The Seattle Seahawks take on the Green Bay Packers at Lambeau Field on Sunday. The Seahawks are coming off a thrashing of the Carolina Panthers in Week 13, and will be looking to win their first game in Green Bay since 1999.

The Packers, on the other hand, are on a two-game winning streak, and at 6-6 are still very much in the thick of things in the NFC North. Green Bay has been playing some of their best football lately, holding opponents to just 13 points per game in their last two outings.

What Seattle and Green Bay both have going for them, as well, is they have two of the best December quarterbacks in the league.

Here’s a case for both Russell Wilson and Aaron Rodgers taking the moniker of “Mr. December.”

Russell Wilson

Since entering the league in 2012, Wilson is 16-3 in the month of December with 35 touchdowns, nine interceptions and a passer rating of 106.2. That December passer rating is the highest in the NFL since the 1970 merger (minimum of five starts). Those December numbers would also explain why Wilson has the highest passer rating in the second half of the season since the merger (108.5). The good news, too, for the Seahawks is that they are 7-1 on the road in December since Wilson’s first year.

Aaron Rodgers

While Rodgers may not be having an MVP-worthy year like most of us expected, he’s still managed to keep the Packers’ head above water. He has them only two games behind the Detroit Lions for the division lead with four games left. And at home in December, Rodgers has been a virtual machine. Green Bay is 15-2 at home in the month since Rodgers became starter in 2008. That’s the best record in the NFL during that span. What’s even more impressive is the offense is averaging 33.4 points per game, while opponents are being held to just 18.6.

Suffice it to say, both these teams have shown a knack for grinding out big wins in the month of December, and Sunday’s game will provide that opportunity once again.

And, for one quarterback, it’ll provide a chance to grow his legend as Mr. December.