Panthers Pack Quite a Punch

Trio's Big Plays Lead to Comeback Victory in Green Bay: Panthers 35, Packers 31

Carolina's DeAngelo Williams, left, scored four touchdowns yesterday in Green Bay, including the game-winner with 1 minute 30 seconds left.
Carolina's DeAngelo Williams, left, scored four touchdowns yesterday in Green Bay, including the game-winner with 1 minute 30 seconds left. (By Jonathan Daniel -- Getty Images)
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By Chris Jenkins
Associated Press
Monday, December 1, 2008

GREEN BAY, Wis., Nov. 30 -- The Carolina Panthers should have been trudging into a snowy Green Bay night wondering for the second week in a row if they're really as good as their record would indicate.

Instead, they were celebrating an improbable come-from-behind victory Sunday, thanks to late back-to-back-to-back big plays by Mark Jones, Steve Smith and DeAngelo Williams -- and a Green Bay Packers team that seemed intent on giving the game away.

But with division rival Tampa Bay coming to Charlotte next Monday night, Smith wasn't gloating about the Panthers' stunning 35-31 victory in wintry conditions at Lambeau Field.

"It just means we're 9-3," Smith said. "It's nothing to go start making T-shirts about. It's just a record. We've got a very good opponent coming in our house Monday night. That's our next focus."

Williams scored his fourth touchdown of the game with 1 minute 30 seconds left after a big kickoff return by Jones and catch by Smith on a deep ball from Jake Delhomme. With the win, Carolina rebounded from a head-scratching blowout at Atlanta last week and kept pace in the competitive NFC South.

The loss could be crushing for the Packers (5-7), who were coming off a blowout loss in New Orleans on Monday night.

"We have been way too inconsistent, definitely underachieving at times," Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers said. "The inconsistency is the biggest disappointment."

Green Bay's last-minute special teams and defensive breakdowns ruined what could have been a signature win for Rodgers, who led Green Bay back from a 21-10 halftime deficit.

With the game tied at 28, Rodgers drove Green Bay deep into Carolina territory and absorbed a jarring late hit out of bounds by Carolina's Julius Peppers for a penalty. That set up first and goal on the 7.

The Panthers made a goal-line stand, but the Packers took a 31-28 lead on Mason Crosby's 19-yard field goal with 1:57 remaining.

But Green Bay immediately gave up a 45-yard kickoff return to Jones and a 54-yard heave from Delhomme to Smith to set up first and goal on the Green Bay 1.

"It shouldn't have been a catch," said Packers cornerback Charles Woodson, who was covering Smith on the play. "I take full responsibility. Like I said, I would take myself 100 percent of the time to be in that position, with the ball in the air, being able to go get the ball. I didn't make it happen."


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