The Green Bay Packers helped open the Atlanta Falcons’ new stadium on Sunday night, and it didn’t go so well for the first visitors to Mercedes-Benz Stadium. The Packers lost by a 34-23 final and fell to 1-1 on the year.

Already undermanned and missing both starting tackles, the injuries piled on, and the Packers just didn’t have enough to hang with the reigning NFC champions.

It’s time to take a look at the good, the bad, and the ugly of Week 2:

The Good

The Bad

The Ugly

Very little in this game was good, but Davante Adams certainly was. When the Packers started to come to life late in the third quarter, it was Adams spearheading the effort. He finished the night with eight receptions on 10 targets and 99 yards, and also managed to haul in a touchdown on an incredibly impressive catch late in the game. If Jordy Nelson and Randall Cobb are out for some time, Adams will need to keep up the great play.Once it was clear that the Packers cornerbacks couldn’t handle Julio Jones and the Falcons deep receiving group, they let rookie cornerback Kevin King play, and he did not disappoint. According to Pro Football Focus, Kevin King was thrown at four times, allowed no catches and had one pass breakup. The young cornerback showed that he could play and that he had the type of speed that Green Bay needs to take it to their secondary to the next level.Montgomery didn’t do much in the running game – though he did rush for a touchdown – but he certainly made his presence felt as a receiver. For a majority of the game, he was the leading receiver for Green Bay, and he finished the night with six receptions on seven targets for 75 yards. The Falcons had a hard time slowing him down once he was out in the open, and the way he runs with the ball makes him even more deserving for extra chances.Once again, the Packers defense just couldn’t seem to get stops against a high-caliber NFC offense. The Falcons scored on five of their first seven possessions, and it seemed someone was open over the middle on every big play. The Packers secondary was once again torched on crossing routes, and seemed to lack the speed necessary to keep up with Atlanta’s deep roster of weapons. If they want to be playing deep into January and February, they’ll have to find a way to force at least some stops on a team like Atlanta.While the Packers defense did them absolutely no favors, Green Bay’s offense came out just as flat as they did in last year’s NFC title game. Aaron Rodgers made uncharacteristic mistakes, throwing an interception on a bad ball and then fumbling while trying to negate a sack. The turnovers led directly to Atlanta scoring 14 points, which essentially ended up deciding the game. After scoring on the first drive, the Packers were stalled multiple times and seemed to have no rhythm. While some of that is surely on the lack of starting tackles, it was disconcerting to see the team barely manage to score 10 points through three quarters. They’ll need to turn it around as the season continues.Despite the poor play in the first half, the Packers only lost the game by 11 points. That’s important when you take note of the amount of penalties that Green Bay had. Two fairly close offensive pass interference plays were called on the Packers, one of which took a touchdown away and another that gave Atlanta one. Late in the first half, offensive interference was called against Martellus Bennett despite Bennett’s pick occurring within one yard of the line of scrimmage. The flag wiped out a 36-yard reception by Randall Cobb, and the next play was the interception by Rodgers that led to an Atlanta touchdown. To start the third quarter, it looked like the backward pass that Atlanta recovered for a touchdown could have been overturned, but it wasn’t. There’s no way of knowing how the game shakes out if the whistles go the other way, but it’s hard to argue that those three calls didn’t result in a huge swing for Atlanta.Another game, another lump of injuries for the Packers. The team’s offense was already missing two key pieces in starting tackles Bryan Bulaga and David Bakhtiari before kickoff, but that number quickly spiked. Jordy Nelson, Randall Cobb, Mike Daniels, Kentrell Brice, Jahri Evans and Davon House all left with injuries at some point, and all but Evans couldn’t return to the game. Needless to say, that’s a huge problem. It’ll be interesting to see how the players heal up over the week, but if even more key contributors fall victim to the injury bug, it won’t matter how well or poorly the team plays.