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Packers to interview former Cardinals HC Jonathan Gannon for DC opening

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According to NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo, the Green Bay Packers will be interviewing former Arizona Cardinals head coach and Philadelphia Eagles defensive coordinator Jonathan Gannon for the team’s defensive coordinator vacancy this week. The Packers currently don’t have a defensive coordinator, as Jeff Hafley took the Miami Dolphins’ head coaching position. Gannon is the third known interviewee for Green Bay at the position, with the first two being Minnesota Vikings pass game coordinator/defensive backs coach Daronte Jones and Eagles pass game coordinator Christian Parker.

So far, Gannon is the first coach that Green Bay has set up an interview with who also has NFL play-calling on his resume.

From 2021 to 2022, Gannon’s Eagles were 12th in opposing passer rating (88.7). For perspective, those were during Joe Barry’s first two years in Green Bay, and the Packers were 9th with an 87.6 mark. In Arizona, Gannon didn’t call plays on defense, deferring to young defensive coordinator Nick Rallis, who was still in his 20s when he got the position, through three seasons. The Cardinals had the third-worst passer rating allowed in the NFL (98.4) during Gannon’s time with the team. Arizona went 15-36 under his watch.

One of the things that the Cardinals did well was disguise their coverage shells until the last second. This was something head coach Matt LaFleur brought up ahead of their matchup on October 19th of this year. Green Bay spent most of the game playing very slowly on offense, using every second of the play clock to run motions that would give them tells on whether the Rallis/Gannon unit was actually in the coverage that they were presenting, or whether it would be changing it post-snap.

In that Packers-Cardinals matchup, which Green Bay won 27-23, the Packers only ended up running 53 plays because of the slow pace of the game. Gannon has no prior ties to Green Bay, LaFleur or key members of the defensive staff. He has interviewed for the Dallas Cowboys’ defensive coordinator opening, but Gannon has yet to be requested for the New York Giants, New York Jets or Washington Commanders.

Source: https://www.acmepackingcompany.com/...r-cardinals-hc-jonathan-gannon-for-dc-opening
 
The Packers are in a better spot to replace Malik Willis than when they traded for him

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It’s pretty clear at this point that Green Bay Packers backup quarterback Malik Willis will be playing for another NFL team in 2026. Willis should command a deal in the range of Justin Fields’ two-year, $40 million contract, a benchmark deal for the “prove it here and you’ll get a real starting quarterback contract” market.

Generally, the market for true blue veteran backup quarterbacks now, ones who do not have to compete for their spot on the 53-man roster, is around $5 million per year in 2026. The Packers, due to their cap situation, aren’t really in the position to be throwing out that kind of money on a non-starter, especially without owning a first-round pick in either of the next two drafts.

So, how will the team back up starting Jordan Love moving forward? Well, over the past two weeks, they made two moves, adding Desmond Ridder and Kyle McCord, that will help quarterback coach Sean Mannion sleep a lot better at night.

Before we talk about Ridder and McCord, I want to take you back to the 2023 draft to show you how this could have gone wrong.

The 2023 NFL Draft​


With Aaron Rodgers traded to the New York Jets and Love moving into a starting role, the Packers needed a backup quarterback in 2023. The problem is that, like in 2026, the team didn’t have much cap space, as they were one of the highest cash spending teams on the player level from 2020 to 2022. They paid a lot of money to go “all-in” at the end of the Rodgers era (were the 2nd-highest cash spend team on players in 2022) and now had to play within a restricted cap situation (were 27th in cash spend on players in 2023).

They were cheap in the backup quarterback market because they had to, just like the reality that they faced at the kicker position that year.

Another important piece to remember is that it wasn’t clear that the Packers were going to move on from Rodgers after the 2022 season. Had they known that, maybe they would have been more aggressive in the reserve/futures market for practice squad quarterbacks after their season ended (practice squad players usually sign deals right after their campaigns are over).

With cheap practice squad players (Green Bay just had Danny Etling, on his second stint with the team, come back from the practice squad in 2023) and veteran backups off the table, the team had to turn to the draft to backfill for Love moving into the starting role.

On draft weekend, five quarterbacks were picked in the top 68 selections, all players who were projected to be first-round picks based on the consensus draft board: Bryce Young, C.J. Stroud, Anthony Richardson, Will Levis and Hendon Hooker.

Going into Day 3, the Packers were sitting pretty, as there were still nine players who had draftable grades on the consensus draft board who were still available to them. Then the run from hell started.

One after another, seven total quarterbacks were taken from the 127th overall pick in the 2023 draft to the 164th pick, just 38 slots. By the time the run started, the Packers’ next pick was 149th overall in the fifth round, which they spent on Sean Clifford, the 11th quarterback off the board, after each of the following quarterbacks was drafted above their consensus board ranking after Green Bay’s fourth-round pick (defensive tackle Colby Wooden): Jake Haener, Stetson Bennett, Aidan O’Connell, Clayton Tune, Dorian Thompson-Robinson. Shortly after Clifford was taken, Jared Hall was also taken, another quarterback who was picked above his consensus ranking.

You can’t control runs in the draft. Just because you need a quarterback on a cheap deal doesn’t mean that other teams will allow you to make a value selection. Ultimately, none of these passers in that seven-quarterback run ended up being worth their selections.

Haener, Tune, Thompson-Robinson and Hall are out of the league completely, while Bennett is the Rams’ third-string quarterback (28-year-old with 0 career pass attempts in the NFL), O’Connell is the Raiders’ third-string quarterback and Clifford finished the year as the fourth-string quarterback on the Bengals’ practice squad.

Bad picks across the board, but this is what happens when you draft for need instead of value: A bunch of punted selections that you regret down the line.

The road to Malik Willis​


Willis is one of the Packers general manager Brian Gutekunst’s best success stories. He turned a 2025 seventh-round pick, which the Tennessee Titans ultimately used to trade up to the 188th pick (sixth-round) for running back Kalel Mullings, into a massive value add. Mullings had three carries for seven yards as a rookie.

It’s safe to say Green Bay, which got a 134.6 passer rating out of Willis over 89 throws, and 261 yards (three touchdowns) on top of that, got the better end of this deal. The Packers will also probably net a compensatory fifth-round pick in 2027 for Willis leaving in free agency this cycle.

But between Love’s promotion and the addition of Willis, Green Bay burned three draft picks while trying to find a medium-term backup.

First was Clifford, whom we have already mentioned. Clifford beat out both Etling (who was released in the summer of 2023) and Alex McGough, who was signed to the team after earning the USFL MVP and ended up making the Packers’ practice squad that year, for the backup job as a rookie.

In 2024, the Packers drafted Tulane quarterback Michael Pratt in the seventh round to push Clifford and McGough, and they later signed Jacob Eason, a 2020 fourth-round pick, for about two weeks. That was Eason’s last stop in the league.

After clearly being unhappy about the non-Love quarterback performances that summer, Gutekunst sent the pick for Willis. Clifford was brought back on the practice squad while Pratt left for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ practice squad. McGough was cut in July. McGough is no longer on a roster after playing with the Birmingham Stallions of the UFL in 2025. Pratt is now a member of the UFL’s St. Louis Battlehawks after being waived by the Buccaneers in August with an injury settlement.

It took three choices over three drafts and two years of a rotating cast, but the Packers finally got a quality backup going into the 2024 regular season.

How the Packers avoided another 2023 situation​


Without the will-he, won’t-he surrounding Rodgers that was very much a factor in 2023, the 2026 Packers had no excuse to be so short-handed going into the upcoming draft. This year’s practice squad quarterback, the team’s third-stringer behind Love and Willis, was Tune.

Tune played two games for Green Bay. The first was at the end of their matchup against the Baltimore Ravens in Week 17, when Love was out for a concussion and Willis was dealing with shoulder and hamstring issues. His statline for that game was 1 of 4 for 8 yards, 1 interception and a sack of -3 yards. Not good.

His next performance was even worse, a Week 18 start against the Minnesota Vikings, alongside the rest of the Packers’ junior varsity offense, when he went 6 of 11 for 34 yards and took 4 sacks for -41 yards.

In 20 dropbacks, he had -2 net passing yards when you include the sacks.

Thankfully, Green Bay was forward-thinking and actually signed a fourth quarterback going into Week 18: Desmond Ridder. For the playoffs, Ridder was brought up to the 53-man roster to be the team’s emergency quarterback. Tune, after his effort against the Vikings, was released and is now signed to the UFL’s Columbus Aviators.

Ridder was taken 74th overall in the 2022 draft and was ranked as the 31st overall prospect on the consensus board in that class. While that doesn’t mean that he’s going to put up Willis numbers, it is worth noting that he has an 8-10 record as a starter, completing 374 passes out of 588 for 4,002 yards, 16 touchdowns and 14 interceptions, while taking 50 sacks for 294 yards. His adjusted net yards per attempt is 5.33, which would be near the bottom of the league most years, but it’s not in the negatives, like it was with Tune (-2.2, including his first two years with the Arizona Cardinals).

Then on Tuesday, the Packers added Kyle McCord to push Ridder for the backup role. McCord was taken in the sixth round by the Philadelphia Eagles this year. McCord wasn’t really needed in Philadelphia, as the team had a starter in Jalen Hurts, a backup in Tanner McKee and also received Dorian Thompson-Robinson, one of those quarterbacks drafted ahead of Sean Clifford in 2023, in a pre-draft trade that sent former first-round pick Kenny Pickett, later traded to the Las Vegas Raiders, to Cleveland.

McCord ultimately beat out Thompson-Robinson for the practice squad job, but the Eagles also traded for Minnesota’s Sam Howell in August, which meant that McCord served in the fourth-string quarterback role throughout the year.

After spending 20 weeks on the Eagles’ practice squad, McCord didn’t sign a reserve/futures deal to come back with the team. Instead, he was plucked by the Packers, who got the 2025 consensus board’s 132nd overall-ranked player for next to nothing. (Funny note: He was actually ranked ahead of Dillon Gabriel, 178th, who was taken 94th overall.)



I don’t know how Ridder or McCord will play out in Green Bay, but the team has brought in two passers who were once considered at least mid-round prospects for basically free. At an absolutely minimum, the team is being more proactive about the backup quarterback position in 2026 than in 2023, when they only had Danny Etling, possibly because they are actually certain that they will lose one of their top two quarterbacks this time around.

If you had asked me about the team’s draft needs in Week 17, before the addition of Ridder, I would have told you that quarterback would have quietly been one of their biggest problem areas on the roster, just from a numbers perspective (I did not believe that Tune was legit, to be fair). Now, I feel much more comfortable about the position.

