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Washington Commanders vs Green Bay Packers Match Player Stats (Sep 11, 2025)

NFL Week 2 | Thursday Night Football | September 11, 2025 | Lambeau Field, Green Bay, WI | Attendance: 77,289

Jordan Love threw for 292 yards and two touchdowns, Tucker Kraft posted a career night, and Green Bay’s defense turned Jayden Daniels into a passenger for three quarters. The Packers won 27-18, and it was never really close. Here is the complete Washington Commanders vs Green Bay Packers player stats breakdown, full box score, and everything that decided this game.



Scoring Summary

QuarterScoring PlayWSHGB
Q1 – 4:33Romeo Doubs 5 Yd pass from Jordan Love (McManus kick)07
Q2 – 7:34Josh Jacobs 2 Yd Rush (McManus kick)014
Q2 – 4:27Matt Gay 51 Yd Field Goal314
Q3 – 6:37Brandon McManus 22 Yd Field Goal317
Q4 – 13:45Zach Ertz 20 Yd pass from Jayden Daniels (Gay kick)1017
Q4 – 8:57Tucker Kraft 8 Yd pass from Jordan Love (McManus kick)1024
Q4 – 6:42Brandon McManus 56 Yd Field Goal1027
Q4 – 2:53Deebo Samuel 10 Yd pass from Daniels (2-pt: Daniels to McCaffrey)1827

How the Game Played Out

Washington gained 11 yards on its first three drives. Green Bay gained 188.

The Packers opened with a 96-yard march in seven plays. A 57-yard Love-to-Kraft connection set up Romeo Doubs’ five-yard touchdown grab. The second touchdown drive covered 92 yards in 10 plays, built around Malik Heath’s 37-yard sideline catch with both feet in bounds, and finished by Josh Jacobs from two yards out. The Commanders answered with a Matt Gay 51-yard field goal right before halftime, leaving points on the field after Gay also missed from 58 and 52 yards.

Washington did not reach the end zone until the 13:45 mark of the fourth quarter, when Zach Ertz pulled in a 20-yard touchdown pass to cut it to 17-10. Love and Kraft answered on the very next drive with an eight-yard scoring strike, McManus added a 56-yard field goal to go up 27-10, and a late Deebo Samuel touchdown with a successful two-point conversion gave the final score a less accurate look than the game actually was.

“They played better than us,” Daniels said. “Not really much (else) to say.”


Team Stats

CategoryWashingtonGreen Bay
Total Yards230404
Passing Yards (Net / Gross)179 / 200269 / 292
Rushing Yards51135
1st Downs1522
Yards Per Play3.56.4
3rd Down Efficiency5/16 – 31%5/12 – 42%
4th Down1/30/1
Red Zone (Scored-Att)1 of 13 of 4
Sacks Allowed4 (−21 yds)2 (−23 yds)
Total Pressures Allowed3314
Explosive Passes (15+ yds)2 for 39 yds8 for 201 yds
Avg Depth of Target7.5 yds15.0 yds
Penalties5 for 30 yds10 for 77 yds
Time of Possession27:3432:26
Turnovers00

Full Box Score

Green Bay Packers

Passing

PlayerC/ATTYDSAVGTDINTSACKSRTG
Jordan Love19/312929.4202-23113.9

Rushing

PlayerCARYDSAVGTDLG
Josh Jacobs23843.7110
Savion Williams22412.0016
Matthew Golden2157.509
Jordan Love3124.0014
Team301354.5116

Receiving

PlayerTGTRECYDSAVGTDLGYAC
Tucker Kraft7612420.715774
Dontayvion Wicks644411.0014
Malik Heath113737.00370
Luke Musgrave223216.00237
Romeo Doubs53289.311716
Chris Brooks43279.001636
Matthew Golden2000
Team271929215.4257

Kicking

PlayerFG (Made-Att)LGXPPTS
Brandon McManus2/3563/39

Defense

PlayerTOTSOLOSACKSTFLPDQB HTS
Edgerrin Cooper1070.5002
Quay Walker840001
Javon Bullard550000
Evan Williams520000
Xavier McKinney330010
Lukas Van Ness330101
Rashan Gary321101
Karl Brooks300.5001
Devonte Wyatt221122
Keisean Nixon220050
Kingsley Enagbare220000
Carrington Valentine220000
Micah Parsons200.5003
Isaiah McDuffie110000
Nate Hobbs110000
Kitan Oladapo110000

Washington Commanders

Passing

PlayerC/ATTYDSAVGTDINTSACKSRTG
Jayden Daniels24/422004.8204-2185.4

Rushing

PlayerCARYDSAVGTDLG
Austin Ekeler8172.105
Jacory Croskey-Merritt4174.305
Jayden Daniels7172.408
Team19512.708

