Packers Building That Chemistry

The stronger the team chemistry, the higher the success rate

You can't have a winning team in any sport without good team chemistry. What that team chemistry achieves can vary from sport to sport, but the result is always success. Outside of football, my second sport is hockey. When hockey players have good chemistry on the ice, they can usually pass the puck to their teammate exactly where the recipient wants it for them to take a shot. On defense, good team chemistry will result in teammates knowing where the other is or will be, at all times. If an opponent skating with the puck breaks one way, good team chemistry allows a defender to stay in position knowing their teammate will pick up that puck handler. Team chemistry on a football team, in ways, can be very similar. 

What's probably the first thing you think of for team chemistry on a football team? I'd say Quarterback/Receiver chemistry. The minute the ball leaves the Quarterback's hand and it's left sailing through the air, it's fair game unless it hits the ground. It may seem like a very simple task, but there's a lot of trust that goes into throwing that ball to a receiver. A Quarterback needs to know what route each receiver is running, how fast that receiver usually runs, and the best place to put that ball in that receiver's hands. From a receiver's perspective, they need to know their Quarterback's tendencies in certain situations. If the clock needs to be stopped, the QB may lead them much closer to the sideline so they can make the catch and get out of bounds. If a QB is being pressured, what can they do to benefit them the most? Switch to a comeback route? And a receiver needs to know their QB's capabilities. If that receiver prefers the ball placed in one place, can their QB get it there? They may have to adjust accordingly, if not.

This is why you read about Quarterbacks getting together with WRs, TEs, and RBs in the offseason to work on timing. Every pass-catcher is different. One receiver cutting across the field could run 10 yards from the time the ball leaves the QB's hand to when it gets there, another could only run 5. The Quarterback needs to know this before they throw that ball through the air so that the ball isn't behind the receiver and in the hands of a defender. 

Chemistry can be very similar for defense. I mentioned earlier that in hockey, defensive chemistry often relies on knowing where your teammates are, or will be. Football is very similar, especially in the secondary. Outside of just getting flat-out beat, what's the most common cause of blown coverage? Miscommunication. Unfortunately, over the last few years, the Packers have had a lot of miscommunication on defense leading to big plays for the offense. Miscommunication or not, this shows a lack of chemistry between players. If a corner is going to let a receiver go, they need to know the safety is going to be there to pick them up. Assignments aside, chemistry will also tell them what their teammate's tendencies are in certain situations. The play may be designed for the Safety to pick up the perimeter WR if the CB cuts them loose, but what if the tight end is running in the secondary? The CB needs to know whether or not there's a chance the safety could cover elsewhere before turning the WR loose. 

The Packers are getting there but could improve.

Improving that chemistry for 2024

In the first half of the 2023 season, we saw the Packers' offense struggle. Whether or not this is truly the case, part of the reason seemed to be a lot of disconnect between Jordan Love and the receivers. You'd see Love throw a pass that would end up 10 yards away from a receiver and wonder what the heck happened. Whether it was Love or the receiver's fault, we'll never quite know. It could've been Love not quite knowing the best place to put that ball, or it could've been the receivers' fault for not running the correct route. Either way, to fix it, you need that team chemistry to help slow them down and get them back to knowing what the other is going to do in the situation.

Avoiding this in 2024 could be as easy as having a full year under your belt with this group of receivers. They could already have a good idea of where that ball needs to be and they need to do their best to ensure it's there each time. The likelihood of a new receiver making the roster this year is slim to none. So, these receivers should already have good chemistry with Jordan Love deeming this question unnecessary. But they can always get better. Hopefully, Love has been putting in the work with his receivers to ensure when that time comes, they play to the best of their own abilities and not have to worry about one another. 

On the defensive side of the ball, I believe signing a player like Xavier McKinney is huge for team chemistry. That may seem strange to you since he's the new guy in the bunch, but you have to look at the confidence a player of his skill set can instill in the other 10 men on the field. If only a serviceable player is in that position, the confidence in them easily picking up a receiver or diagnosing a play is small. With McKinney being a star in the past and now today, the defense has the confidence to follow their own assignment completely, knowing that if things turn south, the safety may clean up the mess. 