If there’s value in the draft at the position, by all means, the team should go and take it. If there’s not, and there’s another weird run like in 2023, maybe it’s not the year to draft a quarterback. The additions of Ridder and McCord have given the Packers that freedom.

The 2026 NFL Draft​


For fun, below are this year’s consensus board rankings at the quarterback position and when Green Bay would be expected to take these passers, based on where the Packers’ picks are scheduled:

  • #1 Fernando Mendoza, Indiana (should be off the board before Green Bay’s top selection)
  • #25 Ty Simpson, Alabama (should be off the board before Green Bay’s top selection)
  • #42 Trinidad Chambliss, Mississippi (should be off the board before Green Bay’s top selection)
  • #57 Garrett Nussmeier, LSU (second round)
  • #93 Carson Beck, Miami (third round)
  • #114 Drew Allar, Penn State (third round)
  • #148 Taylen Green, Arkansas (fourth round)
  • #154 Cade Klubnik, Clemson (fourth round)
  • #163 Sawyer Robertson, Baylor (fifth round)
  • #173 Diego Pavia, Vanderbilt (fifth round)
  • #198 Cole Payton, North Dakota State (fifth round)
  • #229 Jalon Daniels, Kansas (sixth round)
  • #236 Behren Morton, Texas (seventh round)

The last three rounds of the draft are only expected to have five total quarterbacks go off the board, which could have easily set up a Clifford-panic-pick-type situation like in 2023. Thankfully, recent moves mean that the Packers can be more choosy in 2026.

Last note: I’ve been told that Green Bay is at least semi-interested in Iowa quarterback Mark Gronowski, either as a potential late-round pick or a priority undrafted free agent, this class. The connection there is that Iowa’s offensive coordinator, Tim Lester, was a Packers analyst in 2023 before returning to college football, where he had spent the rest of his coaching career. The two sides still talk. Worth noting, Sean Mannion, Green Bay’s quarterbacks coach, will be the offensive coordinator of the West team in the East-West Shrine Bowl next week. Mannion will have hands-on access to Gronowski.

I don’t think this is surprising, considering how much the Packers seem to like at least semi-mobile quarterbacks under LaFleur. Each of Love, Willis, Clifford, McGough, Tune and Etling could move around a bit, to varying degrees (McGough was even moved to receiver, which Etling also played in his NFL career). Gronowski is more of a sledgehammer runner, taking 515 career college carries for 2,312 yards and 53 touchdowns, peaking with his 130 carries for 545 yards and 16-touchdown statline in his lone year at Iowa after transferring up to the FBS from South Dakota State, where he played with Green Bay tight end Tucker Kraft and running back Pierre Strong Jr.

Source: https://www.acmepackingcompany.com/...ce-malik-willis-than-when-they-traded-for-him
 
Green Bay Packers Defensive Coordinator Interview Tracker 2026

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With former defensive coordinator Jeff Hafley off coaching the Miami Dolphins, the biggest move that the Green Bay Packers will make this offseason will probably be who they replace Hafley with. In talking to those in the know in the coaching and coaching representation space, two names have come up consistently (throughout the year), mostly because of convenience: defensive line coach/run game coordinator Demarcus Covington and pass game coordinator Derrick Ansley, two internal candidates who came to Green Bay after previous stints as defensive coordinators in the NFL.

Along with Hafley, both Covington and Ansley each have six years of non-Packers experience as on-field coaches in the NFL, the most on the staff outside of head coach Matt LaFleur and special teams coordinator Rich Bisaccia. Covington has received some defensive coordinator interest from other clubs in 2026, but the same hasn’t been said of Ansley, at least yet.

For what it’s worth, the same people who believe that Covington and Ansley could be defensive coordinator candidates in Green Bay also believe that Hafley could bring one with him at his next gig, too. Another name to know, from the Hafley end, is Jacksonville Jaguars’ linebackers coach Tem Lukabu, who was Hafley’s defensive coordinator from 2020 to 2022. Sean Duggan, the Packers’ current linebackers coach, was a linebackers coach under Lukabu and was one of two co-defensive coordinators who were promoted once Lukabu left for the NFL.

At this point, it’s unclear whether Hafley, who coached in the booth on gamedays for Green Bay, will be a sideline play-caller for the Dolphins or if he will simply be a “CEO” style head coach. Now that the Hafley talk is over, let’s steer it back to the Packers.

A name brought up a lot by Packers fans is Raheem Morris, because of his close ties with LaFleur, but there’s some thought that he might just pivot to television (he has fans in the media) or could take a year off. Remember, when coaches are fired, their remaining salaries are still guaranteed. Morris might not be in a hurry to take a job, and he hasn’t scheduled an interview for defensive coordinator yet.

Other candidates who might become available include Miami’s Anthony Weaver, Baltimore’s Zach Orr, Cleveland’s Jim Schwartz, Tennessee’s Dennard Wilson and Las Vegas’ Patrick Graham, sitting defensive coordinators who are receiving head coaching interviews right now, but whose head coaches were fired.

With all that being said, here’s a list of every coach who, so far, has at least scheduled an NFL defensive coordinator interview this cycle. We’ll also note which team(s) they interviewed with and if they have prior ties to the Packers.

Aaron Whitecotton, Dallas Cowboys, defensive line coach

  • Dallas Cowboys

Whitecotton actually interviewed for the Packers for their defensive line vacancy last offseason, a job that ultimately went to Covington.

Al Harris, Chicago Bears, pass game coordinator/defensive backs coach​

  • Green Bay Packers
  • Washington Commanders

Green Bay interviewed Harris, a former All-Pro cornerback for the team, on Wednesday. Harris’ Bears led the NFL in interceptions, turnovers and turnover differential in 2025.

Anthony Weaver, Miami Dolphins, defensive coordinator​

  • New York Giants

Brian Flores, Minnesota Vikings, defensive coordinator

  • Dallas Cowboys
  • Washington Commanders

Flores has no ties to Green Bay as a defensive coordinator candidate, but he was interviewed for the 2019 head coaching opening that led to the hiring of LaFleur. He has re-signed with the Vikings.

Charlie Bullen, New York Giants, interim defensive coordinator

  • Dallas Cowboys

Chris Harris, New York Jets, interim defensive coordinator

  • New York Jets

Harris interviewed for the Packers’ defensive coordinator opening in 2021, following the firing of Mike Pettine. The job went to Joe Barry.

Christian Parker, Philadelphia Eagles, pass game coordinator​


Parker got his start in the NFL during LaFleur’s initial coaching staff. He was a quality control coach for the Packers from 2019 to 2020 before being hired as a defensive backs coach by the Broncos in 2021. He held that position until he joined the Eagles as their passing game coordinator in 2024. In 2024, Parker was also interviewed for the Packers’ defensive coordinator opening.

Daronte Jones, Minnesota Vikings, pass game coordinator/defensive backs coach​

  • Dallas Cowboys
  • New York Jets
  • New York Giants
  • Green Bay Packers

Jones is reportedly interviewing with the Packers, with news breaking about the interview request on Tuesday morning.

Demarcus Covington, Green Bay Packers, run game coordinator/defensive line coach​

  • Dallas Cowboys
  • New York Jets

Scroll up if you missed our Covington discussion at the start of this article.

Dennard Wilson, Tennessee Titans, defensive coordinator​

  • Washington Commanders

Wilson was interviewed for the 2024 defensive coordinator opening that went to Hafley.

Ephraim Banda, Cleveland Browns, safeties coach​

  • Dallas Cowboys
  • New York Jets

Jim Leonhard, Denver Broncos, assistant head coach/pass game coordinator​

  • Dallas Cowboys
  • New York Jets

Rumors at the time claimed that Leonhard was LaFleur’s first choice to replace Pettine, until Leonhard elected to remain the defensive coordinator at Wisconsin. Leonhard finally made the jump to the NFL in 2024 under Sean Payton, for whom he has a previous relationship dating back to the safety’s playing days.

Jim O’Neil, Detroit Lions, defensive assistant​

  • New York Jets

Joe Cullen, Kansas City Chiefs, defensive line coach​

  • Washington Commanders

Jonathan Gannon, former Arizona Cardinals head coach​


Gannon has set up an interview with the Packers for later this week. He was not a play-caller in Arizona, but he was a play-caller for the 2021-2022 Eagles. He has no prior ties to Green Bay. Gannon was not interviewed by LaFleur in 2021, when Gannon was on the market and scooped up by Philadelphia. The Packers ended up hiring Barry.

Karl Scott, Seattle Seahawks, defensive backs coach/pass game coordinator​

  • Washington Commanders

Mathieu Araujo, Miami Dolphins, cornerbacks coach​

  • New York Jets

Patrick Graham, Las Vegas Raiders, defensive coordinator​

  • Washington Commanders

Wink Martindale, former Michigan defensive coordinator​

  • New York Jets

Zach Orr, Baltimore Ravens, defensive coordinator​

  • Dallas Cowboys

Orr was another candidate who interviewed with the Packers in 2024 for the job that went to Hafley.

Packers Defensive Coordinator Interviews​


Source: https://www.acmepackingcompany.com/...-defensive-coordinator-interview-tracker-2026
 
Packers Draft: 2026 East-West Shrine Bowl Preview

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On Thursday, the American Bowl will be broadcast on NFL Network and the East-West Shrine Bowl will begin its week of events leading up to their game on Tuesday, January 27th. That’s right, folks, it’s full-blown draft season. It’s time to preview our second all-star game of this cycle. If you want to read our American Bowl preview, you can find it HERE.

We’re going to take you position-by-position through the Shrine Bowl, noting which players have draftable grades at each spot per the up-to-date consensus draft board. We’ll also mention general drafting trends and needs that the Green Bay Packers have, so we can slim this board down a bit. Draft season is all about not drinking water through a fire hose.

Quarterback​

  • #161 on the consensus draft board, Cade Klubnik, Clemson

The top quarterback in this game is Clemson’s Cade Klubnik, who came into the year with some first-round hype. The Packers did a pretty good job of covering their bases at quarterback with the additions of Desmond Ridder and Kyle McCord in recent weeks, but maybe they’ll add Klubik to the competition if he slips a bit on draft day.

Running Back​

  • #136 Demond Claiborne, Wake Forest
  • #197 Roman Hemby, Indiana
  • #242 CJ Donaldson, Ohio State
  • #250 Robert Henry Jr., UTSA

All four of the Packers’ top backs this year were listed at at least 219 pounds in 2025. It’s been a general trend in the Matt LaFleur era that Green Bay’s offensive players, specifically, have gotten much bigger to fit in with his inside run-leaning scheme (mixed results). That’s before you even include AJ Dillon, at 247 pounds, into the mix, too.

