Rodgers said it’s “pretty typical” the NFL would double down on the call by coming out earlier this week and saying referee Tony Corrente was right, and that Matthews’ penalty — which wiped out what would have been a victory-clinching interception by Jaire Alexander with less than 2 minutes left in regulation — was correctly called. Matthews, immediately after the game, had predicted the league wouldn’t admit that Corrente blew the call.

“I think we all know it was an incorrect call. I think everybody — including Vikings fans — see it the same way,” Matthews said Wednesday. “The unfortunate thing is, we’re talking about games here. And I know it’s Week 2, but every week matters. You’d like to think if we force that interception, we win the game rather than giving them a chance to tie it up or have an opportunity to win. So that’s unfortunate. But we’ll see what that means moving forward as far as changing tactics.”

To hear Packers coach Mike McCarthy tell it, even with the NFL saying Matthews’ hit will be part of the officiating video distributed teams on Friday, his coaches won’t be changing anything about how they teach tackling.