Daniel from Eau Claire, WI

While Marquez Valdes-Scantling has had the most production out of the rookie wide receivers so far, the most potential out of all of them has to be Equanimeous St. Brown. His catch and run in the fourth quarter was a thing of beauty. Once he gets on the same page as Rodgers, look out.

The potential for both is evident. MVS is actually the faster of the two. We haven't seen him gain many yards after catch yet, but his burst in the open field could be scary. St. Brown's long strides are impressive. There's a lot to like.

Peter from San Diego, CA

I love the Inbox, thank you for providing a great forum for the fans! It's interesting how much the officiating has had a hand in the win loss column this year. What was your take on the punt early in the first quarter that was recovered by the Lions deep in the red zone after touching a player of the receiving team? It didn't appear so obvious that it touched Kevin King before being recovered by the Lions.

A ton of folks asking about the punt play, and many saying they saw replays at home showing the ball clearly touched the Detroit player's hand/arm first. I'll admit I never got a good look at a replay, but what I did see didn't give me any confidence the call would be overturned. King insisted on Monday the ball never touched him, emphasizing if it had he'd have spun around and tried to grab it. My problem was with, not so much the original call itself, but how it was called, which was after a huddle when no one on the field knew in real time what was up. Isn't an official supposed to throw the blue bean bag when there's a loose, live ball? If that comes out, I know Williams is smart enough to pounce on the ball. The Packers weren't given that chance.

Keith from Sheboygan, WI

In fact forget the 15 yards, I don't even want the 15 yards. I just once would like to hear a referee admit that something was their fault. That's what I want, I want an admission of guilt.

Good luck with that. Let me know how you come out.

AJ from Sheboygan Falls, WI

We've got three of the best TEs in the league, two of which are outstanding run blockers. We were down two of our top three WRs in Sunday's game. Wouldn't that normally spell three-TE formation and pound the rock? Even before the game started to slip from 7-0 to 14-0 to 17-0, I didn't see a three-TE formation once. Not to mention, wouldn't this solve our red-zone inadequacies that we're suffering from lately? A play-action bootleg with Lewis and Graham floating through the end zone looks good.

Don't assume those things weren't in the game plan. Game plans are built to have certain concepts set up others for later, but three times in five weeks, the games have gotten so tilted the plans essentially got tossed at halftime. The abysmal execution and avoidable mistakes piled up so early and often, there's no way to know if the plan would've worked. They did put four tight ends on the field and ran the play-action pass to Kendricks, who lined up as a fullback, for a TD in Detroit.

Carroll from Madison, WI

Largely agree with your conclusion re: which four stats are most revealing. But if you had to narrow it further to just two? I've read that the most telling is "Differential in [(Plays over 20 yards) + (Turnovers)]." Would you agree? Thanks for your insight.