Tag Archives: Davante Adams

2022 NFL All-Pro Team Roster

NEW YORK (AP) — The Associated Press 2022 NFL All-Pro team selected by a national panel of 50 media members:

OFFENSE

Quarterback — Patrick Mahomes, Kansas City

Running Back — Josh Jacobs, Las Vegas

Tight End — Travis Kelce, Kansas City

Wide Receivers — Justin Jefferson, Minnesota; Tyreek Hill, Miami; Davante Adams, Las Vegas

Left Tackle — Trent Williams, San Francisco

Right Tackle — Lane Johnson, Philadelphia

Left Guard — Joel Bitonio, Cleveland

Right Guard — Zack Martin, Dallas

Center — Jason Kelce, Philadelphia

DEFENSE

Edge Rushers — Nick Bosa, San Francisco; Micah Parsons, Dallas

Interior Linemen — Chris Jones, Kansas City; Quinnen Williams, New York Jets

Linebackers — Fred Warner, San Francisco; Roquan Smith, Baltimore; Matt Milano, Buffalo

Cornerbacks — Sauce Gardner, New York Jets; Patrick Surtain II, Denver

Safeties — Minkah Fitzpatrick, Pittsburgh; Talanoa Hufanga, San Francisco

SPECIAL TEAMS

Placekicker — Daniel Carlson, Las Vegas

Punter — Tommy Townsend, Kansas City

Kick Returner — Keisean Nixon, Green Bay

Punt Returner — Marcus Jones, New England

Special Teamer — Jeremy Reaves, Washington

Long Snapper — Andrew DePaola, Minnesota

___

SECOND TEAM

OFFENSE

Quarterback — Jalen Hurts, Philadelphia

Running Back — Nick Chubb, Cleveland

Tight End — George Kittle, San Francisco

Wide Receivers — AJ Brown, Philadelphia; Stefon Diggs, Buffalo; CeeDee Lamb, Dallas

Left Tackle — Andrew Thomas, New York Giants

Right Tackle — Tristan Wirfs, Tampa Bay

Left Guard — Joe Thuney, Kansas City

Right Guard — Chris Lindstrom, Atlanta

Center — Creed Humphrey, Kansas City

DEFENSE

Edge Rushers — Myles Garrett, Cleveland; Haason Reddick, Philadelphia

Interior Linemen — Dexter Lawrence, New York Giants; Jeffrey Simmons, Tennessee

Linebackers — Bobby Wagner, Los Angeles Rams; CJ Mosley, New York Jets; Demario Davis, New Orleans.

Cornerbacks — Jaire Alexander, Green Bay; James Bradberry, Philadelphia

Safeties — Derwin James, Los Angeles Chargers; Justin Simmons, Denver

SPECIAL TEAMS

Placekicker — Justin Tucker, Baltimore

Punter — Ryan Stonehouse, Tennessee

Kick Returner — Kene Nwangwu, Minnesota

Punt Returner — Kalif Raymond, Detroit

Special Teamer — George Odum, San Francisco

Long Snapper — Nick Moore, Baltimore

___

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Raiders’ Davante Adams pushes person postgame, apologizes

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Las Vegas Raiders receiver Davante Adams pushed down a credentialed person on the field carrying equipment in the aftermath of Monday night’s 30-29 loss at the Kansas City Chiefs.

Adams later issued an apology.

“I want to apologize to the guy, there was some guy running off the field, and he ran, like jumped in front of me coming off the field and I bumped into him, kind of pushed him, and he ended up on the ground,” Adams said at his locker. “So I wanted to say sorry to him for that because that was just frustration mixed with him literally just running in from of me. I shouldn’t have responded that way, but that’s how I initially responded. So, I want to apologize to him for that.”

Adams, acquired in a blockbuster offseason trade with the Green Bay Packers, could face league discipline.

The Raiders, who fell to 1-4 with the loss, enter their bye week after blowing a 17-0 second-quarter lead.

Adams, who had three catches for 124 yards with 58- and 48-yard scores, was visibly frustrated as he walked off the field, minutes after he was involved in the Raiders’ final offensive play with 46 seconds remaining on the clock.

On fourth-and-1 from the Raiders’ 46-yard line, Adams was running free downfield when quarterback Derek Carr unleashed a deep pass. But Adams and slot receiver Hunter Renfrow ran into each other running their patterns, and the ball fell incomplete.

One play earlier, Adams seemed to have picked up a first down with a toe-tap sideline catch at the Kansas City 39-yard line before the replay official reversed the call. Adams was juggling the ball when his first foot touched down.