Generally, the Packers are in the market for bigger backs now. That sort of rules out Claiborne (estimated 195 pounds), but might keep Hemby (e210), Donaldson (e232) and Henry (e205) on the board.

Donaldson actually began his career at West Virginia, where he transferred from in 2025, as a “tight end.” At the college level, he ran the ball 517 times for 2,419 yards (4.7 yards per carry) and 40 touchdowns to go along with 47 receptions for 286 yards and two scores. He was Ohio State’s number two back behind freshman Bo Jackson this year.

Hemby recorded a 1,000-yard rushing season for Indiana after transferring from Maryland. He also returned kicks for the championship Hoosiers from time to time.

Receiver​

  • #88 Skyler Bell, UConn
  • #178 Eric Rivers, Georgia Tech
  • #186 De’Zhaun Stribling, Mississippi State
  • #196 Noah Thomas, Georgia

The Packers under LaFleur are also pretty picky about the size of their receivers, with players under the 205-ish pound range basically being delegated to the slot role (already filled by both Jayden Reed and Matthew Golden in 2026). If you’re going to watch receivers in this group, let it be Stribling (e6’2”, e210) and Thomas (e6’5”, e205).

Stribling caught 216 passes for 2,964 yards and 23 touchdowns in college, at Washington State, Oklahoma State and Mississippi. Thomas was at Texas A&M until this past season and finished with 89 receptions for 1,238 yards and 19 touchdowns. He only posted a 16-reception, 254-yard and 4-touchdown mark in 2025.

Tight End​

  • #106 Jack Endries, Texas
  • #135 Eli Raridon, Notre Dame
  • #145 Dalton Bentley, Utah
  • #209 Lake McRee, USC
  • #256 Riley Nowakowski, Indiana

This draft class is deep at tight end, based on scouting sources I’ve talked to (I haven’t had the time to watch everyone). Jack Endries wasn’t the biggest Cal transfer in the portal last year — that title goes to future first overall pick Fernando Mendoza — but Endries’ name is probably second on that list. He’s one of the top prospects at this entire event.

Riley Nowakowski played linebacker, fullback and tight end and was a relative unknown in the scouting community until he transferred from Wisconsin to Indiana in 2025. He went to Marquette High School in Milwaukee.

Offensive Line​

  • #80 Brian Paker II, Duke
  • #140 Pat Coogan, Indiana
  • #142 Ar’maj Reed-Adams, Texas A&M
  • #148 Jaeden Roberts, Alabama
  • #151 DJ Campbell, Texas
  • #168 Fa’alili Fa’amoe, Wake Forest
  • #175 Joshua Braun, Kentucky
  • #176 Aamil Wagner, Notre Dame
  • #247 Diego Pounds, Mississippi

Interestingly, Brian Parker II was listed as an interior offensive lineman by the Shrine Bowl, despite playing right tackle at Duke. Many scouts expect that he’ll move inside, potentially to center, at the next level. I took him in the third round in our first mock offseason.

Pat Coogan, the Rose Bowl MVP, is another center prospect who actually played center at the college level. If you want the breakdown of which players played at which positions in college, you can find that here.

The Packers have tried to get bigger on the offensive line under LaFleur, with the exception being the center position. Outside of the potential centers, the only lineman who doesn’t really seem like a “Green Bay-type” is Wagner, who was listed as a 296-pound tackle by Notre Dame.

Edge Defender​

  • #111 Malachi Lawrence, UCF
  • #119 Anthony Lucas, USC
  • #129 Tyreak Sapp, Florida
  • #154 Patrick Payton, LSU

Edge defender is probably one of the better units in this game. All of these players have pretty good size, too. Patrick Payton had some first-round buzz heading into the 2024 season. Obviously, the 2-10 Florida State Seminoles disappointed that year. In 2025, he transferred to LSU, where he posted just one sack and five TFLs, his worst marks since 2021, when he played in only one game as a freshman.

Interior Defensive Line​

  • #91 Dontay Corleone, Cincinnati
  • #99 Darrell Jackson Jr., Florida State
  • #134 DeMonte Capehart, Clemson
  • #181 Albert Regis, Texas A&M
  • #252 Landon Robinson, Navy
  • #255 Gary Smith III, UCLA

There’s a good chance that Dontay Corleone and Darrell Jackson Jr. will be the top nose tackles available to the Packers with their first selection of the draft, depending on whether Domonique Orange of Iowa State is taken before they get an opportunity to nab him.

Corleone has had multiple productive seasons, but he has also been dealing with a blood clot condition that is apparently under control now.

More than anything, the Packers need a starting nose tackle more than another body in the room. I think they either take one early or tap out of the position in the draft. Every one of these linemen is nose tackle-sized, other than Navy’s Landon Robinson, who is estimated to be around 285 pounds. The American Conference’s defensive player of the year has a 665-pound squat and a 465-pound bench press.

Off-Ball Linebacker​

  • #61 Jake Golday, Cincinnati
  • #87 Harold Perkins Jr., LSU
  • #108 Taurean York, Texas A&M
  • #125 Lander Barton, Utah
  • #187 Eric Gentry, USC

Like tight end, another position I’ve been told is very good this year is off-ball linebacker. Each of Harold Perkins (e222), York (e227) and Gentry (e225) will have to answer for size questions, though. For reference, Isaiah McDuffie, who is about as small as the team goes, was taken in the sixth round by the Packers at 227 pounds.

Perkins is one of the weirdest evals that will ever come across a scout’s desk. He originally began his career as an edge rusher, but Perkins was later moved to nickel, then to linebacker and then back to the nickel position. Here’s the breakdown of Perkins’ snaps by season:

  • 2025: 353 nickel, 212 linebacker, 32 edge
  • 2024: 108 linebacker, 52 nickel, 25 edge (tore ACL)
  • 2023: 368 nickel, 187 edge, 120 linebacker
  • 2022: 192 edge, 185 nickel, 96 linebacker

He’s sort of a positionless football player, which can be viewed as a good thing, but those players don’t have a strong track record at the next level, either. It will be interesting to see what the NFL does with him.

Cornerback​

  • #128 Domani Jackson, Alabama
  • #190 Devon Marshall, NC State

Devon Marshall is expected to come in sub-5’10”, and that’s basically a no-draft situation for the Packers. They do not like shorter cornerbacks and haven’t taken them under Wolf, Thompson or Gutekunst.

If Marshall does measure in as expected, then the one draftable cornerback to pay attention to at this event is Alabama’s Domani Jackson, who transferred in from USC in 2024. He was a top-10 recruit in the country in the 2022 class and has started at outside cornerback for Alabama over the last two seasons.

Safety​

  • #123 Louis Moore, Indiana
  • #156 Bishop Fitzgerald, USC
  • #172 Cole Wisniewski, Texas Tech

I doubt that the Packers will be in the safety market much because they already have Xavier McKinney, Evan Williams, Javon Bullard and Kitan Oladapo under contract for 2026, but it never hurts to look, considering the team likes to keep five around on the 48-man roster to play special teams.

Cole Wisniewski is an interesting story. He was actually an FCS All-American at North Dakota State before injuring his foot and missing all of the 2024 season. He ended up at Texas Tech, where the Red Raiders, full of transfers, had the third-best defense in college football last year. He is also a Sparta, Wisconsin native.

Source: https://www.acmepackingcompany.com/...kers-draft-2026-east-west-shrine-bowl-preview
 
Dallas Cowboys jump ahead of Packers for defensive coordinator target

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The Dallas Cowboys hired Philadelphia Eagles Christian Parker to be their defensive coordinator on Thursday after a search led the Cowboys to request interviews for at least 10 different candidates for their opening. Both the Cowboys and the New York Jets started their defensive coordinator searches off aggressively, while other teams have moved more slowly throughout the process.

One of the more popular names on the to-be defensive coordinator market this offseason was Parker, who was also the first reported defensive coordinator interview for Green Bay in 2026. Parker, who coached under the legendary Vic Fangio in both Denver and now Philadelphia, got his start in the NFL in 2019 on Matt LaFleur’s first staff as a quality control coach. Parker was previously interviewed by LaFleur for the team’s 2024 defensive coordinator opening, which went to Jeff Hafley, now the head coach of the Miami Dolphins.

According to NFL insider Jordan Schultz, Parker met with the Cowboys on Wednesday and then headed straight to Green Bay. The Packers are much earlier on in their defensive coordinator search, as their job just opened on Monday. It’s possible that Parker was near the top of Green Bay’s board, but that Dallas was just ready to make a decision now, so Parker made the call.

Parker is the second defensive coordinator hired in recent days, with Brian Flores re-signing with the Minnesota Vikings on Wednesday.

Without Parker, the known and remaining Packers interviewees for the job are Chicago Bears pass game coordinator/defensive backs coach Al Harris (interviewed Wednesday), Minnesota Vikings pass game coordinator/defensive backs coach Daronte Jones (will interview Thursday) and former Arizona Cardinals head coach Jonathan Gannon (will interview Friday). Worth remembering, though, is that Green Bay tends to keep searches quiet. When Hafley was hired, he had never even been linked to the team until the announcement that he got the job was made.

The names below are coaches who have received interview requests from other teams, but they have yet to be announced as requested interviews by Green Bay:

  • Aaron Whitecotton, Dallas Cowboys, defensive line coach
  • Anthony Weaver, Miami Dolphins, defensive coordinator
  • Charlie Bullen, New York Giants, interim defensive coordinator
  • Chris Harris, New York Jets, interim defensive coordinator
  • Demarcus Covington, Green Bay Packers, run game coordinator/defensive line coach
  • Dennard Wilson, Tennessee Titans, defensive coordinator
  • Ephraim Banda, Cleveland Browns, safeties coach
  • Jim Leonhard, Denver Broncos, assistant head coach/pass game coordinator
  • Jim O’Neil, Detroit Lions, defensive assistant
  • Joe Cullen, Kansas City Chiefs, defensive line coach
  • Karl Scott, Seattle Seahawks, defensive backs coach/pass game coordinator
  • Mathieu Araujo, Miami Dolphins, cornerbacks coach
  • Patrick Graham, Las Vegas Raiders, defensive coordinator
  • Wink Martindale, former Michigan defensive coordinator
  • Zach Orr, Baltimore Ravens, defensive coordinator

Source: https://www.acmepackingcompany.com/...d-of-packers-for-defensive-coordinator-target
 
Potential Cap Casualties 2026: The Case For and Against Josh Jacobs

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After taking a look at Rashan Gary and Elgton Jenkins, our cap casualties series now turns to the offensive backfield. What does the future hold for running back Josh Jacobs?

