Yeah, totally agree there. Many of Rodgers' best comebacks were on plays of gigantic gains, not on your typical John Elway or Joe Montana masterpiece. I contended at the time, and still do, that Rodgers would have had a far better chance of completing the Hail Mary Tom Brady tried on the final play of Super Bowl LII. (Although, Rodgers would have had a much lower chance at completing a two-point conversion following the potential TD.)Rodgers has had many great attributes, but he was never without flaws. He was never the master of the two minute drill when you need that last minute score. Just taking the short dump offs was something he didn't want to do. He didn't force the ball either, interceptions weren't a problem. But he would throw the ball away or force it in a way where it wasn't intercepted but it wasn't caught either. That could be a lack of patience on his part.
Now on the other hand, if he needed to make some 30 yard throw, he had no equal there. If you're driving late it was almost better off to have him in that mode, have 30 seconds instead of 2 minutes.
Here's one thing that all the pundits get wrong, but something I know from watching every game of his. The pundits all say "don't blitz Rodgers." On the contrary, that was always where Rodgers was most vulnerable. He'd often turtle when he saw six men coming his way. Is that better than Favre, who would heave one up into double coverage in the same situation? Maybe. But the myth of "don't blitz Rodgers" fooled nearly every announcer, and probably quite a few coaches too.