“I don’t want to comment too much on the officiating, but I thought that I was in,” he said.

“I thought it was a catch, but they looked at it and obviously didn’t feel that way.”

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Green Bay Packers trying to address weakness at wide receiver position

The Green Bay Packers have a glaring weakness at wide receiver after trading Davante Adams to the Las Vegas Raiders and losing Marquez Valdes-Scantling to the Kansas City Chiefs in free agency.

Coach Matt LaFleur isn’t trying to hide it, and he knows they have to do something significant to address issues at the position.

“Certainly, if you look at our roster right now, we definitely need to get some speed in that room,” LaFleur said Tuesday at the NFL owners meetings in Palm Beach, Florida. “We need a legit guy that can take off the top of the coverage. We lost a guy that was pretty good at doing that.”

LaFleur called Adams their “separator” because of the precise way the All-Pro ran routes and created space, even against double teams. He dubbed Valdes-Scantling as “our speed guy,” given his penchant for catching deep balls.

At this point, the top of the Packers’ depth chart at receiver includes Allen Lazard, Randall Cobb and second-year pro Amari Rodgers. They also lost Equanimeous St. Brown to the Bears in free agency.

“It’s like putting a puzzle together; you’ve got to find those pieces that you’re missing and put it all together,” LaFleur said. “How that’s going to look in the end? I have no idea right now.”

Packers general manager Brian Gutekunst armed himself with plenty of draft picks and perhaps will finally break the NFL’s second-longest streak of first-round picks without a receiver, as Green Bay hasn’t taken one since Javon Walker in 2002. The Adams trade with the Raiders brought a first- and second-round pick this year, meaning Green Bay has picks Nos. 22, 28, 53 and 59 in the first two rounds.

“To replace a guy like Davante Adams is gonna be kind of a multi-faceted approach,” Gutekunst said. “It won’t be like a singular guy.”

And it might not be a singular approach.

While Gutekunst recently attended Pro Days at Ohio State and Penn State, where receivers such as Garrett Wilson, Chris Olave and Jahan Dotson could be in play, there’s still a chance the Packers could add a veteran receiver or two. Among the free agents still available is Will Fuller, most recently of the Dolphins and who the Packers attempted to trade for in 2020 when he was with the Texans. Perhaps the best option via trade is DK Metcalf, if the Seattle Seahawks are willing to make a deal.

Those might be better options than expecting a rookie to make an immediate impact given how notoriously hard Rodgers has been on rookie receivers. Even Adams, a second-round pick, took until his third season to find his stride and connection with Rodgers. Valdes-Scantling, a fifth-round pick, struggled early in his career as well. Last season, Amari Rodgers, a third-round pick, caught only four passes for 45 yards as a rookie.

“I’ve witnessed it,” LaFleur said. “It’s a process, like everything is. And the more time that we can get those guys out on the field and put ’em in certain situations to allow them to kind of learn and grow, hopefully we can be creative in ways we can expedite that process. So, I don’t know. It’s going to be interesting.”

At least LaFleur has the two-time reigning MVP quarterback. Speaking for the first time since Rodgers decided to return for the 2022 season, LaFleur said he got the news via text while he was in an offensive planning meeting and “actually darted out right away to make sure I read it the correct way.”

“I think he’ll go as long as he wants to go,” LaFleur said when asked whether he was any sense for how long Rodgers might play after the 38-year-old signed a three-year, $150 million contract extension. “… Those aren’t conversations that we have regularly. So we’re just going to take advantage of the time that he is with us and continue to try to work and grind to hopefully someday be able to get a Super Bowl.”

ESPN’s Jamison Hensley contributed to this report.

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‘A dream come true’ – Wide receiver Davante Adams thrilled to be with Derek Carr, Las Vegas Raiders

HENDERSON, Nev. — No, Davante Adams said, he and Derek Carr did not “scheme” to get him traded from the Green Bay Packers to the Las Vegas Raiders for a reunion of old Fresno State Bulldogs in Sin City.

But the All-Pro receiver and the quarterback who holds virtually every passing record in Raiders franchise history did talk. A lot.

“It’s something we were definitely looking forward to, potentially, doing down the road,” Adams said in his introductory media conference at the team’s facility Tuesday, five days after the blockbuster trade that landed the Raiders Adams.