The Packers have the chance for team chemistry to hit an all-time high this season. Hopefully, they improve on last year and 2024 will be a very successful year. 

 

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Greg Meinholz is a lifelong devoted Packer fan. A contributor to CheeseheadTV as well as PackersTalk. Follow him on Twitter @gmeinholz for Packers commentary, random humor, beer endorsements, and occasional Star Wars and Marvel ramblings.

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Comments (31)

Fan-Friendly This filter will hide comments which have ratio of 5 to 1 down-vote to up-vote.
stockholder's picture

June 30, 2024 at 08:11 am

Chemistry doesn’t guarantee success-

1. Great players don’t need chemistry.
2. Chemistry brings Over-Achieving.
3. Coaches want commitment first.
4. You play like you practice
5. ** Winning- elevates performance.**

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mnbadger's picture

June 30, 2024 at 08:25 am

Point 2. isn't achieving beyond your baseline exactly what we want?
Tight chemistry improves all 5 points you raise so am I understanding you Stock, that that you disagree with your own opening sentence?
GPG!

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stockholder's picture

June 30, 2024 at 09:02 am

If you over achieve-
It always next man up.
You never win it all.
All 5 points go together.
(To be a dynasty)

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PackerBackerAZ's picture

June 30, 2024 at 11:43 am

Your points, except number 3 are just plain wrong. Great players can achieve nothing by themselves in a team sport. Chemistry with your teammates is essential to winning. Chemistry brings on cohesiveness and confidence within the system, allowing the team to achieve its full potential, not over-achieve. I believe coaches want a player's full commitment to the system first. That allows for teaching all the nuances of that system to the players. You never play like you practice. Players should always practice like they play. Game speed at practice is essential to success. It seems like semantics, but practice always comes before the games. Winning doesn't elevate performance. Performance is elevated by commitment, chemistry and practice and that leads to winning.

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DoubleJ's picture

June 30, 2024 at 08:38 am

1. Totally wrong. Even the best players need chemistry with their teammates. If you don't have that you will struggle.
2. Wrong again. Chemistry brings consistency. Play in play out knowing where your teammate is going to be only comes with chemistry. That might look like an over-achieving team but it isn't.
3. True. However, all the communication in the world is worthless if you don't have chemistry to know the communication has been received.
4. Misnomer. You won't do some things in practice that you would in a game. Reason is you don't want to risk hurting your teammates. There are just as many times that you can have a bad week of practice and kill it on game day. At the same time have a great week of practice and lay an egg on game day.
5. Wrong. Winning creates confidence but that doesn't mean the play has elevated. You might start the season against the worst teams in the league, win, and gain confidence. However, then you play the better teams and lose. Overall your team's level of play was the same.

It seriously sounds like you never played team sports.

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stockholder's picture

June 30, 2024 at 09:07 am

No your wrong-
It's do your job!
Don't confuse chemistry with Popularity.

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DoubleJ's picture

June 30, 2024 at 09:33 am

I played a team sport at the highest level for my age. I was a high level player on the team and was never subbed out. I'm not confusing popularity with chemistry at all. When you have good chemistry, you know what your teammate is going to do in almost every situation. You don't even have to look at or communicate with them. You know they will see the same thing you do. Sure you need to do your job and even the best players get beat. However, if you don't have chemistry your team will suffer as you don't play as fast. You are constantly double checking everything to make sure your teammate isn't screwing up. Seriously you do not know what you are talking about but you are trying to come off as an expert.

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stockholder's picture

June 30, 2024 at 09:57 am

Roll models Regress.
I would not want a STAR player
to change for chemistry.
He shouldn't have too.
If a leader can't do his job, you fire him!
.

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DoubleJ's picture

June 30, 2024 at 10:47 am

Rodgers didn't care about building chemistry with young players at the end of his time in GB. A big reason why they weren't as good. The player talent was there but he didn't care. Once again you are proving you are completely wrong.

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Ferrari-Driver's picture

June 30, 2024 at 11:16 am

Quote DoubleJ: "When you have good chemistry, you know what your teammate is going to do in almost every situation."

I would think that practice and repetition would accomplish that.

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DoubleJ's picture

June 30, 2024 at 02:23 pm

Just practice drills won't get that. You need to scrimmage to really get chemistry.

