Aaron Rodgers had played the good and quiet and cheerful soldier long enough this season.
Turning the other cheek as management lacked any sense of urgency had gotten the 37-year-old quarterback through a likely third MVP campaign, another 13 wins and a return trip to the NFC Championship Game, his first at Lambeau Field, as the favored No. 1 seed.
But then the promising journey ended abruptly Sunday with him looking utterly deflated and feeling "gutted" like never before after a 31-26 loss to 43-year-old Tom Brady and the fifth-seeded Buccaneers.
Near the end of a 13-minute postgame news conference, Rodgers chose his words carefully and hit his intended mark like one of those perfectly thrown back-shoulder lasers.
In a matter of three minutes, Rodgers sent a soft-spoken message to his bosses that was loud and clear and powerful enough to make the Packers uncomfortable. The football world now buzzes over whether Rodgers, who is under contract through 2023, will force his way out of Green Bay ahead of the 2021 season.
"[There are] a lot of guys' futures that are uncertain, myself included," Rodgers said. "That's what's sad about it most. Getting this far. Obviously, there's going to be an end to it at some point whether we make it past this one or not. Just the uncertainties is tough and the finality of it all."
Sorry, Vikings fans, but it's highly unlikely Rodgers is going anywhere, or actually would want to. But he was upset enough Sunday to send General Manager Brian Gutekunst a message to not lollygag through another offseason and to start acting with the same sense of urgency that Tampa Bay did after hitching its wagon to another aging quarterback who's still performing at the highest level.
After Bucs GM Jason Licht acquired Brady, he went out and got Rob Gronkowski, Leonard Fournette and Antonio Brown. He used his first-round draft pick on Tristan Wirfs, who made an immediate impact at right tackle.