-- Unless your name is Aaron Jones, the scene at Lambeau Field on Sunday may not have been all that pretty, but the Green Bay Packers' managed to chalk up their eighth win of the season. This one coming over the Carolina Panthers, who were surging with Kyle Allen under center as Cam Newton's replacement.

Oh, and if you love nothing short of a winter wonderland, the stadium practically looked like a snowglobe by late in the fourth quarter.

It was that kind of day. The harsh, unforgiving elements paving the way for what many, including myself, would call "football weather." Taking the weather into consideration, as well as the Panthers' 26th-ranked run defense, the plan to feed Jones and ride the running game seemed ideal.

En route to 156 combined yards on the ground between Jones and Jamaal Williams, that's just what the Packers did.

Aaron Jones continues to show he's a superstar

For the second time this season, Jones had more than three rushing touchdowns in a single game. He's now tied with Panthers running back Christian McCaffrey -- who the Packers contained to the best of their ability on Sunday -- for the most total touchdowns in the league (14).

If you want to truly evaluate Jones, look outside of the volume stats. The stats that have made tailbacks like Todd Gurley, Alvin Kamara and David Johnson so eye-popping could easily apply to Jones, but it's the little nuances in his game that make you realize how special he truly is. Squeezing between linemen, bouncing behind the offensive line before scooting his run towards the sideline and still managing to gain yards, being weaponized as a receiving threat.

It's taken an offense like Matt LaFleur's to truly utilize Jones to his fullest potential, and we're beginning to see the dividends of his run-oriented philosophy. He finished just seven yards shy of his third 100-yard game of the season, but when the Packers needed to churn out yards and burn clock, they were able to turn to their duo of Jones and Williams.

Also, of note: McCaffrey, Gurley and Jones are the only running backs since 2018 with 15+ rushing touchdowns while averaging more than 4.5 yards per carry.

Ibraheim Campbell: The Return

He may not have played football since tearing his ACL 11 months ago, but Sunday marked a promising return for Ibraheim Campbell. The Packers' new "money-backer" filled that role efficiently -- and then some -- against the Panthers, finishing with the third-most tackles (6) on the defense.

Some of the things he did won't show up on a stat sheet, but he diagnosed routes in coverage, stuck himself into traffic in run support and was overall dependable in his return. Pairing a hybrid safety alongside Blake Martinez is only going to make Martinez's job that much easier -- now, with Campbell in the fold, the Packers will be able to allow Adrian Amos to stay at home on the back end of the secondary.

As Mike Pettine would tell you, that's a win for his guys. Players being able to focus solely on one area of expertise and hone in on that without too much riding on their shoulders just lets them play without thinking. Campbell's presence was felt multiple times on Sunday, and in just his first game back, he's already impacting both the second level and the team's secondary.

The perfect time for a bye

Week 11 is the latest bye week the Packers have had since 1990, and for a team that's sitting at 8-2 with no major injuries and an undefeated team on-deck in two weeks, it's a perfect time.

However, while the Packers may not be using the bye to rehab from any injuries -- or the ones that we know of -- it's a great opportunity to clean up the mental and schematic errors that have been plaguing the team these last few weeks. From self-inflicted false starts on offense, blown coverages on defense and everything in-between, there's a lot to clean up.

So to be 8-2 with a rookie head coach, a washed-up quarterback, overpaid pass-rushers and a safety that doesn't make any impactful plays -- all of which were topics of discussion throughout the Twitterverse during the offseason -- having some mental miscues to clean up doesn't seem like a bad place to be at all.