Admittedly tired, Crosby is looking forward to getting a chance to reset with the Packers' Week 7 bye. One thing he has learned from the first six weeks of the season is how much his team has his back.

"You see how special this team is," Crosby said. "The chemistry that this locker room has, everyone is always bringing each other up, trying to make sure that we have each other's back. The guys never wavered from how they felt about me as a man and as a football player. They knew that I worked really hard this week to make sure that I would come through if I was called on this week for this game."

Timely pick: Second-year cornerback Kevin King could not have picked a better time to snag the first interception of his NFL career.

With the 49ers sitting at Green Bay's 46 with a little more than one minute remaining, defensive coordinator Mike Pettine dialed up a blitz that left King in single coverage against San Francisco receiver Marquise Goodwin on third-and-3.

Without any safety help over the top, King stayed stride-for-stride with the former Olympian and picked off San Francisco quarterback C.J. Beathard to give Green Bay's offense the ball back at its own 10 with 1:07 remaining.

"Kev made a heck of a play, especially against 11 who has world-class speed," linebacker Clay Matthews said. "He made a huge play when we needed it. Obviously, we preach it all the time, turnovers, give the ball back to our offense and good things are going to happen."

It was one of three takeaways for the Packers, who turned them all into points. Reserve safety Raven Greene forced a fumble of 49ers kickoff returner D.J. Reed in the first quarter, which linebacker James Crawford recovered.

In addition to his first NFL interception, King also recovered a Kyle Juszczyk fumble, which was forced by safety Ha Ha Clinton-Dix in the second quarter.