The Green Bay Packers used a pair of defensive touchdowns and an opening drive touchdown pass from Aaron Rodgers to Jimmy Graham to beat the Pittsburgh Steelers in the second preseason game of the 2018 season on Thursday night at Lambeau Field.

There were plenty of highlights – including a pick-six each from Tramon Williams and Josh Jackson, and an 82-yard touchdown from DeShone Kizer to Jake Kumerow – but we’re going to use this space to put a few other notable plays under the microscope.

Here’s a look at eight under-the-radar plays from the Packers’ win:

1. Davante Adams, 27-yard catch

Aaron Rodgers said he needed an easy play to get him settled down after a big ovation from the Lambeau Field crowd had him a little emotional to start the contest. Enter Adams, who – from the slot – flashed wide open on a slant route and gave Rodgers his easy throw. It was a wickedly good route from the master of the slant. Adams made the catch, accelerated around former Packers safety Morgan Burnett and got the Packers into the red zone.

2. Rodgers the magician

Rodgers often makes the very difficult look stunningly simple. The Packers probably had no interest in seeing Rodgers scramble in a preseason game, but it was hard to argue with what the two-time MVP pulled out of his hat of tricks on the first drive. On 2nd-and-15 from the 19-yard line, Rodgers literally ducked under the pocket-collapsing pressure up the middle. He then got around one defender with a pump fake before sliding down after a nice gain. In classic Rodgers style, he then immediately hurried the offense to the line while the Steelers attempted to make a substitution and drew the free play/flag.

3. Fourth-down stop

Awareness in coverage and a strong individual pass-rush combined to get the Packers off the field in the second quarter. On 4th-and-6, the Steelers attempted to use a rub route to spring rookie James Washington open underneath. It didn’t work. Davon House worked through the traffic and Josh Jones smothered the tight end in the middle of the field. That allowed Reggie Gilbert to turn the corner and pressure the quarterback into getting rid of the ball. Mason Rudolph went underneath to Washington, but House was right there to make the stop. Turnover on down.

4. Veteran tight ends go back-to-back

Jimmy Graham got the touchdown, the spike and the Lambeau Leap, but Marcedes Lewis and Lance Kendricks later contributed big plays to a scoring drive engineered by Brett Hundley. On the first, Lewis rumbled down the seam and made an out-stretched catch for 23 yards. Like Graham, Lewis’ size (6-6) must make him a comfortable player for quarterbacks to target in the middle of the field. He went up and got it and then absorbed a sandwich hit from two defensive backs. A play later, Hundley dropped it off underneath to Kendricks, who caught the pass in the flat, spun through the tackle attempt of first-round Terrell Edmunds and burst upfield for 15 yards.

5. Oren Burks, tackle for loss

The Packers rookie linebacker is going to take some lumps playing the run, but he’s also going to make a lot of flash plays. Why? Because he’s fast – both athletically and in play speed – and he’ll be playing behind unmovable defensive tackles Kenny Clark and Mike Daniels. On his tackle for loss in the first half, Burks shot the gap off the right shoulder of Clark – who ate up the double team – and made the stop three yards behind the line. Plan on seeing Burks make a bunch of plays in the backfield this season.

6. Kenny Clark stop

One play after Burks burst into the backfield for a stop, Clark proved why he’ll need to be double-teamed on most run plays. The Steelers attempted to single-block him on a simple run play up the middle, but Clark drove the right guard back and then disengaged and made the tackle in one swift, explosive motion. Teams will have that issue up front against the Packers: Do you double Clark and let linebackers run free, or do you run the risk of Clark blowing up a play?

7. EQ from the slot

Rookie receiver Equanimeous St. Brown only had one catch, but he once again proved smooth and slippery operating from the slot. On the Packers’ late touchdown drive in the second quarter, St. Brown won inside leverage off the snap, squared off the route with suddenness and came across the field to provide a throwing window to DeShone Kizer. He completed the play with an out-stretched catch near the boundary. The rookie ran a similar route and was open again early in the third quarter, but he couldn’t bring in Kizer’s slightly inaccurate throw. EQ is looking like a potential weapon from the slot. Could he prove to be a more athletic version of Jordan Matthews?

8. Montravius Adams tackle for loss

The flashes from the Packers’ second-year defensive lineman are awfully bright. In the third quarter, Adams produced the kind of dominant rep that just jumps off the screen. He exploded off the ball, jarred the left guard back three or four steps, tossed him aside with a violent rip move and then lassoed down the running back, who was attempting to cut it back inside. Adams blew up the stretch run play single-handedly. One play later, Josh Jackson stepped in front of a pass and took it back for six.