Packers’ Super Bowl hopes are officially cooked after Micah Parsons injury

Packers’ Super Bowl hopes are officially cooked after Micah Parsons injury
ClutchPoints ClutchPoints

It was close to a worst-case scenario for the Green Bay Packers as Micah Parsons went down. The bad news put Matt LaFleur in a reflective mood. And the Packers’ Super Bowl hopes are officially cooked after the Parsons injury.

Not only did the Packers fall to 9-4-1 on the season, but they also slipped to No. 7 in the playoff seeding. The 34-26 loss to the Broncos hurt in the short term.

In the long term, the Packers will need to move forward with a less intimidating defense.

Packers crushed by injury to edge rusher Micah Parsons

LaFleur approached the situation with honesty. It’s the NFL, and injuries are a brutal part of it. He said the team must keep pushing, according to ESPN.

“I told the guys, ‘Nobody is going to feel sorry for us,’” LaFleur said. “Everybody’s going to have to elevate their play.”

The loss of Parsons is devastating, not just for this season. His recovery could keep him off the field well into the 2026 season. And they mortgaged their future by trading draft picks to get the defensive star. This is everything bad for the Packers.

But as for the here and now, the Packers still have a chance, right? They’re still going to make the playoffs, right?

Yes and yes. But … no.

At best, the 2025 Packers become the 2024 Packers. They could still win a playoff game. But their hopes of the No. 1 seed are toast. And right now, they would need to win three straight games on the road to get to the Super Bowl.

Lambeau Field is a great advantage. But the Packers might not be able to use it.

Parsons’ first season with the Packers had been a great success. The two first-round picks seemed worth it. And they gave Parsons a four-year, $188 million contract. Coming into the game against the Broncos, Parsons had become the first player in NFL history to record at least a dozen sacks in each of his first five NFL seasons. He had totaled 12.5.

Also, he came into Week 15 with an NFL-leading 60 pressures, 10 more than any other player in the league. It was the most pressures by any player within a team’s first 13 games of a season in the past seven years, according to ESPN.

Now, the Packers not only lose Parsons for the playoffs, but they also lose almost a full year of his prime. He’s still young at 26. But the Packers won’t get much, if any, of his age-27 season if he has a typical ACL recovery.

And it’s possible he will never be the same player going forward. That’s the rude reality of the NFL.

Other issues compound the problem

The Packers may also have lost oft-injured wide receiver Christian Watson in the loss to the Broncos. That’s a deep threat the team sorely needs. That’s especially true with the defensive ace in Parsons. The Packers will have to outscore...