Packers prepare to tackle shortcomings

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GREEN BAY, Wis. (MCT) — This time, the Green Bay Packers’ season did not culminate in confetti and heavyweight title belts. Hardly. There was no celebration, no joy. Only a dismayed and undaunted coach Mike McCarthy holding his season-ending news conference back home at Lambeau Field.

He’s dismayed by the fumbles, dropped passes and overall dysfunction that plagued the offense in a 37-20 loss to the New York Giants. He’s undaunted by how the team is constructed, fully confident the defense can improve the Ted Thompson way — through the draft and player development.

After going 15-1 in the regular season, Green Bay’s Super Bowl defense came to a screeching, bitter, unexpected halt. Now, the off-season begins. On at midweek after the loss, McCarthy looked back and looked ahead.

The defense’s problems are rooted in “fundamentals.” The Packers couldn’t manufacture a pass rush (27th in sacks) and set a NFL record for passing yards allowed (4,796). In 2011, this Super Bowl defense took one giant step backward. A league-high 31 interceptions kept the unit’s heart beating during the regular season. Against New York, it caved.

McCarthy reiterated that what ailed the unit is not overly complicated. Rather, he says, it’s pure fundamentals. Tackling and big plays doomed the defense. That was the theme of his conversation with defensive coordinator Dom Capers earlier this week.

Rules in the new collective bargaining agreement cut back on the amount of padded practices teams can have, but McCarthy said that’d be a “cop out.”

“The tackling just was not there all year,” McCarthy said. “Without getting into the specific statistics, we did not tackle well enough as a football team, from start to finish. It’s something that’s emphasized every single day in practice and something that Dom and I talked a lot about today.”

Still, fans shouldn’t hold their breath for March. Do not expect Thompson to dive headfirst into free agency. Most likely — yet again — he’ll be a bystander.

Thompson paid up for Charles Woodson, Ryan Pickett and Marquand Manuel to upgrade the defense in 2006. McCarthy hinted that the Packers would not issue any blank checks to improve this season’s porous defense.

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