“But obviously, me playing in Green Bay, a great situation, having, you know, the greatest quarterback to play the game (in Aaron Rodgers), that’s a dream in itself. So, I’ll never take away anything away from, anything Green Bay gave me, or Aaron gave me. It was an amazing opportunity to work over there and do what I did for almost a decade. But, you know, things change sometimes. It’s not the first time that an impactful player to an organization had to leave. I feel like it worked out for both sides, ultimately.”

Adams, 29, had been slapped with the $20.14 million franchise tag for receivers by the Packers, who later received the Raiders’ first- and second-round picks in this year’s draft, Nos. 22 and 53 overall. And the Raiders got their first still-in-his-prime wideout who actually wants to be a Raider since Hall of Famer Tim Brown at the turn of the century. And Adams signed a five-year, $142.5 million extension with $67.5 million guaranteed to stay with Las Vegas and have a good college friend throw balls to him, to boot.

Yes, the Raiders, their quarterback and their fan base were definitely happy.

Adams set Packers single-season franchise records in catches (123) and receiving yards (1,553) last season and became just the sixth player in NFL history with 120-plus catches, 1,500-plus yards and 11-plus touchdown catches in the same season. He is also the only player in league history to author three seasons of 110-plus catches, 1,350-plus receiving yards and 11-plus TD catches, doing it in 2018, 2020 and 2021.

Carr, who turns 31 next week, is coming off a career-best 4,804 passing yards, though he threw a career-high 14 interceptions and was sacked 40 times, the second-highest total of his career.

“Once we got to a point where (a potential trade) was something that was realistic now, it was not just a thought, we started trying to put a little bit of a plan together,” Adams allowed. “I was traded, so it wasn’t strictly on us.

“We didn’t scheme this. We just kind of checked in on each other, footballwise. We check in on each other about family, and the real stuff. But as far as football, and getting together, you’re not being a great teammate to your current organization if that’s all you’re worried about.

“He had to worry about getting the ball to Hunter (Renfrow) and Darren (Waller) and those guys and being a great teammate over here. And I had to do what I could to try to get to a Super Bowl. Obviously, that didn’t happen for either of us. So, once we got to a point where (a trade) was real, we started entertaining it.”

Adams said that a better “quality of life” went into his plan. That he had a lot of family in California who had never seen him play in person since college. That Las Vegas was a lot closer than Green Bay. That one of his grandmothers was recently in the hospital.

“Just kind of reflecting and thinking about life things and stuff that really matters in this world,” he said. “That’s the stuff that’s weighing on my mind when there’s a decision to be made.”

Plus, having grown up in East Palo Alto, California, about 26 miles southwest of the Oakland Coliseum, Adams said he was a “lifelong” Raiders fan. So joining them was a bonus.

“It is a dream to be a Raider, man,” Adams said. “It’s a dream come true. In a third-grade yearbook, I said I wanted to be a, you know, an NFL star or an NBA star. And I was wearing a Charles Woodson jersey at the time. So, it’s been documented forever, so I guess you can say it was meant to be.”

Woodson, who played defensive back for both the Raiders and Packers and went into the Pro Football Hall of Fame last summer, has watched a lot of Adams over his career.

“The thing that makes him a special player is he’s really a guy that knows how to get separation,” Woodson told ESPN. “The most important thing between being a good and great receiver is about that separation. And more times than not, he’s going to be open.

“Down the road, that’s going to help Derek Carr.”

Adams and Carr entered the NFL together in 2014, Carr taken in the second round by the Raiders at No. 36 overall, Adams 17 selections later by the Packers.

But being reunited wasn’t the main topic of the congratulations Adams said he has received.

“Everybody’s saying, ‘Congrats on being on the Raiders,'” he laughed. “It hasn’t been, ‘Congrats on 140 million dollars.’ It’s been, ‘Congrats, you get to play for a team you grew up loving.’

“Obviously, I’ve already made a lot of money. But to have this type of security, get to a place that is almost like leaving high school and going to college again, you’re a kid in a candy store. To be [in] a place where they’re happy to have you and give you all that money? It’s just a bonus. But money doesn’t buy you happiness; it can buy you a nice house. It’s pretty cool.”

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2021 NFL All-Pro Team Voting

NEW YORK (AP) — The results of The Associated Press 2021 NFL All-Pro balloting as selected by a national panel of 50 media members:

OFFENSE

Quarterback

Aaron Rodgers, Green Bay, 34; Tom Brady, Tampa Bay, 16.

Running Back

Jonathan Taylor, Indianapolis, 50.

Tight End

Mark Andrews, Baltimore, 41; Travis Kelce, Kansas City, 9.

