I was 11 in 1982. I am a Packers fan and it always made me mad when I was younger that the Packers' lone playoff season of the 80s has been discounted as a strike fluke of sorts.
I get it now that I'm older, but of the Packers teams from 1981-85 that largely went 8-8, I think the 1982 team was still the best.
The 1981 team had a fifth-place schedule and an offense that hadn't quite hit overdrive.
The 1983 team had an offense that was awesome at times, but the defense was atrocious.
The 1984 team had a much-better defense, but age was catching up to Lynn Dickey and the team started terrible and finished strong.
The 1985 team was a repeat of 1984, but with serious QB issues as Dickey benched himself at one point replaced with dreck like an old Jim Zorn and second-year Randy Wright.
The 1982 team had peak James Lofton, good Lynn Dickey, still solid (if declining) John Jefferson, underrated Paul Coffman and a solid running back combo in Eddie Lee Ivery and (also underrated) Gerry Ellis, a good two-way threat.
The defense ranked 11th in the NFL - yes, taken with a grain of salt given the sample size - with a solid linebacking corps and a secondary that hadn't melted down yet like it would in '83 (perhaps in direct correlation to whether Maurice Harvey was playing or not). Ezra Johnson was still a pass-rushing threat and they got a one-year wonder season out of Casey Merrill.
They also had X-factor Gary Lewis, kick blocker extraordinaire.
The 1982 Packers were much like their early 80s counterparts. Won some games they shouldn't have, lost (or tied against a putrid Colts team) some they shouldn't have. Then again, it was a totally bizarre schedule. Packers only played one regular season game at Lambeau and three in Milwaukee. There were also three road games to finish.
The games they didn't play were:
Miami - probably a loss. Miami's defense would have given them trouble home or away.
Philly at Milwaukee - Maybe a win. That was when Philly declined, but in the normal run of the schedule, maybe the Eagles pull themselves out?
Chicago home and away - Probably a split, but that game was unpredictable at the time. Plenty of weird results at both places until the Bears finally began a run of season sweeps in 1985.
Tampa Bay home and away - Another split. Bucs were still decent.
at Minnesota - Probably a loss.
Those results would have put the Packers at 8-7-1. No idea where that would put the Packers against the rest of the division. Someone probably sneaks the NFC Central at 9-7. Season for Green Bay might have hinged on whether it could sweep the Bears (decent chance) or the Bucs (not as much). Then again, pro-football-reference rates the Packers better via their SRS rating than all but the Dolphins of the teams they didn't play.
Maybe it's best they did have their 5-3-1, a resounding playoff home win, and a relatively honorable loss to the Cowboys.
