The Green Bay Packers have succeeded this season by protecting leads, taking care of the football and controlling the clock.
They failed to do any of those things Sunday.
Green Bay committed four turnovers and squandered a two-touchdown halftime advantage in a 34-31 overtime loss to the Indianapolis Colts. The defeat caused the Packers (7-3) to fall behind New Orleans (8-2) in the race for the NFC's best record.
"I thought the first half was pretty good, complementary football," coach Matt LaFleur said. "In the second half, they went on long drives. We go three-and-out. We fumble on a kickoff. That stuff is just not going to cut it in this league."
This marked the first time in LaFleur's two-year coaching tenure that the Packers lost a game they led at halftime, though they were tied 14-14 midway through a 28-22 loss to the Minnesota Vikings on Nov. 1. Green Bay's collapse was surprising not only because of how the game started but because of how the Packers performed in practice all week.
"I felt like this was the first week all season where we practiced like a great team and not just a good team, so that was encouraging," quarterback Aaron Rodgers said. "I figured the performance would be really solid based on that. That's how it goes sometimes. The mistakes can happen, regardless of how you practice."
This latest loss showcased one weakness that has been apparent for much of the season. The defense that allowed Minnesota's Dalvin Cook to score four touchdowns on Nov. 1 couldn't slow down Colts rookie running back Jonathan Taylor in the second half.
But the Packers also made uncharacteristic mistakes.