A 2019 first-round pick by the Raiders (with one of the picks they got from Chicago in the Khalil Mack trade in 2018), Jacobs joined the Packers in 2024 as a free agent. Since then, he’s been productive in a high-volume role, carrying the ball 535 times for 2,258 yards and 28 rushing touchdowns over his first two years in Green Bay.

Jacobs battled injuries in the second half of the 2025 season, though, and heading into his age 28 season, his cap hit will approach $15 million. With the Packers looking to retool several parts of their roster before a major teardown in 2027, will Jacobs be a part of the picture in 2026?

The case for Josh Jacobs

Jacobs’ strongest case for remaining in Green Bay is this: he’s doing exactly what the Packers have asked him to do.

The Packers clearly wanted a workhorse, bellcow, lead dog, or whatever animal metaphor you prefer when they signed Jacobs, and he’s given them that. Even with the Packers heavily managing his carries in the last month of the season, Jacobs still logged 234 attempts in the regular season, piling up 13 rushing touchdowns.

He also gave the Packers 36 receptions in the passing game, averaging 7.8 yards per catch. It was just the ninth time since 2000 that a Packers back has hit both of those thresholds.

It’s also noteworthy that Jacobs’ best days coincided with the Packers’ best team performances. He carried 17 times for 83 yards (4.9 yards per attempt) in the Packers’ Thanksgiving Day romp in Detroit, and he carried 20 times for 86 yards and a touchdown (4.3 yards per attempt) in the Packers 28-21 win over the Bears. Jacobs touched the ball on six of the eight plays on the Packers’ game winning drive, including an impressive 21-yard run on a third down play, and the game-winning touchdown.

The case against Josh Jacobs

There are deeper issues with Jacobs, though. Jacobs’ volume-based stats look okay in part because the Packers force-fed him the ball throughout the year. On a rate basis, Jacobs’ stats don’t look nearly as good.

Jacobs has never been a home run hitter as a ballcarrier, and his stats reflect that, but you have to start wondering at what point his lackluster rate stats are evidence of age-related decline and overall wear-and-tear than just a reflection of his playing style.

Let’s start with his yards per carry average. Jacobs averaged just 4.0 per carry this year, the fourth time in his seven-year career that he’s averaged four yards or less per carry. Jacobs was one of 21 players in the NFL to carry the ball at least 200 times this year, and of that group, only three players (Christian McCaffrey, Ashton Jeanty, and Quinshon Judkins) had a worse yards per carry figure.

Jacobs’ success rate of 49.1% on rushing plays also was lackluster among his peers. Among that same 21 player group, Jacobs’ success rate ranked 12th, comfortably in the bottom half but ahead of a few notable names, including Christian McCaffrey (48.6), Jahmyr Gibbs (48.1), Saquon Barkley (46.1), and Ashton Jeanty (41).

Jacobs has also been measurably worse with the football with the Packers than he was with the Raiders. In silver and black, Jacobs averaged one fumble every 126.5 touches (including playoffs). With the Packers, Jacobs has put the ball on the ground once every 72.3 touches, including twice in two playoff games.

Still worse for Jacobs, he’s aging and he’s faced a lot of wear and tear in his NFL career. Next year will be his age-28 season (his birthday is February 11, mark your calendar), and he’s logged more than 2,100 career touches in his seven regular seasons. Sooner or later, those touches are going to add up, and the “sooner” part of that equation becomes more likely every year.

Bottom line: Jacobs is expensive and aging, but the Packers seem inclined to invest in him again

Jacobs carries a cap hit of $14.6 million in 2026, fourth highest in the league after Alvin Karmara ($18.6 million), Jonathan Taylor ($15.5 million), and, surprisingly, Aaron Jones ($14.8 million). Only four other backs in the NFL have a cap hit above $10 million in 2026 (Kyren Williams ($11.6 million), Christian McCaffrey ($10.8), Joe Mixon ($10.5 million), and James Conner ($10.2 million)) and that list could get trimmed. NFL teams, generally speaking, are not super thrilled about double digit cap hits for aging running backs, and more than a few players on that list fit that bill.

The Packers clearly value the “bellcow back” archetype, and I can see why, to an extent. If you’re going to have one guy handling the ball upwards of 300 times in a single season, you’d better be darn sure you trust that guy, and paying to get the best is one way to make sure you’re getting the best guy you can.

The Packers have been willing to spend to make sure they have that guy. They signed Jacobs, obviously, but previously they burned a second round pick on AJ Dillon, re-signed Aaron Jones, and then re-worked Jones’ contract to keep him around even longer. Clearly, they’re not averse to throwing resources at a position commonly criticized by analytics-oriented commentators who decry the value of running backs.

The Packers were exceedingly careful with Jacobs’ reps down the stretch, and clearly viewed him as a crucial part of their offensive machine. Given how beat up their offensive line was in the later portions of the year and their overall injury management philosophy with their star running back, I think the Packers would be inclined to absolve Jacobs of a lot of the blame for his generally disappointing performance in December and January — he averaged just 2.6 yards per carry on his final 36 carries of the year, including playoffs.

Given the state of the rest of the Packers’ roster, I think they’re going to be inclined to run it back with Jacobs one more time. I think they’ll prioritize retooling their offensive line and adding talent on defense, counting on this version of the offense to carry the load one more time before a significant shakeup in 2027. Jacobs will get to be the top dog in the backfield one last time, even if the returns are diminishing.

Besides, unless they’re really confident in the return of MarShawn Lloyd, it’s not like the Packers are just spoiled for choice in the backfield. They can either go to the well in free agency, burn another draft pick on a running back, or just let Jacobs play out the string.

Source: https://www.acmepackingcompany.com/...ies-2026-the-case-for-and-against-josh-jacobs
 
Packers Draft: East-West Shrine Bowl measurements and takeaways

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The East-West Shrine Bowl took its measurements today, giving us 630 data points on 126 players. Let’s go position-by-position, breaking down what can be taken away from the scale and measuring tape day from a Green Bay Packers perspective.

I’m going to reference a Size Score to rank players, which is really just the combined Z-scores of the five measurements taken: height, weight, hand size, arm length and wingspan. NFL scouts list height in a four-digit number, with the first being feet, the next two being inches and the final digits being eighths of an inch. We’ll be referencing heights as such throughout this article (it’s just so much easier than fractions).

For example, 5114 would mean that a player is 5’11.5”. 6012 would mean they’re 6’1.25”.

Every player who is currently given a draftable grade on the consensus draft board will be noted with their number in parentheses in their size score ranking. Here is the full document with the official measurements, including our conversions into inches and our Size Scores, if you just want to look at that yourself. Be warned, it’s a lot of numbers.

View Link

Quarterbacks​


Size scores:

  • Mark Gronowski, Iowa: 1.4
  • Kyron Drones, Virginia Tech: 0.9
  • Joe Fagnano, UConn: -0.8
  • Cade Klubnick (#161), Clemson: -1.9
  • Haynes King, Georgia Tech: -2.4
  • Jalon Daniels, Kansas: -2.6
  • Behren Morton, Texas Tech: -2.7
  • Miller Moss, Louisville: -4.1

The two big measurements that teams like to pay attention to at the position are whether a quarterback is over 6’2” or not and whether they have 9” hands. Among the Shrine Bowl quarterbacks, the only passers over 6’2”-flat were Gronowski (6022), Fagnano (6026) and King (6021). All but King (8 7/8”) hit the 9” hand mark.

Klubnik, the expected draft pick on the roster, measured in at 6017 and 206 pounds with 9 3/8” hands. Gronowski, who has some ties to the Packers, weighed in at 233 pounds with the biggest hands by far at 10 1/4”.

Running Backs​


Size scores:

  • CJ Donaldson (#242), Ohio State: -0.3
  • Chip Trayanum, Toledo: -2.7
  • Eli Heidenreich, Navy: -5.3
  • Dean Connors, Houston: -5.6
  • Robert Henry (#250), UTSA: -5.9
  • Demond Claiborne (#136), Wake Forest: -6.8

We talked about it in our Shrine Bowl preview, but the Packers really like to have bigger backs under head coach Matt LaFleur. As expected, Donaldson (6014, 234) fits that mold. Unfortunately, Henry (5090, 197) and Claiborne (5092, 187) fell short of the mark, though. It appears that Roman Hemby of Indiana (#197) did not report to the event.

Receivers​


Size scores:

  • Jeff Caldwell, Cincinnati: 1.0
  • Noah Thomas (#196), Georgia: 0.9
  • J.Michael Sturdivant, Florida: 0.2
  • Colbie Young, Georgia: 0.0
  • Chase Roberts, BYU: -0.3
  • Skyler Bell (#88), UConn: -2.1
  • Jalen Walthall, Incarnate Word: -2.4
  • Dillon Bell, Georgia: -3.1
  • Malik Benson, Oregon: -3.2
  • Emmanuel Henderson, Kansas: -4.5
  • Zavion Thomas, LSU: -5.8
  • Eric Rivers (#178), Georgia Tech: -6.4
  • Michael Wortham, Montana: -7.4
  • Kaden Wetjen, Iowa: -8.1

Mississippi receiver De’Zhaun Stribling (#186) appears not to have reported to Frisco, leaving Thomas, Bell and Rivers as the receivers with draftable grades on the consensus board at the event.

As far as the Packers go, Thomas very much looks like a LaFleur-era receiver, while Bell and Rivers don’t. Thomas measured in an eight-inch shorter (6045) than the tallest receiver at the Shrine Bowl, Cincinnati’s Jeff Caldwell (6046), and also weighed in at 200 pounds.

Meanwhile, Bell came in 5112 and 187 pounds (but had 10” hands) and Rivers was sub-5’10” (5096) and 179 pounds. Overall, the smallest player at the entire event is Wetjen, who was measured at 5086 and 195 pounds with 8.5” hands and a 72” wingspan.

Tight Ends​


Size scores:

  • Eli Raridon (#135), Notre Dame: 3.9
  • Dallen Bentley (#145), Utah: 1.9
  • Seydou Traore, Mississippi State: 1.8
  • Lake McRee (#209) USC: 1.1
  • Lance Mason, Wisconsin: 1.1
  • Bauer Sharp, LSU: 0.6
  • Max Bredeson, Michigan: -1.5
  • Jaren Kanak, Oklahoma: -2.3
  • Riley Nowakowski (#256), Indiana: -2.5

For the most part, the tight ends were as advertised. Texas tight end Jack Endries didn’t make the weigh-ins, but he did participate in practice today. He is one of the better prospects at this event, ranked 106th on the consensus board.

