Vikings defensive end Brian Robison was trying to explain coach Mike Zimmer's aggressiveness in relation to the more predictable defensive schemes the team played from 2006 until last season.
"Heck," Robison said, "there were some times when we'd line up [against the Packers] and Aaron Rodgers was calling out our defenses as we were lining up."
What say you, Aaron?
"Nah," he said Tuesday, "I never did that before."
Time out. We're throwing the challenge flag on that one.
To say Rodgers was comfortable against the Vikings' Tampa 2 scheme doesn't do justice to the word. His 116.8 passer rating in 12 regular-season games against the Vikings is the highest by any quarterback against a single team since the AFL-NFL merger in 1970.
He's completed 71.4 percent of his passes (277 of 388) against the Vikings for 3,382 yards, 27 touchdowns and four interceptions. He's 8-4 and has won seven of the past eight. He's … well, you get the point.
But that was then. Or at least that's what the Vikings will hope for Thursday night when they hit Lambeau Field with a defense that couldn't be any more different from the one Rodgers and Brett Favre saw the past eight seasons.