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Packers vs. Rams score, takeaways: Aaron Rodgers, Green Bay lean on ground game to remain in playoff hunt

The Rams came into Lambeau Field looking to play spoiler in Baker Mayfield's first official start as Los Angeles' quarterback. And for at least a half, it looked like they might, even though Mayfield struggled to move the ball out of the gate. After his own sluggish start in the red zone, however, Aaron Rodgers found a groove leaning on the Aaron Jones-AJ Dillon backfield combo, and the Packers cruised to a 24-12 prime-time victory, staying alive in the NFC wild-card race in the process.

Matt LaFleur's offense wasn't necessarily fully back on track in front of the home crowd. Rodgers threw an ugly deep-ball pick to Taylor Rapp, and Jones lost a fumble in the second half that could've rejuvenated the Rams' chances. But A-Rod also showcased some signature zip while feeding rookie receivers Christian Watson and Romeo Doubs down the stretch. And both Jones and Dillon found success close to the end zone, combining for more than 120 rushing yards and three total scores in the win.

Here are some additional takeaways from Monday's Packers win:

Why the Packers won

Matt LaFleur's side of the ball finally found some balance. In truth, his unit has quietly been on an upward trajectory for weeks. But after a rough start that included Aaron Rodgers' pick and a third-and-goal sack that required them to settle for three, they struck a rhythm. Dillon was the bruiser, excelling especially in the red zone, while Jones had several open-space gallops to extend drives and, ultimately, seal the deal with a late-third-quarter TD catch. Rodgers, meanwhile, fired a lot of pretty over-the-middle strikes in cold weather to keep the Rams on their toes. The defense stepped up when it needed to, limiting the Rams to 13 first downs and 3.6 yards per play, and intercepting Mayfield late to put a bow on the "W."

Why the Rams lost

The battered and bruised offense failed to deliver once more. Baker Mayfield showed fight working with a makeshift supporting cast, but the accuracy and deep-ball touch that underscored his heroic Rams debut was mostly missing this time out, as the ex-Browns and Panthers starter flirted with a couple pick-sixes and ended up completing only half his throws. It didn't help that no one got separation out wide, with Cam Akers "headlining" the pass catchers deep into the fourth. The vaunted defense, meanwhile, fell victim to a handful of big plays despite a strong early showing. Still missing Aaron Donald, the front got to Rodgers a few times but allowed big lanes for Aaron Jones and couldn't prevent quick strikes to Doubs and Watson in the second half.

Turning point

After Matt Gay hit a 55-yard field goal, the Rams entered halftime down just four points. But then came the Packers' first drive of the second half: a 11-play whopper that got early momentum from a defensive holding penalty on L.A., featured back-to-back first-down bullets to Watson and Doubs, and closed with a powerful three-yard TD run from AJ Dillon. Up 17-6 after the score, Green Bay never looked back, maintaining a comfortable lead with time and the weather on their side.

Play of the game

Give it to AJ Dillon, whose first TD broke an early 3-3 tie and set the tone for smashmouth cold-weather football:

What's next

The Packers (6-8) will travel to Miami for a Christmas Day showdown with the Dolphins (8-6), who fell to the Bills in Week 15 and have their own playoff-related reasons to show up. The Rams (4-10), meanwhile, are now eliminated from playoff contention officially. They will also play on Christmas, hosting the Broncos (4-10), who beat the Cardinals Sunday and are set to have Russell Wilson back under center.

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Live updates
 
@packers via Twitter
 

Quay Walker was practically in the backfield before Baker even handed the ball to Akers. Just saw grass and attacked the ball-carrier. Exactly how a LB is supposed to do it in the run game.

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@packers via Twitter
 

AJ Dillon into the end zone for the second time tonight. Not much resistance on the second-down try.

 
@packers via Twitter
 
@RamsNFL via Twitter
 

Doesn't matter, penalty on Ramsey gives the Packers a first-and-goal. Definitely illegal contact there.

 

Rodgers ALMOST had one of his classic freelance touchdowns to Randall Cobb. Can't tell yet if it was a drop or a PBU.

 

There's another example of the attention paid to Watson leading to a catch for somebody else. Dillon comes off the rub route and ends up wide open for the first down.

 

Naturally, Green Bay finally gets Watson lined up on Hill instead of Ramsey and Watson comes away with his first grab of the night. 

 

Seems like the Rams are devoting so much coverage attention to Watson that it is leaving everyone else open. Ramsey's on Watson, but Rodgers has not had an issue finding Cobb, Doubs, Lazard, Tonyan.

 

Yikes. Multiple penalties on the Rams take away a sack and give Green Bay a free first down. Not the way you want to start the second half.

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@packers via Twitter
 
@packers via Twitter
 
@RamsNFL via Twitter
 
@packers via Twitter
 
@RamsNFL via Twitter
 
@RamsNFL via Twitter
 
@packers via Twitter
 
@RamsNFL via Twitter
 

Packers could make this interesting here! They still have a timeout so they can complete one quick pass to get into range for a field goal or Hail Mary.

 
@RamsNFL via Twitter
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Pretty obvious hold on Jonathan Garvin, honestly. Full grab of the jersey off the shoulder pad.

 

HUGE return by Nixon but... there's a flag. 

 
@RamsNFL via Twitter
 

The drop by Atwell on that series ended up costing the Rams (at least) four points.

 

That's a strike from Baker on third down, with a ton of time to throw. Nice route from Van Jefferson, too.

 

Third sack of the game for the Packers already, and also the third near-turnover for the Rams.

 

Not much misdirection on that third-down play, with the Rams just spreading the field and letting Mayfield find Tutu Atwell in rhythm.

 

Rams using a lot of misdirection in their offense tonight, which I suppose is what you have to do when you're without your quarterback, top two wide receivers, and half your offensive line.

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