Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers are on some kind of a roll. Rodgers, Davante Adams and company have won four straight games, with the star signal-caller playing his way into the NFL MVP race. The Packers, who are unbeaten at home this year, are in the driver's seat for home field advantage in the NFC playoffs, as they currently sit atop the NFC with a 12-3 record, with games against the Minnesota Vikings and the Detroit Lions remaining on the schedule. With the unstoppable Aaron Rodgers-to-Davante Adams connection, the potential to play at Lambeau Field and a team that excels at one of the most basic yet effective NFL strategies- don't turn the ball over on offense and create turnovers on defense- the Packers look like one of the best teams in the NFL. With that in mind, here are three reasons why the Packers will win the Super Bowl.
3 Reasons Why The Packers Will Win The Super Bowl
3. The Packers could have home-field advantage- and no one wants to go to Lambeau
Aaron Rodgers and the Packers are more than likely going to secure home field advantage in the NFC playoffs. With two games remaining against the Vikings and Lions, Green Bay would have to have a big collapse to not do so. The Packers are an astonishing 21-2 at Lambeau Field since head coach Matt LaFleur took over in 2019. That's a tremendous advantage and one that will very likely come into play in the NFC playoffs once again this season. There's a certain intimidation factor that goes into playing at Lambeau, not to mention that no team wants to play there in the frigid temperatures of January. Rodgers and the Packers will roll to a Super Bowl title if they can secure home-field advantage in the playoffs.
2. The Packers have the best point differential in the NFL
It seems simple but it can actually be one of the best indicators of how good a team really is. The Packers are plus-16 in point differential. Aaron Rodgers is practically allergic to interceptions, as he has thrown four all year long in 475 passing attempts. Meanwhile, the Packers defense has generated 26 turnovers, including 18 interceptions by their 10th-ranked pass defense. When a team with as good an offense as the Packers rarely turns the ball over while simultaneously forcing takeaways on the other end, it's a hard formula to defeat, especially come playoff time.
1. Aaron Rodgers and Davante Adams are unstoppable
Not only is Rodgers, who has thrown for 16 touchdowns against zero interceptions in his last five games, perhaps the league's most unstoppable quarterback right now, but teammate Davante Adams is in the conversation, only among the NFL's wideouts. In that same five-game span, Adams has exceeded 100 yards four times and has found the end zone a whopping seven times, despite the presence of double teams and defensive packages designed to stop him. There might be no better connection in the NFL right now than Rodgers to Adams- and the Packers can ride that connection all the way to a Super Bowl title.