You can justifiably pin Green Bay's first touchdown Sunday on Vikings cornerback A.J. Jefferson. Point the finger at nose tackle Letroy Guion, too.
Either way, it was yet another example that showed the Vikings how the difference between being in the thick of the NFC North title race and becoming a fading contender can be seen on a handful of keys plays with things just a bit out of kilter.
The Packers had second-and-7 from the Vikings 32 when Guion bit on a hard snap count from Rodgers and jumped. With penalty flags flying, Rodgers knew he had a free play and fired toward James Jones, who was one-on-one with Jefferson down the left side.
Jefferson seemed to have ideal coverage. Yet Jones jumped a couple of inches higher, reached over Jefferson and snatched the pass for the score.
"You've got to make those plays," Vikings coach Leslie Frazier said. "You can't draw that on a board and ask for it to be any [better] than the position that A.J. was in. They came down with it and we didn't. In our league, you have to make that play."
Loud and proud Rodgers was a nuisance all afternoon with his snap count. On five occasions in the first half he pulled Vikings defenders offsides.
In the second quarter, the Packers quarterback got Everson Griffen to jump and used the free play to draw a 23-yard pass interference penalty on Mistral Raymond.
Just before halftime, an offsides penalty on Jared Allen moved the Packers 5 yards closer for Mason Crosby's 53-yard field goal attempt. That missed.