Packers unable to tackle problem due to injuries

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GREEN BAY, Wis. — Training camp is often a game of chicken for safeties.

When the ball’s in the air, they react, speed to the ball and slide by. There’s minimal contact and no full takedowns. Guys like Morgan Burnett must show mercy.

“But once those lights come on and it’s the game,” Burnett said, “the leash is off. You do what you have to do and hit hard.”

This summer, that leash is tightening in a hurry.

With fullback John Kuhn (ankle sprain) leaving practice Monday, the Green Bay Packers have 19 players sidelined with injuries. Coach Mike McCarthy has been forced to tame contact and condense his precious practice time and cut at least two recent sessions short.

Not exactly ideal for a team so gung-ho about improving its tackling. Since the spring, coaches have made that a priority. Those who will not tackle will not play. Now, the most violent player on the team — inside linebacker Desmond Bishop — is probably out for the season. Also, cornerback Davon House will miss at least two weeks.

There was a tint of helplessness in McCarthy’s voice after a recent practice. McCarthy said he has never dealt with this many players injured in camp.

“This is not what you’re looking for,” McCarthy said. “This has been a very challenging week due to injuries. Obviously if I knew why it was happening, I would fix it.”

So training camp has become more about survival than injecting a shot of nasty into the league’s 32nd-ranked defense.

Two-a-day practices died last year. The new collective bargaining agreement changed the course of camp. The Packers have had only 11 full-padded practices this summer, including the intrasquad scrimmage. Game planning has mostly replaced fundamental work. Ready or not, the Sept. 9 opener against the dark-alley-tough San Francisco 49ers is coming.

Defensive players do not sound too concerned about these injuries. They say the shorter, more vanilla practices won’t change their focus on tackling, on violence.

“We just need to take our time with each other within plays,” rookie defensive end Jerel Worthy said. “Don’t take kill shots when you have the opportunity. Try to keep guys up in piles. Let them finish a play, that’s what Coach McCarthy always teaches us. And if we’re tackling, just kind of form fit. Don’t try to kill him.

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