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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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Mike Spofford

Mike Spofford has worked as a sportswriter in Wisconsin since 1995 and has been a packers.com staff writer since 2006. He has covered the Packers' last two Super Bowl appearances, XXXII and XLV.

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Packers prepare for noisy Georgia Dome

Posted Oct 8, 2011

Aaron Rodgers remembered the play, and the noise, rather vividly this week.

On the Packers’ first possession of the NFC Divisional playoff in Atlanta last January, they faced third-and-13 from their own 8-yard line. The Georgia Dome crowd was in a frenzy.

Rodgers hit Jennings on a quick slant over the middle and Jennings broke into the clear, briefly quieting things down. Then Jennings was hit from behind, coughing up the ball, and the Falcons recovered. The pandemonium immediately returned.

“That’s as loud as I’ve heard,” Rodgers said. “Right up there with any third down in the Metrodome.

“We know it’s going to be tough. We have to have good communication with our three interior guys and hope the tackles get off on the snap count as well.”

The Packers have said all week they’re preparing for a playoff-like atmosphere at the Georgia Dome on Sunday night, even if the stakes don’t compare to the actual playoff game from nine months ago. They piped crowd noise into their practices this week, concluding with a workout Friday inside the Don Hutson Center.

This will be the Packers’ third trip to the Georgia Dome in their last 15 games. Relative to the noise factor, Green Bay will have two new offensive linemen this week compared to those previous trips.

Left guard T.J. Lang and right tackle Marshall Newhouse – who is starting for a second straight week in place of an injured Bryan Bulaga – will get their first extended taste of a road atmosphere like this.

As a rookie, Lang was thrown into a Monday night game at the Metrodome in 2009 in the fourth quarter, though that was a forgettable night for the entire offensive line (eight sacks). Newhouse, who didn’t play at all as a rookie last year, said the loudest place he’s ever played was Norman, Okla., when Newhouse’s TCU squad took on the Sooners.

“It’s just being in tune with each other,” Newhouse said of handling the noise. “It’s on all of us to know what everybody else is doing. You’re not preoccupying yourself with what their job is per se, but just knowing all the responsibilities, making sure we’re all on the same page and Aaron knows what we’re doing, too.”

The last thing the Packers want to see is false starts cropping up again. After committing five false starts in Chicago two weeks ago, the Packers didn’t have a single one last week vs. Denver. The Broncos game, of course, was at home.

“We have to eliminate the penalties,” Lang said. “Don’t give the crowd anything else to cheer about.”

Back in January, by the time the second half of the playoff game rolled around, the crowd couldn’t do anything to stop the Packers. Green Bay overcame the early turnover, scored touchdowns on five straight possessions spanning the first through third quarters, and ran away, 48-21.

If Rodgers gets in another groove like that, the Falcons hope the addition of rookie receiver Julio Jones, the sixth overall pick in the draft, will give them the firepower to keep up. Jones joins an arsenal of quarterback Matt Ryan’s that already includes receiver Roddy White, running back Michael Turner and tight end Tony Gonzalez.

“They’ve got some weapons on that side of the ball,” Rodgers said. “It will be important for us to put some points on the board. Anytime you’re on the road, it’s important to start fast and take the crowd out of it.”

Atlanta Head Coach Mike Smith said this week his team doesn’t circle games on its schedule, but that seems hard to believe. Even if it’s true, it’s a given the fans did.

Either way, the Packers aren’t buying Smith’s line. Lang said there’s “a bullseye on our back” for this one, and the Falcons would love nothing more than to be the first team to beat the Packers since last December.

“Those guys definitely have a bad taste in their mouth from the last time we played them,” defensive lineman B.J. Raji said. “It will be a great test to see where we are this early in the season.”

For more Packers-Falcons stories from the past week, click here.