GREEN BAY – Aaron Rodgers described his mistake as a "bonehead" play. Of course, his gaffe late in the first half ranked far below Kirk Cousins' interceptions on the Richter scale of boneheaded plays, but Rodgers lamented his own weird oopsie moment.
Rodgers got confused over the correct down with the Green Bay Packers in position to stretch their lead, resulting in a miscommunication that opened the door for the Vikings to cut into the Packers' lead right before halftime.
The sequence dramatically changed the tenor of the game, but it didn't alter the outcome, as Cousins' turnovers trumped Rodgers' brain cramp in a 21-16 Vikings loss at Lambeau Field on Sunday.
"That was a bad play by me," Rodgers said.
A controversial pass interference penalty on Dalvin Cook and Cousins' backbreaking mistakes will get more scrutiny, but the entire game pivoted on one play.
Leading 21-7, the Packers faced a third-and-1 from the Vikings 25-yard line with two minutes left in the first half. A touchdown or field goal would have made it a threescore lead and snuffed any momentum the Vikings had established after a disastrous start.
Rodgers completed a pass to wide receiver Geronimo Allison, who was tackled near the line of scrimmage by safeties Jayron Kearse and Harrison Smith.
Rodgers said he looked at line judge Carl Johnson and thought he marked the spot at the 24, which would have been a first down.