TAMPA, Fla. — Byron Leftwich remembers traveling to Lambeau Field for the first time, walking into the legendary stadium and soaking up the atmosphere.
"When you think of it, it's the mecca of football. ... It's like (Madison Square) Garden in basketball. I guess it's like Wrigley Field in baseball. It's a beautiful place to play the game of football," Leftwich said.
"The way it looks, all of the names that are hanging on the walls there," he added. "It's football, old school football, and what football is all about."
Leftwich was a young quarterback in his second NFL season when he led the Jacksonville Jaguars into Green Bay in December 2004.
He returns this weekend, a little more than a week after his 41st birthday, as the offensive coordinator of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
The Bucs (13-5) face the Packers (14-3) in Sunday's NFC championship game, with Leftwich calling plays for a potent offense he's helped six-time Super Bowl champion Tom Brady transform into one of the league's best.
There have been growing pains, with Brady needing much of the season to get acclimated to a talented group of playmakers that includes Mike Evans, Chris Godwin, Antonio Brown, Cameron Brate, Ronald Jones, Leonard Fournette and Rob Gronkowski, the quarterback's favorite target from his days with the New England Patriots.
Leftwich, the seventh overall pick from the 2003 draft, played nine seasons with the Jaguars, Buccaneers, Atlanta Falcons and Pittsburgh Steelers. He's in his second season handling play-calling duties in Bruce Arians' "no risk it, no biscuit" system.