucial to victory.
Grade: B+
Coaching — Grade: C+
Matt LaFleur’s game plan started beautifully — motion, misdirection, rhythm throws. Then came the second quarter, when predictability crept in.
Against a defense as aggressive as the Jets’, the lack of quick-game adjustments was glaring. Only when Love went tempo did the offense regain flow.
Defensive coordinator Jeff Hafley, in his first year calling NFL plays, showed flashes of innovation — creative blitz packages and disguised coverages — but still surrendered too many explosive plays on second-and-long.
Clock management also drew scrutiny: burning a timeout before halftime that could’ve extended a final drive.
Verdict: Better balance than last week, but too reactive.
Grade: C+
Intangibles — Grade: A-
Here’s the paradox again: this team frustrates you, then fights for you.
After surrendering a 10-point lead, the sideline didn’t fracture. Leadership from veterans like Preston Smith and Aaron Jones (still sidelined, but vocal) kept composure.
Love’s late-game demeanor — steady eyes, even heartbeat — rippled through the huddle. “He’s got that calm,” said Watson afterward. “You feel it.”
In a young locker room, belief is currency. Right now, the Packers are rich.
Verdict: Flawed but fearless — a dangerous combination.
Grade: A-
II. The Anatomy of an Escape
Football is rarely about perfection. It’s about surviving your own mistakes faster than the opponent can exploit them.
The Packers did exactly that in New York. They overcame turnovers, missed tackles, and play-calling hiccups with sheer persistence. The Jets matched their energy — but not their nerve.
Defensive takeaways at key moments defined the night: Gary’s strip-sack, McKinney’s tipped pass, and Wyatt’s pressure on the final fourth down. It wasn’t pretty, but it was mature.
“We’ve lost games like this before,” LaFleur said postgame. “Tonight we learned how not to.”
That sentence might be the blueprint for Green Bay’s identity in 2025. They’re not dominant — not yet. But they’re evolving from potential to presence.
III. The Bigger Picture
Through three weeks, the Packers sit at 2-1, hovering in that gray zone between contention and confusion. Their youth flashes brilliance, then forgets assignments. Their coaching shines, then stumbles. But something real is forming.
Jordan Love’s leadership is crystallizing. The defense is learning how to close. And most importantly, the team is developing a trait that analytics can’t quantify — resilience.
Every era of Packers football has had its defining lesson: Bart Starr taught discipline, Brett Favre taught audacity, Aaron Rodgers taught mastery. Jordan Love might be teaching endurance — the power to win ugly, grow honestly, and survive storms.
IV. Position Grades Summary
| Unit | Grade | Summary |
|---|---|---|
| Quarterbacks | B | Poised but inconsistent; learning how to lead late. |
| Running Backs | B- | Physical, limited explosiveness. |
| Wide Receivers | B+ | Youthful energy, flashes of brilliance. |
| Tight Ends | C+ | Raw talent, costly drops. |
| Offensive Line | C | Leaky under pressure, improved run blocking late. |
| Defensive Line | B+ | Gary and Clark dominant when unleashed. |
| Linebackers | B | Active, overaggressive at times. |
| Cornerbacks | C+ | Inconsistent technique, flashes of elite potential. |
| Safeties | B | Smart positioning, one deep lapse. |
| Special Teams | B+ | Quietly excellent night. |
| Coaching | C+ | Good adjustments, slow reactions. |
| Intangibles | A- | Heart and composure kept them alive. |
V. What Comes Next
The Packers fly home with bruises and film full of teaching moments. They also carry a record that could easily be worse — and that’s progress.
LaFleur’s next challenge: translate chaos into consistency. The pieces are there — Love’s confidence, a maturing receiver corps, a defense rediscovering its teeth.
But to evolve from survivors into contenders, Green Bay must learn the difference between escaping and owning a game.
Because someday soon, an opponent won’t let them off the hook.
VI. Final Reflection: The Win Inside the Win
After the locker room emptied, Jordan Love sat at his stall for a moment longer, still in uniform. The hum of reporters had faded. Equipment staff moved quietly around him.
He looked up and said softly to no one in particular, “We finished.”
In football, sometimes that’s everything.
The Packers didn’t conquer New York — they endured it. And endurance, more than dominance, might be the truest sign that Green Bay’s rebuild is starting to harden into something formidable.
Ugly wins don’t decorate resumes. But they forge teams.