Yes, Indiana’s Nowakowski is small, but I only threw him in here because I view fullbacks pretty similarly to tight ends overall (and the NFL does too, based on how they line up players officially listed at either position). I wouldn’t make too much of Nowakowski coming in at 6020, 239 pounds. He did have smaller than 8.5” hands, though, which might hurt him. Overall, his hands were tied for the third-smallest out of the 126 players measured for the event.

Offensive Linemen​


Size scores:

  • Micah Pettus, Florida State: 8.6
  • Josh Braun (#175), Kentucky: 8.3
  • Nolan Rucci, Penn State: 7.5
  • Aamil Wagner (#176), Notre Dame: 7.3
  • Ar’maj Reed-Adams (#142), Texas A&M: 7.0
  • Fa’alili Fa’amoe (#168), Wake Forest: 6.6
  • Diego Pounds (#247), Mississippi: 6.5
  • Micah Morris, Georgia: 6.3
  • Jaeden Roberts (#148), Alabama: 6.0
  • DJ Campbell (#151), Texas: 5.9
  • Joe Cooper, Slippery Rock: 5.7
  • Garrett DiGiorgio, UCLA: 5.5
  • James Neal, Iowa State: 5.4
  • Giovanni El-Hadi, Michigan: 5.1
  • Febechi Nwaiwu, Oklahoma: 4.6
  • Jager Burton, Kentucky: 4.6
  • Dillon Wade, Auburn: 4.0
  • Riley Mahlman, Wisconsin: 3.9
  • Jayden Williams, Mississippi: 3.6
  • Brian Parker (#80), Duke: 3.3
  • Caden Barnett, Wyoming: 3.2
  • Evan Beerntsen, Northwestern: 1.8
  • Pete Nygra, Louisville: 1.4

The draft-caliber linemen mostly measured among the top players at the position. The largest lineman, though, is projected free agent Pettus, who was listed at 6064, 346 pounds and had an 85” wingspan.

The smallest draftable lineman might also be the top player of the game, Duke’s Brian Parker, who played right tackle in college but is expected to move to center, and could be the top prospect there this cycle. Parker said yesterday that he will spend all week practicing at center, as his lack of length wasn’t exactly a secret. Despite being measured at 6046 and 306 pounds, he has sub 32.25” arms. No other draftable lineman in this game has arms under 33.5”.

Indiana center Pat Coogan (#140) appears to have dropped out of the event.

The Packers like to take 320-pounders on the line now. That works in favor of Roberts (335), Braun (333), Pounds (332) and Campbell (321) but not Fa’amoe (311), Parker (306 – might be an exception because of center) and Wagner (302). Reed-Adams (317) is really a borderline case.

Interior Defensive Linemen​


Size Scores:

  • Darrell Jackson (#99), Florida State: 10.0
  • DeMonte Capehart (#134), Clemson: 6.3
  • Tyler Onyedim, Texas A&M: 5.5
  • Aaron Hall, Duke: 4.5
  • Gary Smith (#255), UCLA: 3.1
  • James Thompson, Illinois: 2.8
  • Kaleb Proctor, Southeastern Louisiana: 1.4
  • Albert Regis (#181), Texas A&M: 1.2
  • David Gusta, Kentucky: 1.1
  • Jackie Marshall, Baylor: 1.0
  • Brandon Cleveland, NC State: 1.0
  • Landon Robinson (#252), Navy: -1.2
  • Donay Corleone (#91), Cincinnati: N/A

The largest overall player at the event is Jackson, who measured in at 6051 and 328 pounds with 11” hands and an 86” wingspan. Both his hands and wingspan were the largest of anyone at the Shrine Bowl, despite there being 12 players taller than him, including two legit 6’8” players (OL Nolan Rucci of Penn State and Riley Mahlman of Wisconsin).

Capehart (6046, 314) and Smith (6011, 328) also measured in at nose tackle size, while Regis (6012, 308) measured in about 10 pounds below expectation. Robinson (5112, 291) was known to be small coming in.

Apparently, Cincinnati’s Corleone, expected to be a third-round pick, was measured in for everything but his weight. That’s…interesting. Corleone was listed by the Bearcats at 335 pounds and was expected to be around that range.

Edge Defenders​


Size Scores:

  • Anthony Lucas (#119), USC: 6.1
  • Ethan Burke, Texas: 6.0
  • Patrick Payton (#154), Florida State: 4.3
  • Mason Reiger, Wisconsin: 3.5
  • Malachi Lawrence (#111), UCF: 2.7
  • Marvin Jones, Oklahoma: 2.2
  • Wesley Williams, Duke: 1.3
  • Keyshawn James-Newby, New Mexico: 1.0
  • Aidan Hubbard, Northwestern: 0.8
  • Bryan Thomas, South Carolina: -1.5

Lucas (6046, 267), Payton (6045, 251) and Lawrence (6040, 247) certainly have the frames of NFL draft picks. It probably helps Lucas that he came in under the 285-pound mark that USC listed him at, honestly.

For what it’s worth, Tyreak Sapp (#129) of Florida got a late invite to the Senior Bowl and will not be participating at the Shrine Bowl.

Linebackers​


Size Scores:

  • Eric Gentry (#187), USC: 7.6
  • Jaden Dugger, Louisiana: 5.5
  • Lander Barton (#125), Utah: 1.5
  • Red Murdock, Buffalo: 0.0
  • Karson Sharar, Iowa: -0.7
  • Jackson Kuwatch, Miami (OH): -1.4
  • Declan Williams, Incarnate Word: -1.6
  • West Weeks, LSU: -2.2
  • Harold Perkins (#87), LSU: -3.2
  • Caden Fordham, NC State: -3.8
  • Taurean York (#108), Texas A&M: -4.7

Two of these players are not like the others. USC’s Gentry is a 6063, 221-pounder with 10.5” hands and an 85.6” wingspan. He’s truly built like a basketball player. While he drew a lot of the attention today, Louisiana’s Dugger (6045, 240) also has an 84.6” wingspan. For reference, no other linebackers on this list cracked 80”. Go look up pictures of them. Built different.

Both Perkins (6003, 222) and York (5104, 232) measured in on the smaller size of things, but Barton (6037, 233) checked the box today. Cincinnati’s Jake Golday (#61) apparently did not attend the event after accepting his invitation.

Cornerbacks​


Size Scores:

  • Devonta Smith, Notre Dame: -3.0
  • Marcus Allen, North Carolina: -3.1
  • Andre Fuller, Toledo: -3.6
  • Domani Jackson (#128), Alabama: -4.1
  • Ceyair Wright, Nebraska: -4.5
  • Devon Marshall (#190), NC State: -5.2
  • Jaylon Guilbeau, Texas: -5.2
  • Jarod Washington, South Carolina State: -5.2
  • Harvey Ahmari, Georgia Tech: -5.3
  • Jadon Canady, Oregon: -5.6
  • Tyreek Chappell, Texas A&M: -6.2
  • Austin Brent, California: -7.0
  • Avery Smith, Toledo: -8.0

There is no freakazoid cornerback on this list (no one even measured 6’1”-flat), but there is some good news for Packers fans: Jackson (6005, 192) and Marshall (5103, 197) had solid measurements today. Green Bay likes to have its CBs measure in at 5’10”+ and 185+ (the absolute minimums). There was some concern that Marshall would fall below the 5’10” line, but he checked that box today.

The following cornerbacks weighed in under 190, which is usually a no-go for the Packers: Allen, Wright, Guilbeau, Washington, Ahmari, Canady, Chappell and Brent.

Safeties​


Size Scores:

  • Cole Wisniewski (#172), Texas Tech: -0.9
  • Miles Scott, Illinois: -1.7
  • Kentrel Bullock, South Alabama: -2.0
  • Austin Brown, Wisconsin: -2.1
  • Jalen Huskey, Maryland: -2.2
  • DQ Smith, South Carolina: -3.6
  • Bishop Fitzgerald (#156), USC: -4.0
  • Dalton Johnson, Arizona: -4.3
  • Myles Rowser, Arizona State: -4.7
  • Louis Moore (#123), Indiana: -4.7
  • Ahmaad Moses, SMU: -6.1

Wisniewski (6033, 214) and his size score would have been bigger than half of the linebackers at the Shrine Bowl. The Sparta, Wisconsin, native is pretty massive for a safety, even at the NFL level. The former FCS All-American transferred from North Dakota State to Texas Tech after having to sit out a year with an injury.

Neither Fitzgerald (5107, 205) nor Moore (5105, 191) has measurements that you’d write home about, one way or another.

Source: https://www.acmepackingcompany.com/...t-west-shrine-bowl-measurements-and-takeaways
 
Packers’ Rasheed Walker arrested with gun charges

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According to The New York Post, Green Bay Packers starting left tackle Rasheed Walker has been charged with second-degree possession of a weapon and criminal possession of a firearm in New York. The gun was registered in Wisconsin, per his attorney. The root issue of the case is that Walker attempted to fly with a pistol and 36 rounds of ammunition in a locked case.

The lawyer claims that Walker, a northeasterner who went to school at Penn State and North Point High School in the Washington, D.C. area, did not realize that he wasn’t allowed to fly with a gun.

“It was in a locked box and he disclosed it to the people at the airport,” Aidala explained.

“He told a person from Delta he was traveling with a firearm. He mistakenly thought because he had a licensed firearm and it was in a locked box that he was able to travel with it. We are confident the case will be dismissed

According to The Post, he will have his day in court on March 19th. Worth noting, Walker is set to be a free agent in 2026, as the final year of his rookie contract was 2025. The NFL free agency “tampering period” will begin on March 9th, and the new league year will begin on March 11th. The unofficial tampering period, the NFL Scouting Combine, will be held from February 23rd to March 2nd.

Typically, these airport gun charges don’t amount to much punishment for NFL players, but the timing might not be great for Walker’s free agent market. If a team wants to commit $20 million per year to Walker, which is basically the minimum market for second-contract starting tackles at this point, then they might be a little shy to hand him that deal until the legal matter is fully behind him.

This could potentially impact the Packers, as they are more than likely going to lose more in free agency than they gain in 2026, due to their cap situation. In 2025, a $20 million per year deal player would have earned his previous team a 2026 fourth-round compensatory pick if it had lost the free agent, but even falling to the $16 million range would drop that selection to a fifth-round pick. In free agency, money (and more importantly, cap space) dries up fast, which is why many sign deals within the first 24 hours of the new league year. Time matters.

