Aaron Rodgers and Russell Wilson was once longtime nemeses on account of their standing as quarterbacks on competing NFC powerhouse groups. However Rodgers believes the 2 quarterbacks are actually united considerably by a typical enemy.
Rodgers joined “The Pat McAfee Present” for his weekly Tuesday look. Throughout his interview, Rodgers was requested for his ideas on the Wilson state of affairs. Wilson admitted final week that the Denver Broncos had threatened to bench him if he didn’t modify his contract. Denver finally benched Wilson for Weeks 17 and 18.
Rodgers praised Wilson for talking publicly in regards to the state of affairs and for the way in which he’s dealt with issues. He additionally mentioned that the 2 are united based mostly on the precept that “the enemy of my enemy is my buddy.”
“Russ and I’ve had some battles over time. There was a terrific rivalry, and we couldn’t appear to beat them … in Seattle. They couldn’t beat us in Inexperienced Bay,” Rodgers mentioned, referring to their respective occasions with the Packers and Seahawks.
“I believe now we have extra of a typical enemy based mostly on some feedback which have been mentioned a few expensive buddy of mine, after which seeing this come out,” Rodgers mentioned.
The frequent enemy could be Broncos head coach Sean Payton. Rodgers most likely wouldn’t have any detrimental sentiment towards Payton if it weren’t for what the present Denver coach mentioned in regards to the Broncos’ earlier head coach.
Talking earlier than the beginning of the season, Payton absolutely obliterated Nathaniel Hackett, who went 4-11 in his lone season as Denver’s head coach in 2022 earlier than being fired. Rodgers responded by coming to the defense of Hackett, who had served as Rodgers’ offensive coordinator with the Packers from 2019 to 2021.
These feedback from Payton haven’t been forgotten by Rodgers, who now looks like each he and Wilson have one thing in opposition to the coach.
You’ll be able to watch the complete feedback within the video clip, simply watch out for some dangerous language.