The roar of Lambeau Field on Sunday was deafening, but deep within the Green Bay Packers’ locker room, a crucial, low-key exchange was unfolding that would ultimately define the team’s decisive 23-6 dismantling of the Minnesota Vikings. Running back Emanuel Wilson, suddenly thrust into the spotlight for his first career NFL start, admitted to being gripped by “butterflies” before the must-win divisional clash.
His salvation, however, came not from a coaching schematic, but from the veteran authority of the man he was replacing: Pro Bowl star Josh Jacobs. The injured Jacobs, ruled out just hours before kickoff with a bruised knee, delivered a powerful, concise message that instantly calmed the nerves of the young, undrafted phenom, clearing the path for Wilson’s sensational, career-defining 107-yard performance.

The Weight of the Moment: Stepping Into the Breach
For the Packers, Week 12 was a high-stakes turning point. Nursing a respectable but inconsistent record, they desperately needed a commanding divisional victory to keep pace in the brutal NFC North. The sudden loss of Jacobs, the team’s engine and three-time Pro Bowler, created a massive void.
Wilson, a product of little-known Fort Valley State and an undrafted free agent, had flashed brilliance but had never carried the weight of an offense. He confessed that the gravity of the moment- his first official NFL start- hit him hard when he woke up on Sunday morning.
“I just kept it the same,” Wilson stated after the game, echoing the measured composure of a veteran, “but I did have butterflies. A little nervous.”
This is where the true veteran leadership of Josh Jacobs became the unseen force behind the victory. Jacobs, who had spent the entire week battling trainers in a desperate attempt to play through the pain, shifted his competitive focus entirely to his understudy.

The Message: ‘Just Be Who You Are’
According to Wilson, Jacobs’s pre-game counsel was simple, direct, and delivered with the conviction of a locker-room leader. It was a message designed to bypass the complexity of the playbook and speak directly to Wilson’s innate ability:
“Josh just was in my corner telling me to believe in myself and telling me he believed in me, so I just went out there and did what I did.”
In a separate account, Jacobs himself elaborated on the philosophy he imparts to the younger backs: “Man, just be who you are. Keep running how you running. Make sure you’re running hard and just be who you are and have fun. At the end of the day, you wouldn’t be able to be here in this position if you couldn’t ball.”
This endorsement- the unshakeable faith of the star running back in his replacement- was the final piece of psychological armor Wilson needed. It was the crucial distinction between a player overwhelmed by the opportunity and one empowered by his peer to seize it.

The Explosive Result: A Dominant Ground Game
Empowered by Jacobs’s words, Wilson didn’t just fill a void; he dominated. He logged a staggering 28 carries for 107 rushing yards and scored two touchdowns– all career highs, and the highest rushing yardage total by any Packers back this entire season.
His performance was a masterpiece of grit, vision, and determination, enabling the Packers to control the clock for an astounding 37 minutes and 15 seconds– their highest time of possession in over a year.
The statistical breakdown of Wilson’s game reveals his immediate and crucial impact:
- Volume and Efficiency: His 28 carries are a testament to the coaching staff’s confidence, but his $3.8$ yards per carry average proved the ground attack was effective, chewing up yardage and punishing the Vikings’ defense.
- Goal Line Execution: Both of his 1-yard touchdown plunges showcased a blend of patience and power, demonstrating that he could handle the highest-leverage situations. Wilson is only the second Packer since the 1970 merger to rush for 100+ yards and multiple touchdowns in his first NFL start, joining the beloved Samkon Gado.
- Team Synergy: Wilson’s consistent, workmanlike performance allowed quarterback Jordan Love to play with a more conservative, efficient style (a $81.4$ passer rating with zero interceptions), leaning on the Packers’ vaunted defense to suffocate the Vikings’ struggling offense.
A New Thunder-and-Lightning Threat Emerges
The reverberations of this performance extend far beyond Week 12. Wilson’s breakout does more than just secure a win; it fundamentally alters the future dynamic of the Packers’ offense.
After the game, Wilson acknowledged the thrilling prospect of a tandem attack when Jacobs returns, expected to be as soon as the pivotal Thanksgiving matchup against the Detroit Lions. “It’ll be crazy,” Wilson mused, anticipating a “thunder-and-lightning situation.”
This sentiment reveals the silver lining of Jacobs’s injury: the Packers have unearthed a legitimate, dual-threat weapon. A healthy Jacobs and a confident Wilson now give the Green Bay offense a powerful one-two punch that can sustain drives and punish defenses in a way they haven’t been able to all season. The ability to field two high-caliber running backs provides tactical flexibility and injury insurance- a crucial development as the Packers charge toward the NFC playoffs.
Wilson’s victory was a personal triumph forged in the fire of professional pressure, but it was anchored by the ultimate display of team chemistry: a star athlete setting his ego aside to empower his teammate.
Josh Jacobs’ message was simple, but its effect was seismic. It didn’t just calm the butterflies; it unleashed a Pro Bowl-level performance that just may have solidified the Green Bay Packers’ run game for the rest of the year and beyond. The division is on notice: the Packers have more than one weapon.