The Packers had more than just Favre. They also had a top-10 defense, and the combination of the two was supposed to overwhelm Shanahan’s Broncos. But Shanahan, who by then was being referred to as “The Mastermind” in the media, had a plan for dealing with the Green Bay defense. The key, Shanahan decided, was keeping LeRoy Butler, the Packers’ strong safety, out of the box to give Davis some running room. He discovered that by lining up in a slot formation, with two receivers on the same side of the field, he could control Butler’s positioning and assignments.
"LeRoy was killing people in the run game," Mike Heimerdinger, the Broncos' wide receivers coach at the time, said later. "Nobody ever really accounted for him. Mike's idea was to get him isolated and get him out of there. Once we had him on Shannon (Sharpe), we could go the other way and do some things."
Butler ended up with eight tackles, but most of them were well downfield, preventing long Davis runs from turning into gamebreakers. Davis rushed for 157 yards and three touchdowns, earning game MVP honors.