Did the Packers’ Draft Follow a Winner’s Blueprint?

Has Brian Gutekunst keyed in on the draft trends of the league’s most successful GMs?

As we sit in the dead zone between rookie minicamp and the start of OTAs, I thought it might be a good time to examine the Packers’ recent draft class through a specific lens. If you read my three part series on Substack that examines GMs across the league in regards to talent acquisition and capital efficiency, you’ll know that my comparative analysis revealed two things that the most successful general managers do notably better than their peers: draft contributing role-players and find lightning-in-a-bottle All-Pro seasons. To clarify, I define role-players as any player that manages an NFL career longer than the standard four-year rookie contract even if that player is nothing more than a backup (Gutekunst has proven surprisingly inept at even this low bar, with 46% of his picks out of the league before their rookie deals end).

The lightning-in-a-bottle All-Pro seasons are best represented by one-hit wonders like ILB D’vondre Campbell, and finding guys like this surprisingly correlates with more playoff success than fielding perennial superstars does, though the multi-time All-Pros certainly don’t hurt. Still, knowing how valuable one-off career years can be ought to open a team up to taking more risks on college players who’ve produced elite seasons but pose long-term risks due to injury concerns, advanced age, off-the-field issues, poorly-timed regression, and so on. Traitsy underwear olympians who’ve never shown anything on tape are not the type of risks good GMs should be taking. So with that little revelation out of the way, what can we make of the Packers’ 2026 draft class and whether or not they’ll help push the team deeper into the post-season tournament?

 

Round 2: Brandon Cisse - CB

Does he have a high likelihood of at least being a contributing role-player?

  • Yes. There are risk factors such as a seeming lack of ball instincts, poor tackling technique, and a need for more technical development, but the main thing that stands out when you watch Cisse’s tape is just how sticky he is in coverage, and against good competition. He has the hip fluidity, speed, and all-around athleticism to be in a receiver’s pocket all game long and that will earn him snaps, especially when the team goes to man-coverage. Furthermore, Cisse has demonstrated the versatility to play the boundary or the slot, and while his tackling form needs work, he is NOT afraid to stick his nose in the running game. Perhaps most importantly, the coaching staff’s lack of trust in Carrington Valentine and the likelihood that Keisean Nixon’s average production and advancing age convince Green Bay to move on next year give Cisse a clear runway to meaningful snaps early in his career.

Does he realistically have the potential for his best year to be an All-Pro year?

  • Yes. By all accounts, he’s a “football junkie” who’s always studying the game, and when you pair that with his elite athletic gifts, the potential is there to eventually be a true shutdown CB who shadows the opponent’s top receiver. His lack of interceptions is concerning, and he doesn’t have the blanketing length of a guy like Sauce Gardner, but Jaire Alexander was a small CB who made All-Pro without a ton of interceptions based on how sticky and aggressive he was.

 

Round 3: Chris McClellan - DT

Does he have a high likelihood of at least being a contributing role-player?

  • Maybe. He’s got an NFL frame, played against quality competition, and is very versatile with where he can slot in on the line, but I think he would have been drafted a lot later in a stronger year for DTs. He’s talked about a lot as a run stuffer, but he’s not a Jordan Davis style nose tackle. He’s actually pretty close in size to Kenny Clark, but my eye tells me that Clark has a lot more “sand in the pants,” as they say. His pass rush upside is mentioned as something that could keep him on the field for three downs, but I just don’t believe that he has the quick-twitch explosiveness to beat NFL caliber blockers in the way that he did in college. I suspect he’ll be more of a high-effort disruptor who moves the pocket than a true sack-artist like Chris Jones. More concerning than any of that is how often he plays with high pad-level that will get him completely neutralized at the professional level. Having said all of that, he’s got the physical tools to at least be a rotational defensive tackle in this league and could certainly provide more push up the middle than Colby Wooden ever gave. He’ll also have plenty of opportunity for early snaps given how thin and injury-prone the Packers’ D-Line is.

Does he realistically have the potential for his best year to be an All-Pro year?

  • Not likely. I can’t say that I ever see it happening. Maybe if the coaching staff gets him to master his pad level, develop a repertoire of counter-moves, and add more strength he could make it to a Pro-Bowl level of play with a few years of refinement.  

 

Round 4: Dani Dennis-Sutton - EDGE

Does he have a high likelihood of at least being a contributing role-player?

