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词条 2003 Green Bay Packers season
释义

  1. Offseason

     NFL Draft  Undrafted free agents 

  2. Personnel

     Staff  Roster 

  3. Preseason

  4. Regular season

      Addition of Grady Jackson   Favre's Monday night performance 

  5. Playoffs

     vs. Seattle Seahawks  vs. Philadelphia Eagles 

  6. Standings

  7. Awards and honors

  8. References

  9. External links

{{Infobox NFL season
| team = Green Bay Packers
| year = 2003
| record = 10–6
| division_place = 1st NFC North
| coach = Mike Sherman
| stadium = Lambeau Field
| playoffs = Won Wild Card Playoffs (Seahawks) 33–27 {{small|(OT)}}
Lost Divisional Playoffs (Eagles) 20–17 {{small|(OT)}}
| uniform =
| shortnavlink = Packers seasons
}}

The 2003 Green Bay Packers season was the franchise's 85th season overall and their 83rd in the National Football League.

This season finished with an overtime loss to the Philadelphia Eagles in the divisional round of the 2004 playoffs, after the Packers defeated the Seattle Seahawks in the Wild Card round in overtime off an interception return for a touchdown by Al Harris.

The season may be most notable for Brett Favre's Monday night performance against the Oakland Raiders the night after his father had died.

The Packers won the division on the last play of the season. Needing a win and a Minnesota Vikings loss to clinch the division, the Packers routed the Denver Broncos 31-3, while the Vikings lost 18-17 on a last second touchdown by the 3-12 Arizona Cardinals.

Offseason

The Packers were able to add Al Harris to their starting lineup from a trade with Philadelphia. They lost starters Terry Glenn to a trade and Vonnie Holliday to free agency.[1]

Additions Subtractions
FB Nick Luchey (Bengals) LB Nate Wayne (Eagles)
LB Hannibal Navies (Panthers) S Matt Bowen (Redskins)
C Grey Ruegamer (Patriots) CB Tyrone Williams (Falcons)
DE Chukie Nwokorie (Colts) CB Tod McBride (Falcons)
OT Reggie Coleman (Bengals) DE Vonnie Holliday (Chiefs)
RB Lamar Smith (Panthers) WR Terry Glenn (Cowboys)
OT Marcus Spriggs (Dolphins) LB Hardy Nickerson (retirement)
CB Al Harris (Eagles)

NFL Draft

2003 Packers Draft Selections
Round Overall Player Position College
1 29 Nick Barnett LB Oregon State
3 79 Kenny Peterson DE Ohio State
4 147 James Lee OT Oregon State
4 166 Hunter Hillenmeyer LB Vanderbilt
6 212 Brennan Curtin OT Notre Dame
7 245 Chris Johnson CB Louisville
7 253 DeAndrew Rubin WR South Florida
7 256 Carl Ford WR Toledo
7 257 Steve Josue LB Carson-Newman

Undrafted free agents

2003 Undrafted Free Agents of note
PlayerPositionCollege
Cullen JenkinsDefensive endCentral Michigan

Personnel

Staff

{{NFL final staff
| year = 2003
| team = Green Bay Packers
| front_office =
  • President and Chief Executive Officer – Bob Harlan
  • Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer – John Jones
  • Vice President of Player Finance/General Counsel – Andrew Brandt
  • Vice President of Football Operations – Mark Hatley
  • Director of College Scouting – John Dorsey
  • Director of Pro Personnel – Reggie McKenzie
  • Personnel Analyst to General Manager – John Schneider
  • Assistant Director of College Scouting – Shaun Herock
  • Assistant Director of Pro Personnel – Sean Howard

| head_coach =
  • Executive Vice President/General Manager/Head Coach – Mike Sherman
  • Assistant Head Coach/Defensive Backs – Bob Slowik

| offensive =
  • Offensive Coordinator – Tom Rossley
  • Quarterbacks – Darrell Bevell
  • Running Backs – Sylvester Croom
  • Wide Receivers – Ray Sherman
  • Tight Ends – Jeff Jagodzinski
  • Offensive Line – Larry Beightol
  • Assistant Offensive Line – Joe Philbin
  • Offense Quality Control – Stan Drayton

| defensive =
  • Defensive Coordinator – Ed Donatell
  • Defensive Line – Jethro Franklin
  • Assistant Defensive Line – Brad Miller
  • Linebackers – Mark Duffner
  • Assistant Defensive Backs – Lionel Washington

| special_teams =
  • Special Teams Coordinator – John Bonamego
  • Assistant Special Teams – Stan Drayton
  • Special Teams Consultant – Frank Novak

| strength =
  • Strength and Conditioning – Barry Rubin
  • Strength and Conditioning Assistant – Mark Lovat
  • Weight Room Assistant – Vince Workman

