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  • Tue., May. 28, 2013 11:30AM - 1:00PM CDT Organized Team Activities (OTAs) The Packers announced details on the remainder of their offseason schedule, including the fact that five of the team’s offseason practices will be open to the public, weather permitting.

    The open practices will be three organized team activities (OTAs) and two mandatory minicamp workouts. The open OTA practices are slated for three Tuesdays — May 21, May 28 and June 11 — and will begin at 11:30 a.m. CT. The two mandatory minicamp practices are scheduled for June 4 and 5 with a start time TBA.

    Due to ongoing preparations on Ray Nitschke Field for training camp, the OTA and minicamp workouts will be held on Clarke Hinkle Field this year. Viewing of the open practices will be standing-room only along the Oneida Street side of Hinkle Field.

  • Sat., Jun. 01, 2013 8:30AM - 3:30PM CDT Junior Power Pack Clinic The 16th Annual Junior Power Pack Clinic will take place June 1, 2013 inside the Don Hutson Center, the Packers indoor practice facility. Reserved exclusively for members of the Junior Power Pack kids fan club (ages 5-14), this event features the chance to run skills and drills with other Packer backers and a few up-and-coming Packers players.
  • Sun., Jun. 02, 2013 8:00AM - 1:00PM CDT USA Football coaching school

    The Green Bay Packers have teamed up with USA Football to host a coaching school for Wisconsin youth football coaches at Lambeau Field on June 2, from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.

  • Sat., Jun. 08, 2013 3:00PM - 5:00PM CDT Jerry Parins Cruise for Cancer The Green Bay Packers are gearing up for the 10th annual Jerry Parins Cruise for Cancer event, set for Saturday, June 8. The event once again features a motorcycle ride, but non-riding fans who want to support the cause are welcome to attend the post-ride party at Lambeau Field’s North Loft, the rooftop deck below the TundraVision in the north end zone.
     
    On the day of the ride, registration begins at 9 a.m. and will continue through 10:30 a.m. at Vandervest Harley-Davidson in Green Bay. The post-ride party begins at 3 p.m. at Lambeau Field in the North Loft, which can be accessed through the Bellin Health Gate. The party will include food and drink for purchase, a silent and live auction and fun while bringing awareness to cancer. Attendees will also have the opportunity to get autographs from Packers players in exchange for a $10 donation to the event.
  • Tue., Jun. 11, 2013 11:30AM - 1:00PM CDT Organized Team Activities (OTAs) The Packers announced details on the remainder of their offseason schedule, including the fact that five of the team’s offseason practices will be open to the public, weather permitting.

    The open practices will be three organized team activities (OTAs) and two mandatory minicamp workouts. The open OTA practices are slated for three Tuesdays — May 21, May 28 and June 11 — and will begin at 11:30 a.m. CT. The two mandatory minicamp practices are scheduled for June 4 and 5 with a start time TBA.

    Due to ongoing preparations on Ray Nitschke Field for training camp, the OTA and minicamp workouts will be held on Clarke Hinkle Field this year. Viewing of the open practices will be standing-room only along the Oneida Street side of Hinkle Field.

  • Wed., Jul. 24, 2013 11:00AM - 1:00PM CDT Packers Shareholders Meeting

    The Green Bay Packers 2013 Annual Meeting of Shareholders will be held Wednesday, July 24, at 11 a.m., at Lambeau Field. The meeting will take place rain or shine.

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Midway review: Time to shift gears

Posted Aug 18, 2012

Halfway through the preseason, it’s time to shift gears from talent evaluation to preparation for the start of the regular season.

“We need to be 1-0 when the regular season starts,” Packers Head Coach Mike McCarthy said on Thursday, as the dust settled on a 35-10 loss to the Cleveland Browns and a 0-2 start to the preseason.

Were these guys really 15-1 last season?

Yeah, they were, but you wouldn’t know based on how they’ve played through the first two preseason games, and the only saving grace to that is that it would be quickly and completely rendered meaningless and forgotten, should the Packers rebound with an effort in Cincinnati next Thursday that is reminiscent of the team the Packers were in 2011.

That’s what one meaningful performance in game three of the preseason, largely considered to be the most meaningful of the four meaningless preseason games, would be worth to this team. Suddenly, all would be right with the world again.

Much of what appears to be wrong in the Packers’ world right now is the result of top draft picks that would usually beef up the twos, spending time this season with the ones. That’s the case with players such as Nick Perry, Jerel Worthy and Casey Hayward, the Packers’ top three draft picks, all of whom are being cast in prominent roles on the No. 1 defense or, in Worthy’s case, the No. 1 sub package on defense, which some would say is the Packers’ No. 1 defense.

Offensively, the problem is the Packers didn’t spend any high draft picks on that side of the ball, and injuries to players such as Greg Jennings, Jermichael Finley, John Kuhn, James Starks, Brandon Saine and, for at least one game, Marshall Newhouse, have created too much of a talent drain to be overcome by undrafted free agents.

“We have to grow as a football team,” McCarthy said on Friday, in a post-tape postmortem sans the postgame emotions.

So what would represent growth for the Packers as they head into Game 3 of the preseason?

  • The return of Jennings and Finley would help kick-start a passing game that made moving the ball look easy last season, but which has made moving the ball appear uncomfortably difficult in the first two preseason games. Packers football is moving the ball through the air. That’s how this team wins. It needs to rediscover its identity.

  • Turnovers must be eliminated. The Packers have turned the ball over eight times in two games. Hey, the Packers turned the ball over only 12 times all last season. That’s Packers football.

  • Precision execution is also Packers football. That means expert game and clock management that lead to the completion of two-minute drills and no-huddle series. So far, the Packers can boast only of Graham Harrell’s two-minute drill at the end of the first half in San Diego.

  • Improvement on defense – there wasn’t any in the loss to Cleveland.

“The offense took a step back, the defense took a step back,” McCarthy said.

It’s time for the Packers to take a step forward in all ways and in all phases, not because they need to be 1-2, but because, as McCarthy said, they need to be 1-0.

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