  • Yes. Everybody’s heard about DDS’ historic RAS score putting him in the company of players like Myles Garrett and TJ Watt, but this guy is a football player, not just a track star. The risks are a lack of natural bend around the corner, a lack of counter-moves, and that he misses more tackles than you’d like, but his elite length, strength, and explosion make him a force at setting the edge in the run game who’s ready to take snaps now. The Green Bay defense was not good at stopping the run last year and they’re even weaker now that they’ve lost two EDGE players who specialized in neutralizing the run game, trading Rashan Gary and letting Kingsley Enagbare walk in free agency. Dennis-Sutton is going to take those early-down snaps and never look back. Oh, and he also has a freakish knack for blocking kicks on special teams; when’s the last time you saw the Packers block a kick?

Does he realistically have the potential for his best year to be an All-Pro year?

  • Yes! Listen, DDS is my favorite pick in this draft. He has every physical tool you could ask for, he’s got a motor that runs hot, and he’s played against quality competition. Micah Parsons is going to teach him a counter-move or two before their time together is done. And while he’s never going to be a gymnast, flexibility can be improved with training: get this guy in daily yoga and dance classes and he’ll become flexible enough to be the double-digit sack power-EDGE that Preston Smith served as and that Gute thought he was getting with Rashan Gary.

 

Round 5: Jager Burton - IOL

Does he have a high likelihood of at least being a contributing role-player?

  • Yes. Burton has a ton of experience at every interior offensive line position, he’s faced quality competition, and he’s an absolutely elite athlete. He’s also incredibly durable. Yes, he has short arms and will never be the strongest center in the league, but his versatility and experience practically guarantee that he’ll see snaps when one of Aaron Banks, Sean Rhyan, or Anthony Belton gets injured. I think that his proven durability in college already gives him a leg up over current injury-prone backups like Jacob Monk, Travis Glover, and John Williams. That said, I do think he’ll need a year in an NFL weight room before seriously challenging for a starting role.

Does he realistically have the potential for his best year to be an All-Pro year?

  • Maybe. I’m not certain he’ll ever be a cream of the crop All-Pro mauler, but I do think his top-end athleticism gives him a chance to develop into a Pro Bowl level zone blocking center whose exceptional mirroring ability will keep his quarterback clean in the pass game. And even though he’s not yet a force in the run game, he’s actually the biggest center Green Bay has lined up since before Brett Favre was taking snaps, so it is possible that he could one day top the well-rounded game of two-time All-Pro Corey Linsley.

 

Round 6: Domani Jackson - CB

Does he have a high likelihood of at least being a contributing role-player?

  • Not likely. He’s an elite athlete and had a solid 2024 season, but he got benched in 2025. He’s grabby, relies on athleticism instead of technique, and doesn’t have a ton of ball production. He doesn’t display great instincts either. He’s not better than Nixon, Valentine, St. Juste, or Cisse. Is he better than converted WR and Matt LaFleur favorite Bo Melton? Frankly, I see a red-shirt year ahead with the hope that professional level coaching can develop him into a physical zone boundary-CB when the defensive backfield starts to thin out over the next year or two. That said, it’s not like Alabama is some D-III program that couldn’t give Jackson the training he needed to succeed. This pick is Gutekunst betting everything on Jackson’s 2024 season.

Does he realistically have the potential for his best year to be an All-Pro year?

  • Not likely. I just don’t see the instincts or hip fluidity to erase the Justin Jeffersons of the world. And if you look into the kind of CBs that come out of the sixth round of the draft, you might be surprised to learn that former Packer Al Harris has a bid to be one of the best in league history, though he wasn’t a full-time starter until his third NFL team and sixth year in the league. He did indeed make a second-team All-Pro once, so there’s hope yet for Domani Jackson!

 

Round 6: Trey Smack - K

Does he have a high likelihood of at least being a contributing role-player?

  • Yes. I’m not going to pretend that anybody on earth has any real clue how college kickers will turn out in the pros, but after the Packers decided to roll the dice on one of the two remaining seasons before the cap monster smashes their shoddy championship window shut by cutting veteran Brandon McManus, Trey Smack is all but guaranteed to decide wins and losses by the tip of his toe for at least one year. Let’s hope he’s got the right stuff.

Does he realistically have the potential for his best year to be an All-Pro year?

  • Yes? Once again, nobody has any clue how college specialists will turn out. I love that he’s got a big leg, high trajectory (fewer blocks!), and has been fairly accurate; I don’t love that he’s a warm weather player and that he’s had a game where he missed three kicks. Only time will tell if he’s the next Mason Crosby or Anders Carlson.

 

Conclusion

There are no sure-fire All-Pros in this draft class, but those are hard to come by when your first pick comes on Day 2. That said, there’s realistic potential for at least three of these kids to have the kind of year that defines a team’s season. More importantly, I feel confident that at least four of the six picks will carve out contributing roles and likely even surpass the quality of the departed players they’re replacing. The Packers are going to need that kind of success if they want to advance further than the Wild Card round.