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Ferrari-Driver's picture

July 01, 2024 at 11:56 pm

I wasn't talking about chemistry; I was referring to, as an example, a wide receiver running precise routes and the quarterback practicing getting the ball to him at the proper moment.

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Rory P Scrotem's picture

June 30, 2024 at 02:00 pm

Hey Stockholder...I usually read your comments & most of the time you make allotta sense. However your comment(s) here...w-a-y off the mark re: Chemistry! ;)

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stockholder's picture

June 30, 2024 at 05:07 pm

So - Your saying it guarantees success.
Great- Make your reservations for Disney land.
Because thats the argument.

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LLCHESTY's picture

June 30, 2024 at 08:06 pm

You must be on Stockholder's chemical wavelength, I find 90% of his comments to make no sense at all. Maybe I'm just distracted by the ignoring of any sentence structure or punctuation rules.

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Oppy's picture

July 01, 2024 at 12:59 am

There is nothing that guarantees success.

Debating the rest of this with you is pointless. You have strange ideas about how the world around you operates, which in and of itself isn't a bad thing, but you have repeatedly proven to be unable to articulate the connections between what you state and what you really mean.. or, you're just way out there. Not sure which. If you're just a poor communicator, it must be awfully frustrating for you. I wish I could help.

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Todd's picture

July 01, 2024 at 06:06 am

No, chemistry does not “guarantee” success, and the author did not say that it does.

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mnbadger's picture

June 30, 2024 at 08:18 am

One more reason the defensive chemistry will be better - nobody's tuned out the DC.
At times we looked lost and frustrated over the past couple of seasons.
Hopefully there's early success so we start with confidence and build from there.
GPG!

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Spock's picture

June 30, 2024 at 08:57 am

I rewatched the Packers/Dallas Playoff game last night (I've been "saving" the taped games for the Dead season) and the announcers kept commenting on how "off" the chemistry was between Dak and Cee-Dee Lamb for Dallas. One of Them also commented on how they thought the people saying the Packers "Needed" a "true" WR1 were wrong and that they Packers having multiple receivers with chemistry with Love was a plus. I gotta say I enjoyed rewatching the game almost as much as seeing it the first time! The look on Jerry Jones' face every time the camera showed him is still delightful to see even these many months later :)

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PackEyedOptimist's picture

June 30, 2024 at 09:14 am

By far, the best way to improve “Chemistry” is to improve communication during practice and games. I think we see Gute agreeing with this by looking at his off-season moves.
McKinney, Bullard, and Evan Williams are all excellent communicators.

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DoubleJ's picture

June 30, 2024 at 09:39 am

In my experience the best way to improve chemistry was scrimmaging in practice. You do all your drills and then scrimmage. You might put limiters in place in the scrimmage to reinforce some drills. For me as a soccer player it could be 2 touches max per time you had the ball in the scrimmage. The chemistry developed in scrimmages would translate to the games as well.

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splitpea1's picture

June 30, 2024 at 11:27 am

Regarding the defensive chemistry of the Packers, the one area we should be looking to improve is with the starting linebackers. Quay was guilty of a few of those miscommunication issues, and with a potentially new starter in Cooper, he needs to be assignment-sure, diagnose plays faster, and be the leader of this unit. There's no more Barry to blame, so I would hope Hafley can turn him into more of the impact player that everyone was hoping he could be.

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NFLfan's picture

June 30, 2024 at 12:13 pm

Chemistry & trust is critical-these guys are going into faux battle every week. The bonds between many of them last a lifetime.

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Leatherhead's picture

June 30, 2024 at 01:16 pm

Being on a team is similar to being married because you have to work together, and the better your chemistry is, the better you're going to work together. Trust, accountability, support.......those are all a part of that.

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Bitternotsour's picture

June 30, 2024 at 05:03 pm

It's an entirely new concept, because chemistry used to mean doing whatever Aaron wanted.

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stockholder's picture

June 30, 2024 at 05:21 pm

I think most here forgot the truth.
It was the defense's job to get Rodgers the ball.
Which credits them with a stop.

People expected Rodgers to score
every time he touched the ball.

Team chemistry is not about raising the bar
for some.
And ignoring it for others.

