The Green Bay Packers will be watching from home like everyone else when the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the Kansas City Chiefs square off in the Super Bowl on Sunday. After a week of digesting the loss, Matt LaFleur is taking the blame for the crucial touchdown in the first half against the Buccaneers in the NFC Championship.

“That was just a flat-out miscommunication and ultimately, anytime something like that occurs, that 100 percent falls squarely on my shoulders,” the Packers coach said, via Rob Demovsky of ESPN. “I’ve got to make sure that I’m crystal clear with our communication and those mistakes cannot happen, especially when the stakes are so big, in particular, we pride ourselves on being great in situations. Bottom line is all calls go through me. So I don’t care who makes the call; it’s all my fault. Bottom line: I’m responsible for every play call — offense, defense, special teams — and that every call goes through me. So if I’m ever unhappy with a call, I have the ability to do something about it. And that’s all I’m going to really say about that.”

In the final seconds before halftime, the Packers surrendered an inexcusable touchdown to Scotty Miller on a 39-yard touchdown pass from Tom Brady. The touchdown to Miller made it a 21-10 game, putting Green Bay in a massive hole.

Other moments led to the Packers losing the game, including a questionable decision to kick a field goal in the fourth quarter. But it was Miller's touchdown that changed the course of the game in the first half.

Matt LaFleur claimed that he and Mike Pettine—who has since been fired by the Packers—didn't communicate the play call correctly before halftime. There's a chance that LaFleur is attempting to cover for his former assistant. Regardless if that is really the case, there's going to be a lot of finger-pointing among fans in Green Bay this offseason.