Wide Receiver

Davante Adams, Green Bay, 50; Cooper Kupp, Los Angeles Rams, 50; Deebo Samuel, San Francisco, 21; Justin Jefferson, Minnesota, 20; Ja’Marr Chase, Cincinnati, 9.

Left Tackle

Trent Williams, San Francisco, 46; Rashawn Slater, Los Angeles Chargers, 2; Orlando Brown Jr., Kansas City, 1; Tyron Smith, Dallas, 1.

Right Tackle

Tristan Wirfs, Tampa Bay, 37; Lane Johnson, Philadelphia, 10; Brian O’Neill, Minnesota, 3.

Left Guard

Joel Bitonio, Cleveland, 28; Quenton Nelson, Indianapolis, 13; Joe Thuney, Kansas City, 6; Ali Marpet, Tampa Bay, 2; Rodger Saffold, Tennessee, 1.

Right Guard

Zack Martin, Dallas, 46; Wyatt Teller, Cleveland, 2; Shaq Mason, New England, 1; Brandon Scherff, Washington, 1.

Center

Jason Kelce, Philadelphia, 21; Corey Linsley, Los Angeles Chargers, 11; Creed Humphrey, Kansas City, 10; Ryan Jensen, Tampa Bay, 5; Ryan Kelly, Indianapolis, 3.

DEFENSE

Edge Rushers

T.J. Watt, Pittsburgh, 50; Myles Garrett, Cleveland, 29; Robert Quinn, Chicago, 9; Maxx Crosby, Las Vegas, 6; Nick Bosa, San Francisco, 5; Joey Bosa, Los Angeles Chargers, 1.

Interior Linemen

Aaron Donald, Los Angeles Rams, 50; Cam Heyward, Pittsburgh, 19; Chris Jones, Kansas City, 10; Jeffery Simmons, Tennessee, 10; DeForest Buckner, Indianapolis, 5; Kenny Clark, Green Bay, 2; Vita Vea, Tampa Bay, 2; Jonathan Allen, Washington, 2.

Linebackers

Micah Parsons, Dallas, 46; Darius Leonard, Indianapolis, 44; De’Vondre Campbell, Green Bay, 18; Demario Davis, New Orleans, 10; Roquan Smith, Chicago, 10; Bobby Wagner, Seattle, 7; Lavonte David, Tampa Bay, 3; Matthew Judon, New England, 3; Denzel Perryman, Las Vegas, 2; Foye Oluokun, Atlanta, 2; C.J. Mosley, New York Jets, 1; Jordyn Brooks, Seattle, 1; Devin White, Tampa Bay, 1; Matt Milano, Buffalo, 1; Tremaine Edmunds, Buffalo, 1.

Cornerbacks

Trevon Diggs, Dallas, 33; Jalen Ramsey, Los Angeles Rams, 32; J.C. Jackson, New England, 25; A.J. Terrell, Atlanta, 8; Darius Slay, Philadelphia, 1; Marshon Lattimore, New Orleans, 1.

Safeties

Kevin Byard, Tennessee, 41; Jordan Poyer, Buffalo, 12; Budda Baker, Arizona, 10; Justin Simmons, Denver, 10; Micah Hyde, Buffalo, 10; Derwin James, Los Angeles Chargers, 5; Quandre Diggs, Seattle, 3; Marcus Williams, New Orleans, 3; Adrian Phillips, New England, 2; Antoine Winfield Jr., Tampa Bay, 1; Minkah Fitzpatrick, Pittsburgh, 1; Tyrann Mathieu, Kansas City, 1; Harrison Smith, Minnesota, 1.

SPECIAL TEAMS

Placekicker

Justin Tucker, Baltimore, 40; Daniel Carlson, Las Vegas, 8; Nick Folk, New England, 1; Matt Gay, Los Angeles Rams, 1.

Punter

AJ Cole, Las Vegas, 21; Bryan Anger, Dallas 18; Michael Dickson, Seattle, 5; Logan Cooke, Jacksonville, 3; Sam Martin, Denver, 1; Johnny Hekker, Los Angeles Rams, 1; Cameron Johnson, Houston, 1.

Kick Returner

Braxton Berrios, New York Jets, 27; Andre Roberts, Los Angeles Chargers, 13; Kene Nwangwu, Minnesota, 7; Isaiah McKenzie, Buffalo, 1; Jakeem Grant, Chicago, 1; Devin Duvernay, Baltimore, 1.

