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NFC East: Aaron Rodgers & How He Affects The Division

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This is going to sound a lot like whining, I guess, but it's really just an interesting observation.

A couple of days removed from his injury on Monday Night Football, we're now aware Green Bay quarterback Aaron Rodgers has a broken clavicle. The Packers' signal-caller is slated to miss at least three or so weeks, but he is expected back before the end of the season.

By an amusing twist of fate, that simple fact is likely going to affect the NFC East championship race in a very direct manner. The NFC North drew the NFC East on the schedule this season, which pits the Packers against all for East squads.

Rodgers and Co. have only played one team from the division to this point, however. The Packers crushed the Redskins, 38-20, in Week 2 of the season. But the other three matchups against the NFC East are slated for later in the season. [embedded_ad]

And now it brings us to this point. The Packers' next two games, with Rodgers sidelined, are a home date against Philadelphia this weekend and a road trip to play the Giants on Nov. 17.

Obviously, anything can happen in any NFL matchup – that's what makes this league so much fun. But you've got to admit the prospects of defeating Green Bay with Seneca Wallace running the offense look a lot brighter than if it was one-time NFL MVP and Super Bowl MVP Aaron Rodgers.

The Packers round into view on the Cowboys' schedule on Dec. 15, by which point it's a good bet Rodgers will be coming back to full health, if not back on the field already.

In the same vein, the Bears look likely to have Jay Cutler back for the home stretch – which includes the Cowboys – after Cutler said he planned to play this weekend against Detroit. Cutler went down with a groin injury early in the Bears' game against the Redskins – a game they lost. But he will be back in the mix for games against the Eagles and Cowboys.

It's the NFL. So counting games ahead of the schedule is an exercise in futility. Green Bay is still probably a good enough team to beat Philadelphia and New York without Rodgers. And with four games on the schedule before the Packers come to town, it's not worth fretting over matters outside the Cowboys' next opponent.

But it's certainly not a twist that looks likely to benefit the Cowboys. 

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