GREEN BAY, Wis. — Yes, it's the preseason. And yes, it's only the first game. But there were some troubling signs for the Green Bay Packers in Friday night's 17-0 loss to the Arizona Cardinals, their first shutout in a full preseason game since the Forrest Gregg days.
That is, when Forrest Gregg was coaching the Packers, not playing for them.
Here are five things we learned from the Cardinals' victory over the Packers:
1. ARIZONA'S DEFENSE MEANS BUSINESS: With a goal-line stand on the first drive and takeaways on the next two, the Cardinals' defense showed that it isn't just more aggressive this season, it's downright nasty. Like eat quarterbacks for lunch nasty. Three sacks, one forced fumble and one interception, and that was on top of limiting Green Bay and its potent offense to a measly 223 yards.
"We have a better all-around defense," Patrick Peterson said. "We don't just have a couple guys here, a couple guys there that can play. I believe that entire secondary is guys that have been in the league a while, guys that have been in big games. ... I believe that we can compete with the best of them."
2. FIRST IMPRESSIONS: Stepfan Taylor sure didn't look like a rookie as he carried Arizona's running game in the absence of Rashard Mendenhall (patella tendinitis).
After setting Stanford's career records for yards rushing (4,300) and total touchdowns (45) last season, Taylor showed he's more than capable of running with the big boys. Not only did he gain 64 yards on 20 carries, but he did it economically, repeatedly running straight at the Packers defense.
And he wasn't the only rookie to shine.