 

 

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Cody Cottrell is a proud shareholder of the greatest sports franchise on Earth, the Green Bay Packers. He's also a complicated fella who loves writing a good hot take.

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Comments (30)

Fan-Friendly This filter will hide comments which have ratio of 5 to 1 down-vote to up-vote.
dobber's picture

May 16, 2026 at 04:04 pm

"I define role-players as any player that manages an NFL career longer than the standard four-year rookie contract even if that player is nothing more than a backup (Gutekunst has proven surprisingly inept at even this low bar, with 46% of his picks out of the league before their rookie deals end)."

I guess if you need a metric that can be applied consistently, this is as good as any, but it's going to inherently make any GM who regularly deals away day 3 picks look better than a GM who makes a lot of day 3 picks (either through comp picks or dealing down) since it's going to concentrate your numbers into higher % rounds and remove lower % picks. Since officially taking over, 31 of Gute's 86 picks (36%) have been day 1/2 picks and 55 of 86 (64%) have been day 3 picks (for comparison, if you're picking a standard 7 picks with no comps, it's (42%-58%).

The NFLPA asserts that the average player only plays about 3.3 years (keeping in mind that this will include UDFAs and such, too) and never sees a second contract. The NFL argues that if you set the bar as making a 53-man roster as a rookie, the average career is almost 6 years. The other piece here is that on average, the longest careers belong to specialists (K, P, LS) and QBs...most specialists go undrafted and linger in and out of the league, which skews the average numbers long relative to other spots.

That said, I think the only guy who doesn't really have a direct path to snaps at this stage is probably Burton: if he's playing a lot, I suspect it's likely that they've had at least one key injury to the IOL or that someone has been woefully ineffective. Either would not be good...both would suck. That also assumes you count special teams snaps because I see Domani Jackson as being a prototypical gunner: size, length, speed, physical. I wouldn't be surprised if he's one of the gunners week 1...that counts, too, right?

"he’s actually the biggest center Green Bay has lined up since before Brett Favre was taking snaps,"

Burton's combine measurements leave him a half-inch shorter and 10 pounds lighter than Sean Rhyan and almost exactly the same ht/wt as Elgton Jenkins, although I guarantee Jenkins was not at his combine 310 lbs last season. I'm less high on Burton than others, but that's because he profiles a lot like other day 3 G/C projects who haven't cut it.

I think DDS and Smack are likely to be the two picks for whom the health of players around them will make the least difference in how much they play (and that presumes Smack wins the job). They'll be regulars, so they have the best chance to be impact guys. With two returning players (Nixon and Valentine), an experienced FA who supposedly fits the defense (St. Juste), and a safety who plays the nickel spot (Bullard), Cisse may find himself playing 3rd or 4th CB...and the 4th CB played very little last year. I agree in that McClellan feels like a blend of Clark and Wyatt. He'll get rotational snaps because the Packers like to rotate their IDL, but Hargrave and Wyatt will get the lion's share.

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GregC's picture

May 16, 2026 at 07:21 pm

Thanks dobber, I thought that stat looked fishy. In order to make it work, you would have to come up with a way to measure equivalent draft picks--maybe by averaging them out somehow? On the other hand, I really don't like ANY measures of successful drafting, such as number of starters or number of Pro Bowlers. It's one thing for a player to be a starter, but is he a good starter or a mediocre one? And did the Pro Bowler actually deserve to go to the Pro Bowl? We all know the Pro Bowl is a joke, and I'm not just talking about the game. A lot of players make the Pro Bowl based on reputation.

In the end, I think the only measure of a GM is how many games a team wins. Just focusing on their success in the draft ignores a lot of what they do, such as free agent signings and decisions about how long to keep the players they draft.

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dobber's picture

May 17, 2026 at 06:35 am

Well-stated Greg.

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LambeauPlain's picture

May 17, 2026 at 08:52 am

Thumbs up, Dobber. My "narrative alert" went off when reading:

"Gutekunst has proven surprisingly inept at even this low bar, with 46% of his picks out of the league before their rookie deals end)." Turns out, this is the NFL average!

But Gutey's "low bar ineptness" isn't the worst of it. Being enamored with "traitsy" skills while performing in under-wear vs acquiring real football players, is.

Then the author goes through the draft class and praises most of them as good players, highlighted by top athleticism he too seems enamored with.

I think Big Mac has a chance to be a significant role player as a third rounder. In fact, I see a good chance the entire class will be solid role players.

