HeadtoHeadFootball -
  • Home
  • NFL
  • NFL STANDINGS
  • STATISTICS
  • Soccer
  • Place Bet
  • Contact Us
HeadtoHeadFootball -
Home
NFL
NFL STANDINGS
STATISTICS
Soccer
Place Bet
Contact Us
  • Home
  • NFL
  • NFL STANDINGS
  • STATISTICS
  • Soccer
  • Place Bet
  • Contact Us
NFL

Vikes' Barr expecting worst from Packers fans

EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. — For the past 10 weeks, Minnesota Vikings linebacker Anthony Barr has been reminded of his hit that resulted in a broken collarbone for Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers.

Twitter posts are filled with statements of him being a dirty player, with some taking it as far as to wish him bodily harm. The linebacker shared one such sentiment on Snapchat, posting a photo of a letter sent to him in the mail from someone hoping “you get your neck snapped.”

  • It’s not just Aaron Rodgers’ absence, shortcomings at multiple positions are the reason the Packers season is effectively over with two games to play.

  • With two weeks of the regular season remaining, the playoff picture is partially drawn. Which teams have the best chances of making the Super Bowl? Who are the favorites to win it? Football Outsiders presents the latest intel.

  • The Vikings’ offense has gone from tepid to troublesome for opposing defenses this season, and coordinator Pat Shurmur is the key.

2 Related

Rodgers suffered a fractured clavicle in his throwing shoulder on the Packers’ second series against the Vikings on Oct. 15 at U.S. Bank Stadium. As Rodgers rolled to his right, he was brought to the ground by Barr — a legal tackle — as his pass went incomplete.

Ten weeks after the incident, the hateful messages haven’t stopped.

“It is what it is,” Barr said. “What are you doing to do? I can’t control that. I have to go about my business the same way I’ve been doing for the last — what’s it, Week 16? Same old story.”

On Saturday night, Barr knows the type of reception he’ll receive at Lambeau Field when the Vikings face the Packers on their home turf.

“I’m sure they’ll all be fired up,” Barr said. “So will we.”

Anthony Barr’s hit on Aaron Rodgers on Oct. 15 resulted in a broken collarbone for the Packers’ star quarterback. Rodgers returned from the injury last week as Green Bay was eliminated from playoff contention. Adam Bettcher/Getty Images

He expects to be a target from a Packers fan base that blames him for dismantling the team’s season. Tuning out that noise, he says, won’t be an issue.

“I don’t think it’ll be too much of a factor,” Barr said, “I’m pretty good at tuning that stuff out.”

Asked about what they might face from the Green Bay crowd Saturday, some of Barr’s teammates expect the retribution to be between fans and not spill onto the field.

“From the years that I’ve been here, there hasn’t been this much hate [in the rivalry], should I say, but it shouldn’t become anything as far as physical,” receiver Stefon Diggs said. “I hope not. I hope there’s still some class there. It’s really unfortunate what happened. Nobody wants that for anybody, but it was, like, how many weeks ago?

“Hopefully they’ve moved past it. [Rodgers] came back. Their season didn’t go probably the way they wanted it to because they didn’t have him. But at the end of the day, we all still play football, we’re all grown men. Hopefully it doesn’t become any type of thing where somebody has to worry about their safety because this is grown men you’re talking about. I hope they don’t try to hurt anybody.”

Rodgers returned for last week’s game against Carolina but, with the Packers having been eliminated from playoff contention, was put on injured reserve Tuesday.

Given that his hit was deemed legal by referees and Barr did not incur a subsequent fine, the level of vitriol that has been spewed at Barr is surprising to everyone but the linebacker.

“No, not really,” Barr said. “It’s Aaron Rodgers. It’s one of the faces of the NFL. It’s going to happen.”

Barr said he hasn’t heard from any Green Bay players who wanted to make amends and move past the incident. While he expects a physical game against their NFC North rival, it’s no different than what he says he’d anticipate any other week.

The Vikings are two wins from a first-round bye in the playoffs. Getting out of Green Bay with a victory helps the Vikings’ chances of achieving that goal, the only thing with which Barr says he’s concerned.

“I think you’re supposed to play to the whistle regardless of who you’re playing,” Barr said. “I don’t know. I’m going to play my game.

“We’re playing for seeding. We have big things to play for right now. Division games are always important. Road games are always important. My focus, our focus, is winning the game. Doesn’t matter who the opponent is. We’re going to go in there and try and play to win.”

Soccer

By the numbers: Scoring savant Liverpool leads the way

If Tuesday’s Champions League slate was short on attacking, Wednesday’s offerings were blessed by a litany of tallies as 33 goals were bagged across eight group-stage finales.

Seven-goal Liverpool was unplayable, Porto put a five-spot on slumping Monaco, and Roberto Firmino and Cristiano Ronaldo set individual standards for proficiency in front of goal.

Naturally, it was a matchday rife with compelling statistics, and here’s a look at a baker’s dozen from an unrelentingly exciting day on the continent.

1: Gabriel Jesus finally lost his first competitive match for Manchester City courtesy of the shock 2-1 defeat at Shakhtar Donetsk.

3: Philippe Coutinho’s hat-trick was his first treble for Liverpool since joining the Merseyside club from Inter in 2013.

4: For the first time since 2006-07, four English clubs won their respective Champions League groups.

5: By virtue of Liverpool’s victory over a lifeless Spartak Moscow, the Reds join Tottenham, City, Manchester United, and Chelsea in the last-16, marking the first time five clubs from the same country have made the knockouts.

6: Dental deity Firmino’s six goals at this stage is a new Liverpool record.

12: Feyenoord’s late victory over Napoli ended a streak of a dozen Champions League defeats on the bounce for the Eredivisie holder.

16: Tottenham recorded 16 points in winning Group H, matching a record for English clubs with Arsenal (2005-06 – eventual runner-up) and Manchester United (2007-08 – eventual winner)

23: Yes, Liverpool again – but the 23 goals Jurgen Klopp’s lot scored in the group stage sets a Champions League standard for English sides, and is second all-time to Paris Saint-Germain’s record 25.

100: Pep Guardiola became the sixth manager to register a century of tilts in the competition, joining Sir Alex Ferguson, Arsene Wenger, Carlo Ancelotti, Jose Mourinho, and Mircea Lucescu.

306: The 2017-18 group stage set a record with 306 goals scored.

1470: Alvaro Negredo’s penalty for Besiktas was his first Champions League goal in 1,470 days, with the last coming for Man City against Viktoria Plzen in 2013.

6 for 6: Real Madrid’s Ronaldo became the first player to score in all six group games matches in the tournament’s history.

17, 192: City teen talent Phil Foden became the youngest English player (17 years, 192 days) to start a Champions League match, and is the youngest of any nationality to line up from kickoff for an English club since Cesc Fabregas did so for Arsenal in 2004.

(Photos courtesy: Getty Images)

“If you think about it, I've never held a job in my life. I went from being an NFL player to a coach to a broadcaster. I haven't worked a day in my life.”
-John Madden


© 2020 Copyright . All rights reserved | Terms & Conditions | Privacy policy