If the Packers lose all their free agents this offseason, they are expected to earn three fifth-round picks (LB Quay Walker, WR Romeo Doubs and QB Malik Willis) and a fourth-round pick for Walker. Teams are capped at four comp picks per class, and Walker was supposed to give Green Bay its best chance to earn higher than a fifth-rounder. Now, those projections rely on how comfortable teams will feel about Walker’s legal situation.

Source: https://www.acmepackingcompany.com/...kers-rasheed-walker-arrested-with-gun-charges
 
Steelers hire former Packer Mike McCarthy to be their new head coach

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The Pittsburgh Steelers ran an exhaustive search to figure out who would be replacing Mike Tomlin, who coached the team for 19 years and never posted a losing season. Tomlin stepped down from the position the day after the Steelers’ playoff loss to the Houston Texans.

In total, the Steelers ran 10 interviews, with three candidates who advanced into the in-person stage: former Green Bay Packers/Dallas Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy, Miami Dolphins defensive coordinator Anthony Weaver and Minnesota Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores. On Saturday, the team announced that McCarthy, a Pittsburgh native, would be leading their team moving forward.

Hopefully, this works out better for the Steelers than the last time they made a big decision to grab a local product. In 2022, in need of a new quarterback, Pittsburgh drafted Pitt Panther quarterback Kenny Pickett, who used a lot of the Steelers’ facilities while playing at the college level, in the first round. At the time, Tomlin said, “We circled the globe, at least the United States here, the past several months, exploring and researching. It’s funny. We ended up with the guy from next door.

McCarthy has a 174-112-2 record as a head coach in the NFL, going 125-77-2 with the Packers (where he won Super Bowl XLV over Pittsburgh) and 49-35 with the Cowboys. Over his last seven years as a head coach, his teams have gone 60-51-1 (54 percent win percentage) compared to 114-61-1 (65 percent) to start his head coaching career.

This move could also reunite McCarthy with Aaron Rodgers, the former Packers MVP quarterback who is currently in Pittsburgh but played on a one-year deal in 2025 after his stint with the New York Jets. It’s time to start up Rodgers watch again.

Source: https://www.acmepackingcompany.com/...cker-mike-mccarthy-to-be-their-new-head-coach
 
Green Bay Packers to hire Jonathan Gannon as next defensive coordinator

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Well, it looks like Matt LaFleur won’t be waiting for Jim Leonhard after all. On Sunday morning, NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero reported that the Green Bay Packers will be hiring Jonathan Gannon, the former head coach of the Arizona Cardinals, as their next defensive coordinator. Many reports stated that Leonhard and Raheem Morris were at the top of Green Bay’s lists to fill the void that Jeff Hafley left when he joined the Miami Dolphins as their next head coach, but that obviously didn’t come to fruition.

As far as we know, the interviewed candidates for the Packers’ job were Eagles pass game coordinator Christian Parker, who took the Dallas Cowboys’ defensive coordinator opening, Vikings pass game coordinator/defensive backs coach Daronte Jones, Chicago Bears pass game coordinator/defensive backs coach Al Harris and Gannon. Agents usually like to get interview news out there to build buzz for their clients, so those four candidates might be the only ones who came in for a visit. Yes, Hafley’s interview wasn’t reported prior to him inking a deal with Green Bay in 2024, but those were under specific circumstances — as Hafley was a sitting head coach of a college football team.

Per the reporting, Harris and Parker were interviewed on Wednesday, Jones was interviewed on Thursday and Gannon came in on Friday.

Here is what we wrote about Gannon’s resume at the time of his interview becoming public:

From 2021 to 2022, Gannon’s Eagles were 12th in opposing passer rating (88.7). For perspective, those were during Joe Barry’s first two years in Green Bay, and the Packers were 9th with an 87.6 mark. In Arizona, Gannon didn’t call plays on defense, deferring to young defensive coordinator Nick Rallis, who was still in his 20s when he got the position, through three seasons. The Cardinals had the third-worst passer rating allowed in the NFL (98.4) during Gannon’s time with the team. Arizona went 15-36 under his watch.

One of the things that the Cardinals did well was disguise their coverage shells until the last second. This was something head coach Matt LaFleur brought up ahead of their matchup on October 19th of this year. Green Bay spent most of the game playing very slowly on offense, using every second of the play clock to run motions that would give them tells on whether the Rallis/Gannon unit was actually in the coverage that they were presenting, or whether it would be changing it post-snap.

In that Packers-Cardinals matchup, which Green Bay won 27-23, the Packers only ended up running 53 plays because of the slow pace of the game. Gannon has no prior ties to Green Bay, LaFleur or key members of the defensive staff. He has interviewed for the Dallas Cowboys’ defensive coordinator opening, but Gannon has yet to be requested for the New York Giants, New York Jets or Washington Commanders.

It’s difficult to know what type of defense Gannon will be coaching in Green Bay, considering how different his Eagles and Cardinals defenses were. With Philadelphia, he mostly played four-down (4-3 or nickel defense) looks with match-quarters coverage (think Fangio or Barry). In Arizona, the defense was a 3-4 base that relied on a lot of simulated pressures (think Ravens tree). We probably won’t get a strong indication for what Gannon is going to run with the Packers until someone, be it him or LaFleur, tells us in a press conference.

Gannon also interviewed with the Cowboys, who elected to go the Parker route earlier this week, and the Washington Commanders this hire-fire cycle, but no reports have linked him to the Baltimore Ravens, Los Angeles Chargers, Miami Dolphins, New York Giants, New York Jets or Tennessee Titans, who have set up interviews with other defensive coordinator candidates in 2026.

Update:

Pelissero’s report has now been confirmed by ESPN’s Adam Schefter and The Athletic’s Dianna Russini.

Update #2:

Here is ESPN’s Rob Demovsky’s reporting on why the Packers did not wait for Leonhard to become available to interview:

A source told ESPN that LaFleur “loved the fact that [Gannon has] sat in the [head coach’s] chair.”

A source also said Gannon was drawing interest from both Jim Harbaugh and John Harbaugh for their respective defensive coordinator openings with the Los Angeles Chargers and New York Giants, and if the Packers had waited any longer, they might have lost out on Gannon.

However, that meant the Packers could not interview Denver Broncos assistant head coach/defensive pass game coordinator Jim Leonhard for the job.

While there was mutual interest between LaFleur and Leonhard, the Wisconsin native and former Badgers player and coach, the Packers could not interview him because the Broncos are playing in Sunday’s AFC Championship Game.

Demovsky also stated that LaFleur interviewed every Packers defensive assistant, too, which includes defensive line coach/run game coordinator DeMarcus Covington and pass game coordinator Derrick Ansley, who have previously served as defensive coordinators with other teams at the NFL level.

Source: https://www.acmepackingcompany.com/...jonathan-gannon-as-next-defensive-coordinator
 
Packers offensive coordinator to interview for lateral job with Tennessee Titans

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The Tennessee Titans will interview Green Bay Packers offensive coordinator Adam Stenavich on Monday for their offensive coordinator job, according to NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero. The Packers could technically block the interview, since it’s a lateral move, but that isn’t really in Matt LaFleur’s DNA.

LaFleur was allowed by Sean McVay to leave the Los Angeles Rams’ non-play-calling offensive coordinator position to call plays for the Tennessee Titans. He pays that forward. Last year, LaFleur also let Stenavich interview for the Seattle Seahawks’ job, a play-calling opportunity, which eventually went to Klint Kubiak.

If Stenavich did leave, you’d have to think that the Packers would look at a couple of internal candidates to replace him.

First of all, Nathaniel Hackett, who was LaFleur’s original offensive coordinator in 2019, is currently working on the team in a defensive analyst role. Coaching contracts in the NFL are usually guaranteed, and Hackett signed a four-year deal to be the Denver Broncos’ head coach in 2022, meaning that he’s likely receiving a bulk of his 2025 money from the Broncos, even though he was fired from the post after just one year. But that ends in 2026.

Green Bay usually brings in bought-out coaches for analyst roles to help reverse-engineer their side of the ball for the Packers’ coaches on the other side of the ball. For example, Robert Saleh and Aubrey Pleasant, who both came from defensive backgrounds, were offensive analysts with the Packers.

For whatever it’s worth, what usually pushes coaches to accept these analyst roles, beyond the drive for wanting to be around football, is actually receiving insurance for their families (a new benefit on top of the buyout), rather than money (which often is offset).

Secondly, Luke Getsy, who served as a defensive consultant for the Packers in 2024, is now a senior assistant with Green Bay, too. Getsy was LaFleur’s first choice to replace Hackett in 2022, but he left for a play-calling offensive coordinator opportunity with the Chicago Bears (and then eventually the Las Vegas Raiders). After Hackett and Getsy were hired away, only then did LaFleur pivot to Stenavich.

You’d have to think at this point that Hackett and Getsy are tapping their feet, wondering when the offensive coordinator job is going to open with the Packers. Going into the 2025 season, Stenavich was already the longest-tenured offensive coordinator in the NFL.

With so much coaching turnover in this era, as owners no longer have any fear of the cost of buyouts, it’s crazy that three years (going into 2025) in a coordinator position would make someone the most tenured man in his position in the league. But, hey, that’s the 2020s NFL for you.

Source: https://www.acmepackingcompany.com/...terview-for-lateral-job-with-tennessee-titans
 
Player communication is why Dallas chose Christian Parker over Jonathan Gannon

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We’ll have more stuff on the hiring of new Green Bay Packers defensive coordinator Jonathan Gannon throughout the week, as there are a lot of angles to examine for what should be the biggest move that the Packers make in the 2026 offseason, but I want to get this one up quickly, because it’s a one-off I believe is interesting. After the Dallas Cowboys hired their own new defensive coordinator, Christian Parker, Nick Harris of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, who currently works on the Cowboys’ beat and used to work for DallasCowboys.com, spoke to why Dallas didn’t end up hiring Gannon on a podcast.

There are a couple of reasons I think a Cowboys perspective on Gannon would be worth entertaining. First of all, of the Packers’ three known outside interviews for their defensive coordinator search, Dallas brought in three of them (Gannon, Parker and Minnesota Vikings pass game coordinator/defensive backs coach Daronte Jones). The only outside candidate that Green Bay reportedly interviewed who wasn’t a Dallas prospect was Chicago Bears pass game coordinator/defensive backs coach Al Harris, who was with the Cowboys from 2020 to 2024 as their defensive backs coach.

Secondly, Dallas got a jump on the Packers in their defensive coordinator search, as Matt Eberflus was fired by the team on January 6th. Green Bay’s vacancy didn’t open until January 19th, when Jeff Hafley took the Miami Dolphins’ head coaching opportunity. Because of that, the Cowboys made their hire of Parker on January 22nd, a day before Gannon even had his interview with the Packers. They were able to get a better scope of the market faster, which is completely independent of whether they made the right decision or not (only time will tell).

