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ST.“He’s a Monster”: Packers’ Coach Matt LaFleur Admits They Couldn’t Stop Eagles’ DeVonta Smith

DeVonta Smith of the Philadelphia Eagles runs out of the tunnel prior to an NFL football wild card playoff game against the Green Bay Packers at...

GREEN BAY, WISCONSIN — November 10, 2025

A freezing Monday night at Lambeau Field turned into a one-man showcase — a display of precision, toughness, and brilliance from a receiver who silenced the home crowd and earned even his rival’s admiration.

It’s not often that Packers head coach Matt LaFleur praises an opponent, especially after a heartbreaking home loss. But following Green Bay’s 7–10 defeat to the Philadelphia Eagles on Monday Night Football, even he couldn’t hide his respect for what DeVonta Smith did under the cold Wisconsin sky.

“I’m frustrated we lost,” LaFleur admitted post-game.
“But you have to give credit where it’s due. That guy’s a monster. We doubled him, bracketed him, rotated safeties — and he still found a way. He’s surgical. He’s special.”


The Moment That Broke Lambeau Silence

DeVonta Smith, just 26 years old, turned a defensive slugfest into his personal statement game.

With the score tied 3–0 early in the fourth quarter, Smith burned the Packers’ coverage for a 36-yard touchdown from Jalen Hurts — the only touchdown of the night — perfectly tracking the deep ball and dragging his toes inside the end zone corner as snow flurries danced around him.

That single play flipped the game.

Smith finished with 4 catches for 69 yards and that decisive touchdown, plus a crucial third-down toe-tap grab on the sideline to extend the Eagles’ final scoring drive.

“We practiced that look all week,” Hurts said afterward.
“When I saw the coverage shift, I just trusted him. Smitty doesn’t miss. He’s ice-cold.”

According to Pro Football Focus, Smith graded 81.9 — the highest offensive score on either team. ESPN highlighted him as “the technician who cracked Green Bay’s shell,” while NFL Network analysts simply called him “unstoppable when it mattered most.”


How Smith Won the Battle

Smith didn’t do it with brute strength. He did it with rhythm, discipline, and timing.

Every route looked identical — until it wasn’t. He lured Green Bay’s corners into false steps, slicing through soft zones and beating one-on-one press coverage with near-mathematical precision.
Even Jaire Alexander, the Packers’ All-Pro corner, could only shake his head:

“You can’t play him off balance. He reads you like a book. One wrong move and he’s gone.”

Behind that smooth demeanor lies a relentless competitor. While most receivers celebrated loudly, Smith simply jogged back to the sideline, helmet down, and whispered to Hurts: “One more drive.”


📊 DeVonta Smith — Week 10 by the Numbers

CategoryStat
Targets5
Receptions4
Yards69
Touchdowns1
Third-down conversions2
PFF Offensive Grade81.9

The Quiet Killer

For Nick Sirianni, this wasn’t a surprise.

“That’s who he is,” Sirianni said. “He doesn’t scream. He doesn’t need to. He just breaks your heart quietly, one route at a time.”

Smith’s touchdown wasn’t just another highlight. It was a message — that Philadelphia’s offense still runs through precision and trust, even on nights when style takes a back seat to survival.

The 10-7 win moved the Eagles to 7–3, keeping them in the NFC playoff hunt, and reaffirmed that even in ugly games, talent like Smith’s can be the difference between heartbreak and triumph.


Matt LaFleur’s Final Words

“He made us pay for every mistake,” LaFleur said quietly before leaving the podium.
“You can’t game-plan perfection. And tonight, he was damn near perfect.”

Under the frozen lights of Lambeau, DeVonta Smith walked off the field not with fireworks — but with the cold, calm look of a man who just turned a defensive war into an art form.

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