Jackson as a gunner not only seems possible, it is probable. Kid likes to play football. And he's got all those "under-wear skills" too!

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golfpacker61's picture

May 17, 2026 at 09:15 am

"I'm less high on Burton than others, but that's because he profiles a lot like other day 3 G/C projects who haven't cut it."
It also makes a difference for players and really players at certain positions where they play at in college, on how they are perceived and drafted. 'What if" Burton had played OC/OG at Iowa? Would teams rate him higher because he played in Kirk Ferentz's o-line factory? I think it would have. Burton played against great competition in the SEC. but having the Iowa OL pedigree vs the Kentucky one is different.

I am just glad we got him, and especially where we got him. I feel we have an actual solid backup behind Rhyan now, and maybe his replacement. I can see Monk being a casualty as he has done very little to be on this team.

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Alberta_Packer's picture

May 16, 2026 at 04:10 pm

My thinking is that this has been Gutekunst's best draft in terms of overall quality. Even several of the UDFAs could legitimately compete for a roster spot and / PS. Josh Gesky?

Also - IMO - Gutekunst has become a better GM over the years. At least he seems to be open to learning while still on the job..

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Since'75's picture

May 16, 2026 at 10:42 pm

So would it be safe to say you grade this draft class an A for Guter?

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Since'75's picture

May 17, 2026 at 02:56 pm

Love seeing people grade a draft class, before they step on an NFL field.

What could go wrong? 🙄

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golfpacker61's picture

May 17, 2026 at 09:06 am

"My thinking is that this has been Gutekunst's best draft in terms of overall quality. Even several of the UDFAs could legitimately compete for a roster spot and / PS. Josh Gesky?"
I think so too Alberta, especially when you factor in no first round pick and so few picks.

Gutey also filled needs with UDFAs that he traded away picks for in OL-Gesky and WR-Sturdivant. The only way it's better is if we got McClellan @ 84, and then picked Singleton-RB @ 160. And then kept the 2 7th rounders, picked Dallen Bentley & Diego Pounds, filling needs @ TE & OL. The move up for McClellan was unnecessary in my view, but the 2nd trade up gets sketchy because Smack probably could have been snatched before he became a UDFA. If we got the kicker we think he is it was well worth it.

All in all, a great need filling draft.

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Starrbrite's picture

May 17, 2026 at 05:35 pm

I agree—his best draft.

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LambeauPlain's picture

May 17, 2026 at 11:34 am

I conur...one of his best drafts, especially when acknowledging the Packers first rounder acquired Micah Parsons.

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Starrbrite's picture

May 17, 2026 at 05:36 pm

Yes indeed.

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Spock's picture

May 16, 2026 at 05:38 pm

Trey Smack DID miss his first 3 kicks in 2025 but then made his next two (all 5 in the same game). If I remember correctly those first 3 kicks were his only misses for the season. Sounds like he figured out the problem pretty fast.

Edit: I Found this:
"In the 2025 season opener against Long Island University, Trey Smack missed his first three field goal attempts
The misses came from distances where he had been highly accurate in previous seasons: two from 40 and 39 yards, and one from a career-long 57 yards that bounced off the left upright Roundtable. All three were short — the shortest by just inches — and coach Billy Napier described them as “deep” but “off a yard” Roundtable.

Despite the early misses, Smack still connected on two field goals that day (including a 56-yarder) and all seven extra-point attempts Roundtable. Napier emphasized that Smack’s mental toughness and work ethic mean he doesn’t stop shooting after a bad day, and that the team would “keep letting Trey shoot” Roundtable.

In the broader context, Smack had missed only three field goals all of the previous season, showing that these were an outlier."

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Spock's picture

May 16, 2026 at 05:51 pm

Another fun fact about Smack's first kicking coach Matt Stover.
si.com/nfl/packers/onsi/how-one-kick-helped-a-super-bowl-champion-pave-trey-smacks-path-to-packers
Matt Stover had another GB Packer kicker he trained.

"Stover knows a little something about training kickers. Among his pupils was Mason Crosby, who was only 12 or 13 when he started working with Stover."

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Starrbrite's picture

May 17, 2026 at 05:36 pm

Great point.

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splitpea1's picture

May 16, 2026 at 05:49 pm

A very good and very honest article.

But what kind of winning blueprint are we talking here? If we're talking a Super Bowl-winning blueprint for the past few years, a common theme has been strong defensive line play; and in order to do that, it involves spending high draft capital or acquiring that talent through free agency. You look at L. Williams, Murphy 2, J.Davis, Jalen Carter, Chris Jones, and Karlaftis: all first or early second-round picks, and with the exception of Jordan Davis, all high snap count guys--and all are very good at their jobs. In other words, they don't try to skate by with Wyatt and a collection of Day 3 picks and they don't spend their highest draft capital on prospects that take forever to develop. There's no getting around it: you need a great defensive line if you expect to win it all.