Third, and possibly most important, is that Dallas and Green Bay are on opposite sides of the secrecy spectrum. Things are mostly tight-lipped with the Packers. Meanwhile, Jerry Jones runs his mouth and tells people whatever he thinks at any given moment. He has no problem complaining about Micah Parsons’ run defense after trading him away, even if he mistakenly calls him Michael double-digit times in a press conference. Jones has leaked the Cowboys’ draft board FOUR different times. There would be heart attacks at 1265 if that ever happened in Green Bay. To say the least, Dallas is a little more loose and media-friendly to the press that hangs around the team, based on conversations I’ve had with members of both beats.

Here’s how the Cowboys viewed Gannon, according to Harris:

Jonathan Gannon on Tuesday was told, hey, this guy is very smart. He understands defenses. He gets it, but can he connect with the players? And I don’t think they got that question answered in their interview process. That was the big thing for Jonathan Gannon. He was a top-two contender from this search from the very jump. Jonathan Gannon has a lot of supporters in Dallas, whether it be Brian Schottenheimer, Clayton Adams or anyone else who has worked with him over the course of his career.

Bringing him in, it was with the understanding that he was going to have a pretty damn good shot at landing this job and certainly was ahead of a name like Christian Parker or Daronte Jones, but I don’t think he got that question answered to them. If he could connect with them on a personal basis A) and then B) being able to communicate to these guys what he wants out of them.

I think, looking back on the Matt Eberflus decision and what went wrong with Matt Eberflus over the last season, that is the thing that they point to the most is that, yes, they believed in him, they believed in what he was trying to preach, but he cannot get that communicated to the players.

As it started to get further down with Jonathan Gannon, I think they realized that it would be very similar to hiring Matt Eberflus again, from that perspective.



I’m not here to bash Gannon. He isn’t Hafley on the mic, but I also don’t think that’s an important aspect of an NFL defensive coordinator’s job, either. As Daire Carragher of Pro Football Focus and Packer Report has pointed out, Gannon’s Arizona Cardinals only had 10 coverage busts last season, which was the third-fewest of any team in the league. Considering Gannon’s defense was a quarters-based system, like in his time as the Philadelphia Eagles’s defensive coordinator, that’s pretty impressive — as quarters-based defenses often take much more on-field communication than the average NFL defense. To me, that would be evidence enough to shrug off the “Is he able to communicate what he wants out of players?” critique in isolation.

Gannon doesn’t talk like the typical macho defensive coordinator you’d get sent from Central Casting. If that moves you, it moves you. Gannon did get hit with a $100,000 fine for hitting a player who fumbled the ball in 2025. That is firmly in the “Not Good And If You Ever Do It Again You’re Probably Out Of The League Forever” bucket. I will say, though, this is the first time I’ve ever actually heard anyone question whether Gannon can or can’t communicate on-field assignments to his players.

I have two more things I want to mention here at the end. One factor for Dallas’ perspective might be that Gannon coached under Eberflus, who the Cowboys were just burnt by, with the Indianapolis Colts from 2018-2020. Maybe there’s some projecting of Eberflus onto his former protégé. Second, Gannon didn’t call plays for the Cardinals, unlike his time with the Eagles. It was actually his defensive coordinator — Nick Rallis, who Gannon brought with him from Philadelphia — who actually called plays for Arizona. Maybe the Cowboys are giving the credit for the Cardinals’ defenses not having many coverage busts to Gannon’s assistants, since he was a non-play-calling head coach. If that’s the case, though…why’d you come into the process with him as a “top-two contender” anyway?

Ultimately, Harris said, “Parker blew [the Cowboys] out of the water” with his second interview and was hired within 24 hours of that meeting. Considering that Parker began his NFL coaching career with the Packers in 2019, it’s hard to imagine that these two coordinators won’t be juxtaposed next to each other moving forward.


Source: https://www.acmepackingcompany.com/...s-chose-christian-parker-over-jonathan-gannon
 
Packers to lose LB coach Sean Duggan to Jeff Hafley’s Dolphins

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South Florida is going to have a lot of former Green Bay Packers moving forward. Not only have the Miami Dolphins taken Jon-Eric Sullivan (general manager), Jeff Hafley (head coach), Ryan Downard (pass game coordinator) and Venzell Boulware (pro scout) from the team, but Miami will also get linebackers coach Sean Duggan in the divorce, according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel’s Tom Silverstein.

This should be no surprise, as Duggan joined the Packers from Hafley’s Boston College staff. In 2024, Duggan was the team’s assistant linebackers coach, working under Anthony Campanile, now the Jacksonville Jaguars’ defensive coordinator. When Campanile left Green Bay, Duggan was internally promoted to be the team’s linebackers coach for the 2025 season.

It’s uncertain what Duggan’s role will be for Hafley, but unless he was named as the defensive coordinator by Miami, then the Packers could have blocked this move. Duggan was Hafley’s co-defensive coordinator in their final season together at Boston College (2023). Before then, Hafley’s defensive coordinator was Tem Lukabu (2020-2022), who is currently the Jaguars’ linebackers coach on Campanile’s staff.

Duggan was just one of two coaches from Boston College that Hafley brought with him. The other is assistant defensive line coach Vince Oghobaase, who was BC’s defensive line coach from 2020 to 2023. Prior to that, Oghobaase served as the San Francisco 49ers’ assistant defensive line coach from 2016-2017, which overlapped with Hafley’s time there as a defensive backs coach. Do not be surprised if Oghobaase ends up following Hafley to Miami, too.

With Duggan, Hafley and Downard gone, here’s what Green Bay’s on-field defensive staff looks like right now:

  • Defensive coordinator: Jonathan Gannon
  • Defensive line/run game coordinator: DeMarcus Covington
  • Passing game coordinator: Derrick Ansley

At the absolute minimum, the Packers will need a new linebackers coach. One name who makes a lot of sense is Nick Rallis, who was Gannon’s linebackers coach with the Philadelphia Eagles (when Gannon was a defensive coordinator) and defensive coordinator with the Cardinals.

On Gannon’s Eagles staff, when he ran a 4-3 defense, he only had three on-field coaches: a defensive line coach, a linebackers coach and a defensive backs coach. In Arizona, when he ran a 3-4 defense, he had individual coaches in charge of the defensive line, outside linebackers, inside linebackers, cornerbacks and the overall secondary. Depending on how he wants the staff to be structured, we could see one or three assistants being added to Green Bay’s defense, assuming that Covington and Ansley are retained.

Update:

Can confirm the #Eagles are promoting Joe Kasper to DBs coach/defensive pass-game coordinator, as @CameronWolfe reported.

Kasper had interest elsewhere, including with Jonathan Gannon in Green Bay, but decided to stay with the Eagles in the role vacated by Christian Parker.

— EJ Smith (@EJSmith94) January 26, 2026

Philadelphia Eagles beat reporter EJ Smith has stated that Joe Kasper, now the Eagles’ pass game coordinator/defensive backs coach, was a coach that Gannon was interested in signing to Green Bay. Kasper served as the Eagles’ safeties coach from 2024 to 2025 and was a quality control coach in Philadelphia in 2021, when Gannon was the team’s defensive coordinator. So, it looks like the Packers do want to add at least one person to coach their secondary. Whether this means that someone will be replacing Ansley or if he will just be working under Ansley, as Downard did, has yet to be reported.

For what it’s worth, Ansley has prior experience coaching under a quarters-based system, which is what Gannon is expected to run. Ansley was Brandon Staley’s defensive backs coach from 2021 to 2022 and his defensive coordinator in 2023 with the Los Angeles Chargers. Ansley’s secondaries at the college level also ran a similar style of defense at Alabama (2016-2017) when he was a defensive backs coach and at Tennessee (2019-2020) when he was a defensive coordinator and defensive backs coach.

Source: https://www.acmepackingcompany.com/...lb-coach-sean-duggan-to-jeff-hafleys-dolphins
 
Packers QBs coach to interview for Eagles offensive coordinator job

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The Green Bay Packers are starting to see members of their assistant coaching staff depart for other jobs as the NFL’s coaching carousel continues to spin. On Monday, news broke that DBs coach Ryan Downard and LBs coach Sean Duggan will be following Jeff Hafley to the Miami Dolphins, while offensive coordinator Adam Stenavich is interviewing with the Tennessee Titans for a playcalling OC position.

Now we have news that another member of the offensive staff is under serious consideration for a big upward move with a different team. That individual is quarterbacks coach Sean Mannion, who is currently in the Dallas area serving as the offensive coordinator for the West team in the East-West Shrine Bowl. NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo reports that Mannion will have an in-person interview with the Philadelphia Eagles for their offensive coordinator position, and that this comes on the heels of a previous virtual interview.

If he gets the job, this would be a remarkably quick rise for the 33-year-old Mannion, who just completed his second year coaching at any level. The former quarterback retired from football after the 2023 season, which he spent on the practice squad of the Seattle Seahawks. Green Bay hired him as an offensive assistant in 2024, then promoted him to quarterbacks coach for 2025 after Tom Clements retired.

The Eagles, meanwhile, are looking to replace Kevin Patullo, their playcalling offensive coordinator whom the team fired after their Wild Card loss to the San Francisco 49ers. Head coach Nick Sirianni has an offensive background and has called plays occasionally, but not consistently since early on in 2021, his first season as Eagles head coach.

Interestingly, the Eagles have seen multiple individuals withdraw from consideration, including the Chiefs’ Matt Nagy, the Bears’ Declan Doyle, and former NFL head coaches Brian Daboll and Mike McDaniel. That leaves Mannion as one of of a handful of remaining candidates, along with former Dolphins OC Frank Smith and former Colts OC Jim Bob Cooter.

If Mannion does depart, that will leave the team to hire a new QBs coach for the second straight season. One internal possibility is Connor Lewis, who spent three years as assistant QBs coach under Clements before getting passed up by Mannion for the position last year. Lewis is currently listed as an offensive pass game and game management specialist, with the latter duties being a return to his role he held in 2021.

Source: https://www.acmepackingcompany.com/...nterview-for-eagles-offensive-coordinator-job
 
Packers Discussion: East-West Shrine Bowl gameday thread

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Green Bay Packers quarterbacks coach Sean Mannion will be the play-calling offensive coordinator of the West team’s offense in the East-West Shrine Bowl tonight, which kicks off at 6 pm CT on NFL Network and NFL+. If you need a refresher on who will be in the game, you can find our preview HERE.

