Saturday, November 29, 2014

A Tight Fit

The Patriots have put up a photo gallery featuring their next opponent, our Packers. Among them, this great shot of running back Eddie Lacy from last year:

Associated Press photo

Must have been cold that day; he's wearing compression tights under his pants and socks.


Nice, but let's see if somebody can get Eddie a pair in team colors.

Friday, November 28, 2014

Infographic: Packers v. Patriots

Packers/Patriots is the marquee matchup this weekend in the NFL, and Packers.com has this preview:
This week's infographic features a look at the Packers-Patriots all-time series, which has included only 10 meetings to this point. There's also a team and individual statistical breakdown, plus a closer look at the two head coaches' track records, and the scoring and point-differential rankings of these two teams in 2014.

Interesting. I hadn't realized that the lifetime series against the New England was knotted at 5 apiece. Of course, I remember Super Bowl XXXI as the highlight.

Friday, November 21, 2014

It's off to Minnesota this weekend:
This week's infographic features a recap of the recent history between the Packers and Vikings, a look at the key team and individual statistics for both teams through 10 games this season, and a special focus on Green Bay's prolific scoring offense, especially recently.

Thursday, November 20, 2014

What Will Replace the Acme Packers?

NFL uniform regulations establish a five-year lifespan for alternates; teams don't have to wear their alts every season, but they can't introduce a new one until five seasons have passed. That means the Packers' 1920s-era alternates, introduced in 2010, can be replaced as soon as next season.

Paul Lukas at Uni Watch is breaking news that it will actually happen:
Heard yesterday from a trusted industry source, who shared the new Nike/NFL 2015 youth catalog with me (the cover of which is shown above). This isn’t as good as seeing the adult catalog, natch, but it nonetheless offers some interesting hints regarding what’s in store for next season.
Uni Watch

Looking at the home jerseys, we can see that the Browns are getting new uniforms, represented by a blank graphic so as not to leak the design:

Uni Watch

The same story for the road uniforms, no new changes except for Cleveland.

Uni Watch

Now we come to the alternates. This is where it gets interesting. The Browns are getting new alts, as might be expected, but so are the 49ers, the Dolphins... and our Packers.

Uni Watch

Here's a closer look:

Uni Watch

So that's it. The Packers will have new alternate jerseys next year. That could mean a full alternate uniform, like the current throwbacks, or a new jersey in team colors. Given that non-throwback alts need to stick with the team palette, that would mean a gold jersey. They've been selling them as fashion jerseys for over a decade; next season we could finally see something like this take the field.


But let's hope not.

They could even pair it with a pair of white or green pants; the NFL's regulations are remarkably lax on pants, presumably because they don't sell those.

But let's hope not.

I think it's far more likely that we'll see another throwback instead. I hope we'll see another throwback instead. But what era?

My hope is that we'll see a return to the classic Curly Lambeau uniform of the 1940s.


It would keep the gorgeous (and presumably lucrative) navy and gold color scheme.


This is also the uniform in which the Packers won two World Championships, the first in 1939 and the second in 1944. And the gold yoke is tailor-made for this era of magically-shrinking sleeves.

The Packers re-created this uniform once before, for the 1994 league-wide celebration of the NFL's 75th Anniversary.


I'd say they were moderately successful in re-creating the vintage look.

The basic idea is good, but look at the yoke on Don Hutson's jersey, which falls above the curve of his crew-neck. The gold on Favre's jersey comes right down and obscures that line.

The yoke also covers the entire sleeve, when it really should just cap the shoulder.

Given the period (throwback uniforms had only come into vogue three years earlier, and this was the NFL's first attempt), they aren't bad. But they could do so much better now.

Steve Wåhlin of Minneapolis-based design firm BAKER created a series of concept uniforms for the Packers which we featured a couple years ago, before the Nike takeover. One of his concepts was based on that classic 1940s look.

Change the metallic gold of his proposal to the classic athletic gold, adopt a more traditional block number font instead of Wåhlin's custom numbers, and you could have an excellent reproduction of classic Lambeau-era aesthetics in modern materials.

So that's one option. There's another one that could be equally interesting; the 1935-36 green and golds.

For two years, including a World Championship season in 1936, the Packers wore kelly green jerseys with gold raglan sleeves.


Here's a look at those uniforms in action at 1935's training camp in Rhinelander:


And against the Chicago Cardinals on September 13, 1936:

Off-tackle power play (above) gains ground for the Chicago Cardinals against the Green Bay Packers. The Cardinals, wearing light-blue pants and bright-red jerseys, have made a big hole for Al Nichelini, No. 43, their fast ball-carrying back. Harry Field, No. 31, Cardinal tackle, is cutting back toward the center of the line to block the Packers backfield men.
So this seems a real possibility, although a-slightly-lighter-shade-of-green seems somewhat less marketable than a completely new color like navy.

So what do you think? A gold fashion-style jersey, one of those throwbacks, or something else entirely? We should find out sometime after the Super Bowl.

Saturday, November 15, 2014

Now *That's* a Trophy

Press-Gazette Media

Yesterday, the Packers unveiled a new monument at Lambeau Field; a 50-foot replica of the Lombardi Trophy in the lobby just inside the new American Family Insurance Gate.

H.M. Larson/Press-Gazette Media

Whoa. This thing is absolutely massive. Designed and built by a company in Florida, it was shipped in ten pieces to Miron Construction in Neenah, where it chromed by a team of 16 craftsmen over ten weeks. The pieces were then brought to Lambeau Field, where Miron assembled it in place.

H.M. Larson/Press-Gazette Media

It completely dominates the lobby, and will be visible from the new Packers Hall of Fame and the new atrium restaurant replacing Curly's Pub.

The new gate was added to ease traffic flow, but I wonder what this massive installation will do to hamper the movement of thousands of fans trying to enter the stadium at once. How many will want to stop and take photos, and will that create long lines?

H.M. Larson/Press-Gazette Media

Stunning. But where are the five-foot tall fingerprints?

H.M. Larson/Press-Gazette Media

The Packers also released this infographic:

Packers.com

Green Bay's very own Colossus of Rhodes.



UPDATE 11/20/2015:  The Press Gazette has this video with fan reactions to the new sculpture:

Press-Gazette Media

Awesome. In the true sense of the word.

Friday, November 14, 2014

Infographic: Packers v. Eagles

The Packers continue to kill it with their infographic series:
This week's infographic highlights the series history between the Packers and Eagles, plus a statistical breakdown of each team's offensive leaders and their league rankings. Finally, don't miss a special note on the bottom about QB Aaron Rodgers and his current passing streak at Lambeau Field.
I love that they managed to get a notation for the 1929-inspired uniforms the Packers will be wearing, although I was rather hoping that the infographic itself might be in blue and gold, as they do each year for the website in the week leading up to the throwback games.

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Feeling a Little Blue, Again

Once again, it's Acme Packers Week! And in honor of the blue-and-gold uniforms the Packers will wear this weekend against the Eagles, Packers.com has been given its customary blue makeover.


They've been doing this since 2010.

That photo in the background is the 1929 squad, who wore the original uniforms the team is throwing back to:


I always love this week. Can't wait to watch the action on Sunday.

Friday, November 7, 2014

Infographic: Packers v. Bears

This weekend we'll finish off the season series against the Bears, and Packers.com has another amazing graphic preview.
This week's infographic features detailed numbers on the Packers-Bears all-time series, plus team and individual stats for both squads and a special look at the Packers WR duo of Jordy Nelson and Randall Cobb.