Most players go about their job.
Reading too much into chemistry,
can have a adverse effect, if goals are not met.

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Oppy's picture

July 01, 2024 at 12:52 am

That word, "Chemistry"...

...I do not think it means, what you think it means.

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LambeauPlain's picture

July 01, 2024 at 12:19 pm

Seems like it.

Two hydrogen atoms and a hydrogen atom create a chemical synergy called water. Without chemistry, all you would have is gas. I can understand why SH eschews chemistry. He seems more comfortable with the gas.

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Swisch's picture

June 30, 2024 at 01:48 pm

If guys buy into the teamwork and bond in genuine camaraderie, these days with the Packers can be among the best of their lives, and the beginning lifelong friendships.
It requires sacrificing for each other by sharing the suffering and the accolades.
I just watched once again a replay of the 2013 Lombardi documentary on the NFL Network as part of their series, "A Football Life."
It is wonderfully instructive and inspiring even with repeated viewings.
Lombardi wasn't content to teach the techniques and tactics of the game of football, but was also intent on instilling in his players a sense of purpose in all that we do as an opportunity for grit and gallantry.
***
He talked about life more than football, because everything we do for our own personal honor and the good of others is of real importance.
From this came his exhortation to not do things the right way once in a while, but always.
From this came his encouragement to strive for perfection while realizing that we will always fall short -- but in the process attain excellence.
From this came his extraordinary ability to see players as persons with different needs for achieving their potential holistically, and so to treat them not merely collectively but as unique individuals.
Lombardi seemed to believe that in becoming better men, his guys would be better players; and that in becoming better players, they could become better men.
***
From this came Lionel Aldridge saying he used to like to simply listen to Lombardi talk about life.
From this came Dave Robinson saying he cried at the funeral of Lombardi as a white man because he was like a father.
From this came Herb Adderley saying he loved his own father but didn't think of him every day; yet he thought of Lombardi every day.
From this came a group of guys of various personalities and from diverse backgrounds who have cherished being Green Bay Packers for all of their lives.
From this came the Lombardi Packers becoming a team not just of glory but of legend.
Hence, even good people and true fans from places like New Jersey were attracted and attached to the Green Bay Packers for decades ongoing.
***
On a quick personal note (perhaps Lombardi would understand), this lack of solidarity will be the death of America.
It is in reclaiming our neighborliness that we will restore America to the best of itself.
For us to say, "It's a Wonderful Life," we need not the gaudy glitz of Pottersville and its every-man-for-himself; we need the togetherness of Bedford Falls.
On that note, highly recommended for the Fourth of July is a movie of similar style and substance, artistry and integrity, humor and honor: "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington."
As elicited so powerfully in the climax of the drama: We fight for the lost causes most of all, and because of one simple rule: Love thy neighbor.
***
By the way, in all of my idealism -- which may rub some people the wrong way -- I admit to being largely a schmuck and a slouch.
In the spirit of Lombardi, I strive for the ideals that are the best of America knowing that I will come up short, but hoping I will in the process become a better person.
We do well to encourage each other in this endeavor, as teamwork applies to all of our lives.

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pantz_bURp's picture

June 30, 2024 at 08:40 pm

Thanks much Swisch...I appreciate your insight and thoughts on the game of football as well as life. Peace, and thanks for being you!

As Packer fans, we are blessed with all the tradition. I love reading about the Lombardi era and the cast of characters. My goodness, it would have been awesome to experience it in person as it was all unfolding.

Keep on...keeping on my friend,

P. Burp

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Swisch's picture

June 30, 2024 at 09:02 pm

Thanks much, PB. Your words mean a lot and are greatly appreciated.
Being born in 1962, I was unfortunately too young to experience the Lombardi Era; but somehow I became drawn to its lore in the early 1970s -- perhaps because of television presentations.
This lore of the Lombardi Era helped to sustain me as an avid fan of the Packers throughout the mostly lean years of the 1970s and 1980s, even while living almost all of that time in the Chicago area surrounded by Bears fans.
By the way, my younger cousin caddied for Bart Starr at a cancer tournament near Milwaukee in the late 1980s and said he indeed lived up to his image of being a truly great person.

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