GREEN BAY — Aaron Rodgers wouldn’t divulge exactly what he saw, or how significantly he altered his approach in the wake of his discovery.
But the Green Bay Packers’ two-time NFL MVP quarterback has looked remarkably sharp in practice, and he credits in part some archival footage of himself in 2010 — the year he led the Packers to the Super Bowl XLV title and before his two MVP awards in 2011 and 2014 — for him setting the Ray Nitschke Field grass on fire.
“It’s interesting. We were watching some old film of some of the cut-ups.