Receiving

PlayerTGTRECYDSAVGTDLGYAC
Zach Ertz866410.712025
Terry McLaurin95489.601412
Deebo Samuel87446.311255
Luke McCaffrey111919.00192
Noah Brown4199.0093
Austin Ekeler4273.50411
Ben Sinnott1177.0070
Jaylin Lane4122.0020
Jacory Croskey-Merritt1000
Team40242008.3220

Kicking

PlayerFG (Made-Att)LGXPPTS
Matt Gay1/3511/14

Defense

PlayerTOTSOLOSACKSTFLPDQB HTS
Bobby Wagner1130000
Quan Martin740001
Marshon Lattimore650010
Mike Sainristil650000
Dorance Armstrong641101
Will Harris530000
Jeremy Reaves420000
Jacob Martin320.5001
Percy Butler220000
Jonathan Jones210000
Javontae Jean-Baptiste210000
Trey Amos210020
Von Miller100.5001
Deatrich Wise Jr.100000

Players Who Decided the Result

Jordan Love averaged 9.4 yards per attempt on Thursday night, nearly double Daniels’ 4.8. He threw deep with purpose — average target depth of 15.0 yards — and did it while operating without two starting offensive linemen in Zach Tom (quad) and Aaron Banks (ankle/groin). He was sacked twice, absorbed 14 total pressures, and finished with a 113.9 passer rating. PFF’s initial grade: 83.0.

Tucker Kraft had never gone over 100 receiving yards in a game at any level before that night in Green Bay. Six catches, 124 yards, 74 yards after the catch, and a touchdown. His 57-yard reception on the opening drive set the whole offense in motion.

“Hopefully, I can keep stacking games like that,” Kraft said. “It’s the first time I’ve ever gotten over 100 yards, including college.”

Micah Parsons generated 8 total pressures on 47 pass-rush snaps, including a sack, a hit, and six hurries. The box score credits him 0.5 sacks (a split with a teammate), but his impact on Daniels’ decision-making went well beyond the stat sheet. PFF graded him at 89.8.

“We gave up some things that we didn’t want to, more points than what we wanted to, but we made them earn everything,” Parsons said. “No big plays, we made them earn everything, and that’s the good part.”

Keisean Nixon was targeted six times in coverage and allowed one catch for nine yards. His five pass breakups led the defense. PFF’s initial grade: 90.5.

On Washington’s side, Bobby Wagner was the most reliable piece with 11 tackles and five run stops. Zach Ertz led the Commanders in receiving yards (64) and scored the only touchdown that genuinely threatened a comeback.


Injuries From Thursday Night

Three players left Lambeau Field with significant diagnoses.

Jayden Reed (GB, WR): Broke his collarbone in the first quarter on a 38-yard reception that was wiped out by penalty. Reed had also been managing a foot fracture coming into the season and chose to have surgery on both injuries simultaneously. Ian Rapoport reported a 6-8 week timeline. Head coach Matt LaFleur said, “He’ll be down for quite some time. We’ll see how fast he can recover and heal.”

Austin Ekeler (WSH, RB): Suffered a torn right Achilles tendon in the fourth quarter on a non-contact cut upfield. An MRI confirmed the tear. His 2025 season was over. With Brian Robinson Jr. already traded to the San Francisco 49ers before the season opened, rookie Jacory Croskey-Merritt became Washington’s lead back going forward.

Deatrich Wise Jr. (WSH, DE): Carted off in the second quarter with a quadriceps injury, later confirmed as season-ending. John Bates (groin) and Noah Brown (groin) also left the game, while CB Jonathan Jones hurt his hamstring.


What This Result Meant

Green Bay went to 2-0 for the first time since 2020, with both wins coming against teams that made the playoffs the previous season — Detroit in Week 1 (27-13) and now Washington.

“It feels good,” Love said. “We couldn’t have started the season off on a better note. It’s a thing we’ve just got to keep building on, but it feels great right now.”

Washington dropped to 1-1 and headed into the following week with their starting running back done for the year, a key defensive end lost for the season, and Daniels dealing with a sprained knee that ruled him out of Week 3. Quinn put it plainly after the game: “I just felt like we didn’t find the rhythm that we needed to, really from jump street.”

The Packers extended their Lambeau Field winning streak over Washington to seven straight. The last time the Commanders won at Lambeau was 1986. Thursday night did nothing to change that.


Officiating Crew: Referee Brad Rogers | Network: Prime Video

Bobby Smith
Bobby Smithhttps://thesportie.com/
Bobby A. Smith is a Senior Sports Analyst with over nine years of professional experience, specializing in forensic analysis of game strategy and player performance. His work provides a definitive lens on a broad spectrum of professional sports, delivering expert commentary on the NFL, NBA, MLB, WNBA, Soccer, Boxing, Cricket, F1, and NASCAR. Unlike surface-level reporting, Bobby’s analysis is known for identifying the critical, game-deciding patterns that raw statistics often obscure. Every article is grounded in rigorous, fact-based research and an unwavering commitment to journalistic integrity.

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