}}

Roster

Quarterbacks
  •  4 Brett Favre
  • 18 Doug Pederson
Running Backs
  • 44 Najeh Davenport
  • 40 Tony Fisher
  • 30 Ahman Green
  • 43 Chris Hetherington FB
  • 33 William Henderson FB
Wide Receivers
  • 83 Antonio Chatman
  • 80 Donald Driver
  • 89 Robert Ferguson
  • 84 Javon Walker
Tight Ends
  • 88 Bubba Franks
  • 87 David Martin
  • 85 Wesley Walls
Offensive Linemen
  • 71 Kevin Barry T
  • 76 Chad Clifton T
  • 69 Brennan Curtin T
  • 58 Mike Flanagan C
  • 67 Grey Ruegamer C
  • 62 Marco Rivera G
  • 74 Marcus Spriggs T
  • 65 Mark Tauscher T
  • 68 Mike Wahle G
Defensive Linemen
  • 93 Gilbert Brown DT
  • 94 Kabeer Gbaja-Biamila DE
  • 97 Cletidus Hunt DT
  • 74 Aaron Kampman DE
  • 75 Grady Jackson DT
  • 91 Joe Johnson DE
  • 90 Chukie Nwokorie DE
  • 98 Kenny Peterson DT
  • 99 Brad Scioli DT
Linebackers
  • 56 Nick Barnett
  • 59 Na'il Diggs
  • 53 Paris Lenon ILB
  • 51 Torrance Marshall
  • 50 Hannibal Navies
Defensive Backs
  • 20 Marques Anderson SS
  • 24 Antuan Edwards FS
  • 29 Curtis Fuller FS
  • 31 Al Harris CB
  • 27 Michael Hawthorne CB
  • 21 Bhawoh Jue CB
  • 34 Mike McKenzie CB
  • 42 Darren Sharper FS
  • 25 James Whitley CB
Special Teams
  •  9 Josh Bidwell P
  • 60 Rob Davis LS
  •  8 Ryan Longwell K
Injured Reserve
  • 29 Bobby Jackson S
  • 37 Chris Johnson CB (IR)
  • 28 Adam Tate FB (IR)
Practice Squad
  • 28 Dahrran Diedrick RB
  • 73 Jason Jimenez T
  • 17 Scottie Vines WR
  • 19 Travis Williams WR
Rookies in italics

Preseason

Regular season

The Packers finished the season 10–6 and advanced to the Wild Card round of the playoffs.

Week Date Opponent Result Game site TV Time (CST) Attendance
1 September 7, 2003 Minnesota Vikings L 25–30 Lambeau Field FOX 12:00pm
70,505
2 September 14, 2003 Detroit Lions W 31–6 Lambeau Field FOX 12:00pm
70,244
3 September 21, 2003 at Arizona Cardinals L 13–20 Sun Devil Stadium FOX 3:15pm
58,784
4 September 29, 2003 at Chicago Bears W 38–23 Soldier Field ABC 8:00pm
61,500
5 October 5, 2003 Seattle Seahawks W 35–13 Lambeau Field FOX 12:00pm
70,365
6 October 12, 2003 Kansas City Chiefs L 34–40 (OT) Lambeau Field CBS 12:00pm
70,407
7 October 19, 2003 at St. Louis Rams L 24–34 Edward Jones Dome FOX 12:00pm
66,201
8 October 26, 2003 Bye
9 November 2, 2003 at Minnesota Vikings W 30–27 Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome ESPN 7:30pm
64,482
10 November 10, 2003 Philadelphia Eagles L 14–17 Lambeau Field ABC 8:00pm
70,291
11 November 16, 2003 at Tampa Bay Buccaneers W 20–13 Raymond James Stadium FOX 3:15pm
65,614
12 November 23, 2003 San Francisco 49ers W 20–10 Lambeau Field FOX 12:00pm
70,250
13 November 27, 2003 at Detroit Lions L 14–22 Ford Field FOX 11:30am
62,123
14 December 7, 2003 Chicago Bears W 34–21 Lambeau Field FOX 12:00pm
70,458
15 December 14, 2003 at San Diego Chargers W 38–21 Qualcomm Stadium FOX 3:15pm
64,978
16 December 22, 2003 at Oakland Raiders W 41–7 Network Associates Coliseum ABC 8:00pm
62,298
17 December 28, 2003 Denver Broncos W 31–3 Lambeau Field CBS 3:15pm
70,299

Addition of Grady Jackson

On November 5, 2003, the Packers claimed defensive tackle Grady Jackson off waivers from the New Orleans Saints.[2] Jackson helped the Packers allow only 95.38 rushing yards per game over the final 8 games,[3] after allowing over 117 yards per game in the first 8 games.[3] Jackson signed a two-year contract extension on December 29, 2003.[2]