Here are a couple of players I’m keeping an eye on:

  • QB Mark Gronowski, Iowa
    • I’ve heard that we like him, and he’s being coached by Mannion. His OC at Iowa, Tim Lester, was an analyst for the Packers under head coach Matt LaFleur.
  • RB CJ Donaldson, Ohio State
    • He’s a huge bad at 234 pounds, and Green Bay’s offense has only gotten heavier and heavier (mostly because of the backfield, receiver and offensive line position) under LaFleur. He’s very much their type.
  • C Brian Parker, Duke
    • Parker played right tackle for the Blue Devils but might be the top center prospect drafted in this class, depending on what happens with Auburn center Connor Lew’s injury situation. Lew is the only iron-clad top-100 pick center in this class, but he’s also coming off a torn ACL.
  • NT Dontay Corleone, Cincinnati
    • He’s been a known commodity for three years now, and he entered the 2024 season as a potential top-100 selection before a blood clot issue was discovered.
  • NT Darrell Jackson, Florida State
    • A truly massive human at 6’5” and 328 pounds with 11” hands, 35” arms and a 7’2” wingspan. He, like Corleone, is being floated as a top-100 pick.
  • CB Domani Jackson, Alabama
  • S Cole Wisniewski, Texas Tech
    • Green Bay might not be in the safety market this offseason, but Wisniewski is a Sparta, Wisconsin native who played for North Dakota State before transferring to Texas Tech. He’s massive at 6’3.5” and 214 pounds.

Feel free to chat here about the game if you get a chance to catch it.

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Source: https://www.acmepackingcompany.com/...scussion-east-west-shrine-bowl-gameday-thread
 
Packers coach will get hands-on work with cornerbacks at Senior Bowl

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Later tonight, Green Bay Packers quarterbacks coach Sean Mannion will be calling plays for the West team’s offense in the East-West Shrine Bowl, but he’s not the only Packers coach who is getting a coaching opportunity in the college all-star circuit this offseason. At the Senior Bowl, which started practices on Tuesday, Green Bay will be represented by quality control coach Jamal Lett, who is coaching defensive backs for the National team.

The Packers have said in the past that the intel they get from this hands-on experience of coaching a player can make them more comfortable about turning in a pick for the player on draft week.

So with that in mind, let’s take a look at the defensive backs that Lett will be coaching, along with their ranking on the consensus draft board.

Cornerbacks​

  • #33 Colton Hood, Tennessee
  • #41 Chris Johnson, San Diego State
  • #101 Chandler Rivers, Duke
  • #138 Hezekiah Masses, California
  • #226 TJ Hall, Iowa
  • #238 Jalen McMurray, Tennessee
  • #376 Charles Demmings, Stephen F. Austin

Both Colton Hood and Chris Johnson are expected to come off the board before the Packers go on the clock with their first pick of the 2026 draft, the 52nd overall selection. As of now, eight cornerbacks are expected to be taken before Green Bay gets its first crack at a selection, per the consensus draft board.

From a size perspective, both Chandler Rivers (measured at 5’9”) and Jalen McMurray (179 pounds) are far too small to be Packers selections, historically. Green Bay is known for wanting size at the cornerback position. Since 2005, their average draft pick cornerback has been around 6’0” and 195 pounds.

So, if you’re keeping an eye on guys here, I’d pay attention to Hezekiah Masses of Cal (6’0.5”, 180), TJ Hall of Iowa (6’0.5”, 188) and Charles Demmings of Stephen F. Austin (6’1”, 191). Even then, Masses is really a borderline case, as Green Bay hasn’t taken a corner as light as him under either Ted Thompson or Brian Gutekunst.

Safeties​

  • #63 Zakee Wheatley, Penn State
  • #160 Bud Clark, TCU
  • #173 Deshon Singleton, Nebraska
  • #196 VJ Payne, Kansas State
  • #337 Wydett Williams, Mississippi

Green Bay returns Xavier McKinney, Evan Williams, Javon Bullard and Kitan Oladapo at safety this year, with the potential for a Zayne Anderson reunion still possible in 2026. The team might not be in the safety market at all, but if Anderson doesn’t return, it’s possible that the Packers could take one of these safeties on Day 3 of the draft. Green Bay likes to carry five safeties, as they use the position the most on the special teams units they value the most (punt and kickoff).

There are no size questions with any of these safeties, so Bud Clark (6’1”, 185), Deshon Singleton (6’2.5”, 212) and VJ Payne (6’3”, 210) could all fit the mold of a Day 3 Packers selection.

Source: https://www.acmepackingcompany.com/...hands-on-work-with-cornerbacks-at-senior-bowl
 
Packers hire Bobby Babich, former Bills DC, to coaching staff

The Green Bay Packers made their first new hire to the supporting staff for new defensive coordinator Jonathan Gannon, and it is a big one. With the team on the hunt for a new defensive backs coach to fill the vacancy created with Ryan Downard’s departure to Miami, they are bringing aboard a coach who has multiple years of experience as a defensive coordinator.

That iindividual is Bobby Babich, who served as the Buffalo Bills’ DC for the past two years. According to Tom Pelissero of NFL Network, Babich is coming aboard the Packers staff with the titles of secondary coach and defensive pass fame coordinator.

If Babich’s name sounds familiar to Packers fans, there is good reason for it. He interviewed for the DC job in Green Bay two years ago, but took the Bills job instead, getting a promotion from his prior position as Buffalo’s linebackers coach; the Packers then hired Jeff Hafley one day later.

Babich does have a deep background coaching defensive backs, however. He was almost exclusively a DBs coach prior to his two years coaching linebackers in Buffalo, having served as the Bills’ safeties coach for four seasons from 2018 to 2021. He also has experience coaching DBs with the Cleveland Browns, serving as assistant DBs coach under head coach Mike Pettine, who would eventually become the Packers’ defensive coordinator.

The titles Babich will hold in Green Bay raise a question about the future of Derrick Ansley, who was Green Bay’s defensive pass game coordinator in 2025. Ansley has held that position in Green Bay for two years, but this news suggests that he will either be taking a different role under Gannon or may be departing Green Bay for a new job elsewhere.

Green Bay still needs to find a replacement for one major hole on the coaching staff: the linebackers coach. Sean Duggan is joining Hafley and Downard in Miami, and one candidate to watch is Nick Rallis, Gannon’s former defensive coordinator in Arizona.

Source: https://www.acmepackingcompany.com/...obby-babich-former-bills-dc-to-coaching-staff
 
If Miami is Green Bay South, Pittsburgh is Green Bay East

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The Miami Dolphins have essentially taken the entire defensive staff from the 2025 Green Bay Packers, along with vice president of player personnel Jon-Eric Sullivan and pro scout Venzell Boulware, this offseason. While Packers South is getting a lot of attention, Packers East is starting to develop, too.

If you haven’t heard, former Green Bay head coach Mike McCarthy has been named the next leader of the Pittsburgh Steelers. Aaron Rodgers Watch 2026 will revolve around whether Rodgers will be retiring or returning to play under his 2006-2018 head coach. In his opening press conference with the Steelers, McCarthy said he “definitely” wants Rodgers to be his quarterback next year.

But the Packers connections don’t end there with the McCarthy Steelers.

With McCarthy stating that he will be the offensive play-caller in Pittsburgh, the biggest hire under him is his defensive coordinator. According to Jordan Schultz, McCarthy will hire Patrick Graham to fill the position. Graham, formerly the defensive coordinator of the Miami Dolphins, New York Giants and Las Vegas Raiders, was McCarthy’s linebackers coach and run game coordinator in 2018 with the Packers.

Matt Zenitz of CBS Sports is also reporting that James Campen, who was Green Bay’s offensive line coach from 2007 to 2018, is going to join McCarthy’s staff with the same title. Campen was still under contract with the Packers when head coach Matt LaFleur was hired, but Campen was allowed to leave for the Cleveland Browns. LaFleur hired Adam Stenavich, now Green Bay’s offensive coordinator, to be his first offensive line coach in 2019.

Jason Simmons is also joining McCarthy’s staff, per ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler. Simmons was in Green Bay from 2011 to 2019, working various coaching roles in the secondary.

Former Packers quarterback Scott Tolzien (2013-2015), who also coached under McCarthy with the Dallas Cowboys, is also being interviewed for the offensive coordinator job in Pittsburgh, according to Fowler.

For Green Bay fans, there’s going to be a lot of familiar faces in Pittsburgh this season.

Source: https://www.acmepackingcompany.com/...-green-bay-south-pittsburgh-is-green-bay-east
 
Packers’ Sean Mannion named Philadelphia Eagles offensive coordinator

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Green Bay Packers quarterback coach Sean Mannion is shown congratulating quarterback Jordan Love (10) during the second quarter of their game Sunday, September 7, 2025 at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wisconsin. The Green Bay Packers beat the Detroit Lions 27-13. | Mark Hoffman/Milwaukee Journal Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The Green Bay Packers will be making at least one change to the offensive side of the ball. While they’ve lost virtually the entire defensive staff to the Miami Dolphins, the Packers and head coach Matt LaFleur have held firm, so far, with offensive coaches. That was until Thursday night, when the Philadelphia Eagles signed Packers quarterbacks coach Sean Mannion to become their next offensive coordinator.

The Eagles have had a hard time filling this position, with leaks coming out left and right about the reason for the job still being open. Depending on who you listen to, it’s because of the locker room, Nick Sirianni being on the hot seat, coordinators wanting to bring in their own offensive line guy instead of Jeff Stoutland or just generally how Eagles fans treat coaches’ families when the team doesn’t meet expectations.

Either way, Mannion had an in-person visit with Philadelphia this week after having a virtual interview with the team earlier this offseason. Mannion is coming off a 21-17 victory in the East-West Shrine Bowl, a college all-star game, where he was the offensive coordinator for the West team.

Mannion played nine years in the NFL as a quarterback before joining the Packers as an offensive assistant in 2024. In 2025, he was promoted to quarterbacks coach by LaFleur, who was Mannion’s offensive coordinator as a player.

On February 3rd, 2024, Mannion started his coaching career. Less than two years later, he is the offensive coordinator of a playoff team. Rises don’t happen much faster than that.

Update:

It’s now being reported that Nathaniel Hackett will be Jeff Hafley’s quarterbacks coach in Miami. The next man up to replace Mannion will probably be Luke Getsy, who holds the title of “senior assistant” in Green Bay. He was previously the Packers’ quarterbacks coach from 2019 to 2021 before leaving for two play-calling offensive coordinator jobs. He’s been in Green Bay for the last two years.

Source: https://www.acmepackingcompany.com/...med-philadelphia-eagles-offensive-coordinator
 
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