Punt Returner

Devin Duvernay, Baltimore, 28; Jakeem Grant, Chicago, 20; Braxton Berrios, New York Jets, 2.

x-Special Teamer

J.T. Gray, New Orleans, 18; Matthew Slater, New England, 10; Ashton Dulin, Indianapolis, 10; Miles Killebrew, Pittsburgh, 3; Matt Adams, Indianapolis, 3; Frankie Luvu, Carolina, 2; E.J. Speed, Indianapolis, 1; Nick Bellore, Seattle 1; Derek Watt, Pittsburgh, 1.

y-Long Snapper

Luke Rhodes, Indianapolis, 22; Josh Harris, Atlanta, 12; Morgan Cox, Tennessee, 4; Trent Sieg, Las Vegas, 4; Nick Moore, Baltimore, 3; Joe Cardona, New England, 3.

___

x-one voter did not select a special teamer.

y-two voters did not select long snappers.

___

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Green Bay Packers stars Aaron Rodgers, Davante Adams stun San Francisco 49ers with 37-second, game-winning drive

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — The first comeback led to the second one for the Green Bay Packers.

Without Davante Adams’ speedy recovery from a hit to the chest, Aaron Rodgers might not have broken the San Francisco 49ers’ hearts. But give Rodgers his best receiver and let him have 37 seconds on the clock — even without a single timeout left — and he’ll get one of the NFL’s most reliable kickers the chance to win it.

That’s exactly what Rodgers, Adams and Mason Crosby pulled off Sunday night at Levi’s Stadium. Two throws to Adams — one for 25 yards and another for 17 — set up Crosby’s 51-yard field goal as time expired for an improbable 30-28 victory.

“Yeah, you always worry with Aaron on the other side,” 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan said.

Especially if Rodgers has Adams. That looked questionable after 49ers safety Jimmie Ward laid out Adams with 7:41 left in the contest. The Packers star wideout spent several minutes on the ground, and while it appeared he might have taken a shot to the head, he said the issue was he couldn’t catch his breath.

Yet one play later, Adams returned. When asked how he came back so quickly, Adams said: “I’m different.”

But he was the same old Adams, finishing with 12 catches for 132 yards and a touchdown. Rodgers needed him after the 49ers took the lead — their first of the game — on Jimmy Garappolo’s 12-yard touchdown pass to Kyle Juszczyk with 37 seconds left. That’s exactly how long their lead lasted. When asked how much time he needed for a comeback like this, Rodgers deadpanned: “Thirty-seven [seconds].”

Matt LaFleur thought he could’ve done it with less. “Thirty-five seconds,” the Packers coach said. “Maybe 34.”

Rodgers hit Adams for 25 yards on a play that, while it wasn’t drawn up in the dirt, was created in practice only three days earlier. A spike and an incompletion followed with the Packers at midfield with 16 seconds to left. One more throw to Adams for 17 yards and Rodgers raced to the 33-yard line to spike it again. When he did so with 3 seconds left, he pumped his right arm.

“I don’t know [if that] sealed it,” Rodgers said. “We still had a 51-yard field goal, but my old partner Mace, I felt good about him nailing that. He’s made some big kicks over the years.”

Crosby’s game winner was his third field goal of the night and his 22nd straight dating to last season. Including playoffs, it was the third-latest game-winning drive in Rodgers’ career in terms of time left on the clock when he took over, according to Elias Sports Bureau research.

After the ugly loss to the New Orleans Saints to open the season, Rodgers has thrown six touchdowns without an interception over the past two weeks. Playing with a third-string left tackle — Yosh Nijman, who had tallied only 14 NFL snaps before Sunday night — Rodgers was sacked only once. He was 23-of-33 passing for 261 yards and two touchdowns.

Adams, meanwhile, posted his second straight 100-yard game and the 25th of his career.

“Just what a competitor, man,” LaFleur said of Adams. “And then to go out there and have two big catches in the final two-minute drive, he is the ultimate competitor. I think he’s the best receiver in the National Football League, and I think he shows it on a weekly basis.”

After an icy postgame handshake that might have had something to do with the 49ers’ offseason pursuit of Rodgers, something that angered the Packers and had them contemplating tampering chargers this spring, Shanahan admitted he was afraid his team left Rodgers with too much time. The 49ers snapped the ball with 12 seconds still left on the play clock before their touchdown and could have run the game clock down further.

“We were hoping to take it down,” Shanahan said of the clock, “but it was a hell of an effort by Juice to get in.”

As for that handshake, Shanahan said he was “pissed about the game” and “wasn’t trying to hang out too long in the middle of the field.” LaFleur insisted last week that his relationship with his Shanahan, his former boss and mentor, was fine, and he claimed the quick handshake had nothing to do with that.

