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Packers’ offensive line wants to stand its ground

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Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers (12) is sacked by Indianapolis Colts defensive end Dwight Freeney (93) in second half action. The Colts defeated the Green Bay Packers 30-27 on Sunday, October 7, 2012, in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Sam Riche/MCT)

GREEN BAY, Wis. (MCT) — It’s not as if Mike McCarthy and Aaron Rodgers will have a mutiny on their hands if they don’t commit to running the ball more, but if they remain pass-happy they better be prepared for frustration to boil over as it did after the Green Bay Packers’ 30-27 loss to Indianapolis Sunday.

Both guards, T.J. Lang and Josh Sitton, made sharp comments after the game questioning the scarcity of run plays called in a game the Packers led 21-3 at halftime.

They felt Colts pass rushers were able to keep their engines revved the entire second half, knowing there wouldn’t be any reason to throttle down for a run play. In all, McCarthy and Rodgers — the quarterback often has freedom to change McCarthy’s call from pass to run or vice versa at the line of scrimmage — called 25 pass plays to just six runs in the second half.

The result was a sack-fest that saw Rodgers go down five times and the Packers manage six points.

“I think we were both definitely frustrated after the game,” Lang said. “I think we both probably said some things that we didn’t really mean. I think we have to just take more advantage of the (run) opportunities when they’re called.

“Coach always talks about practice (performance); I agree with him. I think we have to give him that confidence in the run game. There’s been times in practice that it really hasn’t looked the way it’s supposed to.”

On Sunday, McCarthy and Rodgers didn’t give the line very many opportunities to prove itself after starter Cedric Benson left with a foot injury. The Packers didn’t run the ball until their third possession of the second half when the Colts had crawled back into the game, 21-13.

Green gained minus-2 yards on three carries during the eight-play drive. He had two more carries before busting off a 41-yard run with 4 minutes 44 seconds left, setting up the Packers for a go-ahead touchdown.

“That’s a tough situation to get into and I think that’s where the frustration came out of,” center Jeff Saturday said. “But ultimately, as an offense, whatever the play is we have to make the best of it.”

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