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Green Bay -- Quarterback Aaron Rodgers doesn't view any lack of practice reps hindering him come Sunday against the Dallas Cowboys at Lambeau Field.

The calf he reinjured in Week 17 had an extra week to heal with the bye week and Rodgers has continued to rest it.

Repeating what coach Mike McCarthy said Monday, the quarterback said on his weekly radio show they'll take a look at the calf Wednesday and decide on practice from there.

"It feels better," Rodgers said. We'll see what happens this week, as far as practice reps. Everybody's so concerned about them. I'm not. And my teammates aren't either. We'd like to get out there at some point and move around a little bit. It just depends on how I'm feeling."

Rodgers said he's been getting a lot of treatment, including acupuncture.

Asked if he could practice in some fashion Wednesday, Rodgers added, "There's always a chance."

As a first-year starter in 2008, Rodgers didn't practice for about a month while dealing with a shoulder injury, so he's no stranger to playing without a high volume of practice reps. As he noted Tuesday, he played well in three of those games. In too much pain to throw in practice due to tendinitis, the quarterback said he'd throw a little bit on Fridays and then, of course, game day.

He was also a younger player then.

"It affected me more as a young starter because the more reps you take, the better you're going to play," Rodgers said. "The more looks you get at something, certain plays and defenses, obviously the better you're going to play. As I'm in my seventh year starting, 10th year in the league, I think those reps become a little bit less important, as far as being able to play well on Sunday without practicing.

"You want to see young guys making plays and doing things off of checks you make or off of plays we're putting in that week and you want to see them doing that so you have that confidence when you break the huddle or when that play comes to mind is 'Richard (Rodgers) ran a good route on Wednesday on this play and made this catch,' or 'Davante (Adams) ran a great adjustment on this play and made this play in practice,' so when the ball's about to be snapped, you have that picture in your mind. That's a positive image you can attach to that play. Because I'll be limited in my practicing this week, I'll just have to get it done in other ways, which we've done in the past."

Rodgers cited the walkthroughs, film review and game-plan meetings as ways to accomplish this.

He didn't practice much leading up to the Packers' win over Detroit in Week 17, saying it helped to put his cleats on and throw the ball around during pregame to see how his calf would respond.

While he injured the calf originally at Tampa Bay Week 16 and had it give out in a different spot the next week, Rodgers said he's not concerned about reinjuring it again Sunday.

"If it happens, it happens," Rodgers said. "I have to get myself in the best position to play and then realize whatever limitations I might have moving. Maybe I won't have any. Maybe I'll get to Sunday and I'll feel great. Or maybe I'll be very limited. It just depends on how I'm feeling this week and we'll adjust accordingly."

So now, it's on to Dallas. As Rodgers has said before, the postseason is where legacies are made.

Rodgers starred through Green Bay's Super Bowl run in 2010 and the Packers have gone 1-3 in the postseason since, including two losses at Lambeau Field.

Asked what his postseason legacy says right now and how he views the last three postseasons, Rodgers said "Not good enough, not good enough." He's hoping that, this time, playing at Lambeau Field is a difference-maker.

"We haven't played good enough," he said. "I think we've learned a lot since then. It's a different team this year. This is not the same team that lost to San Fran last year. It's a different team, a different group of guys, a different attitude. In years past, playing at home has not meant the same thing in the playoffs as it does this year. We have not played like this at home in any of my years to where there's a palpable feeling of dominance at home. We feel like when we step on the field, we should win the game.

"It's a mind-set, the great teams in this league have that mind-set. I guarantee you Seattle has that mind-set. When they step on their homefield, they think 'Nobody can beat us.' ...It's a combination of belief and confidence and also an advantage you can gain from your crowd, from the elements and I think with the renovations that we've done and the kind of crowds we've been getting, we have an incredible opportunity to have that kind of advantage at home that you really desire in the playoffs."