“That’s a tough moment for anybody to be in, and I’m sure he was ticked off that we were able to take the ball down and kick a field goal to win the football game,” LaFleur said. “We’ve had a lot of history together, so I’m not going to let anything come between our friendship.”

ESPN’s Nick Wagoner contributed to this report.

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Green Bay Packers stars Aaron Rodgers, Davante Adams stun San Francisco 49ers with 37-second, game-winning drive

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — The first comeback led to the second one for the Green Bay Packers.

Without Davante Adams’ speedy recovery from a hit to the chest, Aaron Rodgers might not have broken the San Francisco 49ers’ hearts. But give Rodgers his best receiver and let him have 37 seconds on the clock — even without a single timeout left — and he’ll get one of the NFL’s most reliable kickers the chance to win it.

That’s exactly what Rodgers, Adams and Mason Crosby pulled off Sunday night at Levi’s Stadium. Two throws to Adams — one for 25 yards and another for 17 — set up Crosby’s 51-yard field goal as time expired for an improbable 30-28 victory.

“Yeah, you always worry with Aaron on the other side,” 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan said.

Especially if Rodgers has Adams. That looked questionable after 49ers safety Jimmie Ward laid out Adams with 7:41 left in the contest. The Packers star wideout spent several minutes on the ground, and while it appeared he might have taken a shot to the head, he said the issue was he couldn’t catch his breath.

Yet one play later, Adams returned. When asked how he came back so quickly, Adams said: “I’m different.”

But he was the same old Adams, finishing with 12 catches for 132 yards and a touchdown. Rodgers needed him after the 49ers took the lead — their first of the game — on Jimmy Garappolo’s 12-yard touchdown pass to Kyle Juszczyk with 37 seconds left. That’s exactly how long their lead lasted. When asked how much time he needed for a comeback like this, Rodgers deadpanned: “Thirty-seven [seconds].”

Matt LaFleur thought he could’ve done it with less. “Thirty-five seconds,” the Packers coach said. “Maybe 34.”

Rodgers hit Adams for 25 yards on a play that, while it wasn’t drawn up in the dirt, was created in practice only three days earlier. A spike and an incompletion followed with the Packers at midfield with 16 seconds to left. One more throw to Adams for 17 yards and Rodgers raced to the 33-yard line to spike it again. When he did so with 3 seconds left, he pumped his right arm.

“I don’t know [if that] sealed it,” Rodgers said. “We still had a 51-yard field goal, but my old partner Mace, I felt good about him nailing that. He’s made some big kicks over the years.”

Crosby’s game winner was his third field goal of the night and his 22nd straight dating to last season. Including playoffs, it was the third-latest game-winning drive in Rodgers’ career in terms of time left on the clock when he took over, according to Elias Sports Bureau research.

After the ugly loss to the New Orleans Saints to open the season, Rodgers has thrown six touchdowns without an interception over the past two weeks. Playing with a third-string left tackle — Yosh Nijman, who had tallied only 14 NFL snaps before Sunday night — Rodgers was sacked only once. He was 23-of-33 passing for 261 yards and two touchdowns.

Adams, meanwhile, posted his second straight 100-yard game and the 25th of his career.

“Just what a competitor, man,” LaFleur said of Adams. “And then to go out there and have two big catches in the final two-minute drive, he is the ultimate competitor. I think he’s the best receiver in the National Football League, and I think he shows it on a weekly basis.”

After an icy postgame handshake that might have had something to do with the 49ers’ offseason pursuit of Rodgers, something that angered the Packers and had them contemplating tampering chargers this spring, Shanahan admitted he was afraid his team left Rodgers with too much time. The 49ers snapped the ball with 12 seconds still left on the play clock before their touchdown and could have run the game clock down further.

“We were hoping to take it down,” Shanahan said of the clock, “but it was a hell of an effort by Juice to get in.”

As for that handshake, Shanahan said he was “pissed about the game” and “wasn’t trying to hang out too long in the middle of the field.” LaFleur insisted last week that his relationship with Shanahan, his former boss and mentor, was fine, and he claimed the quick handshake had nothing to do with that.

“That’s a tough moment for anybody to be in, and I’m sure he was ticked off that we were able to take the ball down and kick a field goal to win the football game,” LaFleur said. “We’ve had a lot of history together, so I’m not going to let anything come between our friendship.”

ESPN’s Nick Wagoner contributed to this report.

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