Favre's Monday night performance

The day before the Week 16 game, Irvin Favre, father of Brett Favre, died suddenly of a heart attack. Favre elected to play and passed for four touchdowns in the first half, and 399 yards in a 41–7 defeat of the Raiders. Afterwards, Favre said, "I knew that my dad would have wanted me to play. I love him so much and I love this game. It's meant a great deal to me, to my dad, to my family, and I didn't expect this kind of performance. But I know he was watching tonight."[4]

Playoffs

vs. Seattle Seahawks

{{Americanfootballbox
|Road=Seahawks
|R1=3
|R2=3
|R3=14
|R4=7
|R5=0
|RT=27
|Home=Packers
|H1=0
|H2=13
|H3=0
|H4=14
|H5=6
|HT=33
|stadium= Lambeau Field, Green Bay, Wisconsin
|time= 1:00 p.m. EST/12:00 p.m. CST
|weather= {{convert|20|°F|°C}}, cloudy
|TV=Fox
|TVAnnouncers= Joe Buck (play-by-play), Troy Aikman, Cris Collinsworth (color commentators), and Chris Myers (sideline reporter)
|referee= Bernie Kukar
|attendance= 71,457
}}

Packers defensive back Al Harris returned an interception 52 yards for the game-winning touchdown 4:25 in overtime. The game was sent into overtime on Seahawk running back Shaun Alexander's third touchdown of the day. Ahman Green scored two touchdowns for Green Bay, and Bubba Franks caught a 23-yard touchdown in the second quarter. The game is memorable for Seahawks quarterback Matt Hasselbeck's ironic comment after winning the coin toss for the start of overtime, telling the referee "We want the ball and we're going to score." [5] This game remains one of two times in NFL history that an NFL playoff game has ended with a defensive touchdown in OT. The other being the January 10, 2010 Wild Card game between the Arizona Cardinals and the Green Bay Packers.[6]

Packers quarterback Brett Favre completed 26 of 38 passes for 319 yards and a touchdown.

vs. Philadelphia Eagles

{{Americanfootballbox
|Road=Packers
|R1=14
|R2=0
|R3=0
|R4=3
|R5=0
|RT=17
|Home=Eagles
|H1=0
|H2=7
|H3=0
|H4=10
|H5=3
|HT=20
|stadium= Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
|time= 4:30 p.m. EST
|weather= {{convert|25|°F|°C}}, clear
|TV=Fox
|TVAnnouncers= Joe Buck (play-by-play), Troy Aikman, Cris Collinsworth (color commentators), and Pam Oliver (sideline reporter)
|referee= Ed Hochuli
|attendance= 67,707
}}

Ahman Green's franchise postseason record 156 rushing yards was not enough to lift the Packers to victory. Facing fourth down and 26 yards to go, with 1:12 left in the fourth quarter and the Packers leading 17–14, Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb completed a 28-yard pass to Freddie Mitchell on a famous play now known as "4th and 26". The play set up David Akers' 37-yard field goal to send the game into overtime. In the overtime Favre's deep pass was intercepted, and Akers then kicked a 31-yard field goal, giving the Eagles the victory.

McNabb had a spectacular performance in the game, completing 21 of 39 passes for 248 yards and 2 touchdowns, while also rushing for 107 yards on 11 carries.

Standings

{{2003 NFC North standings}}

Awards and honors

  • Brett Favre, NFC Leader, Completion Percentage (65.4)
  • Brett Favre, NFC Leader, Touchdown Passes (32)

References

1. ^Offseason Overview: Green Bay Packers, espn.com obtained 2009-03-12
2. ^{{Cite web|url=http://proxy.espn.com/nfl/team/transactions?name=gb&year=2003|title=Green Bay Packers 2003 Team Transactions - Trades, Injured List, Free Agents, and Signings - ESPN|website=ESPN.com|access-date=2018-09-10}}
3. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.pro-football-reference.com/teams/gnb/2003.htm#all_games|title=2003 Green Bay Packers Statistics & Players {{!}} Pro-Football-Reference.com|website=Pro-Football-Reference.com|language=en|access-date=2018-09-10}}
4. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.packers.com/news/stories/2003/12/22/2/ |title=Official Packers press release regarding the 12/22/03 game |accessdate=2006-08-06 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060309092905/http://www.packers.com/news/stories/2003/12/22/2/ |archivedate=2006-03-09 |deadurl=no |df= }}
5. ^http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/recap/NFL_20040104_SEA@GB
6. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.madison.com/wsj/home/sports/ |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2007-01-01 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090707140025/http://www.madison.com/wsj/home/sports/index.php?ntid=264752 |archivedate=2009-07-07 |df= }}/index.php?ntid=266179

External links

  • 2003 Packers results and recaps
{{Clear}}{{Green Bay Packers seasons}}{{Green Bay Packers}}{{NFL on ABC}}{{2003 NFL season by team}}{{DEFAULTSORT:2003 Green Bay Packers Season}}

4 : 2003 National Football League season by team|Green Bay Packers seasons|NFC North championship seasons|2003 in sports in Wisconsin

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