I hope McClellan turns out to be a pleasant surprise, more so than just another unexeptional role player. We'll see. Keep in mind that in last year's draft, Jamaree Caldwell, a prototypical NT who is also versatile along the line, could have been had by the Packers if Gute could have moved just one spot up in the third round. So I hope Savion Williams really turns into an impact offensive weapon because we could used a solid anchor for the middle of our defense.

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golfpacker61's picture

May 17, 2026 at 08:49 am

The author says, "More concerning than any of that is how often he plays with high pad-level that will get him completely neutralized at the professional level."

Cmon, it's almost impossible to find a lineman that they don't say this about. Good coaching fixes this and if it doesn't then the player finds a real job. McClellan has skills that alot of the other DT don't have, he isn't a 1 trick pony. He is definitely not Kenny Clark, but that is a good comparison and maybe he gets close some day.

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dobber's picture

May 17, 2026 at 07:32 pm

With the trend toward taller and longer DTs it will continue to be an issue.

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LeotisHarris's picture

May 16, 2026 at 07:07 pm

Thanks for the thoughtful, well-written blog, Cody. I enjoyed reading it.

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Since'75's picture

May 16, 2026 at 11:12 pm

This.......

"But what kind of winning blueprint are we talking here?"- Splitpea

Keyword...Winning

Its time to win Championships.
Hell....it's time i win powerball

Talk is what it's always been....talk.

We can talk about having a winning blueprint the rest of our lives.
We can talk about winning more Championships
The only thing missing here is the.....

Winning
*********
The Green Bay Packers are in the business of winning Championships...See Wolf and Thompson.
This is the 13x Championship winning Green Bay Packers.

As Mark Murphy once told a reporter, when asked what the expectations were for an upcoming season, he said....
"Well, this is Title Town"

Followed by his awkward goofy forced laugh.
**********
Bottom line....
I would love for Policy and Guter to prove me wrong and put me in my place...i really would.

So, like the rest of Packer Nation....i wait, annually, through all the talk.

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stockholder's picture

May 17, 2026 at 08:26 am

Gute has No Blue print.
Overall sentiment has replaced Luck.
Luck now will determine if that upside
materializes.
And the most obvious point is Health.

The fundamental building blocks
have been replaced.
With a Swiss Army knife-style player.

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Starrbrite's picture

May 17, 2026 at 05:38 pm

Right—health is everything.

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Since'75's picture

May 18, 2026 at 06:01 am

Guter has a blue print.

In his time of being the GM, he's most likely had 8-10 of them.

The trouble it seems, is Guter's blueprints are always changing.

Seemingly...Wolf and Big Ted operated under one blueprint.

Guter's blueprints are fluid.

Apparently...Policy likes his flexibility.

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dobber's picture

May 18, 2026 at 08:57 am

"Guter has a blue print."

I don't think there's any blue print--that implies that if you do these X many things, you're going to be a contender. There might be things in common for superbowl winning teams, but how they accomplish their plans is widely variable.

"In his time of being the GM, he's most likely had 8-10 of them."

I think this has to be the case: no GM is going to work on a static plan, and any "working" plan will shift over the next 4 months as they head toward final cutdowns. They need to respond to changes in contract status and extensions, player acquisition opportunities, surprising player performance (good and bad), coaching changes, injuries--all those things change needs and change plans regularly. The overall direction might be consistent, but the details of the plan are changing all the time and there's a lot of luck involved.

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Since'75's picture

May 18, 2026 at 02:45 pm

When we mention 'blueprint', maybe it's not something that needs to be dissected.
Of course injuries matter, i mean...🤷‍♂️

A blueprint, is nothing but a plan of the goal, and a philosophy of how to get there.
If the plan is at least getting to the Super Bowl, then Guter has failed in his 8 years.
Sure, they got close with Rodgers x2.
Then Guter changed his blueprint, traded up and drafted a QB in the first round to sit 3 years that didn't help the NFCCG team on the field.
Then drafted a 2nd round power running back for the future, we know how that went. but boy, he had big thighs didn't he.
He also changed the blueprint when he gave Rodgers a 3 year 150 million contract.
Which didn't do much (at the time) other than make Love think....well wtf?
Remember the articles written about that very subject?
**********
When Wolf and Thompson worked their blueprint, it yielded results, Championships

I can give more examples but i'm tiring of talking about this.

When Guters blueprint works....look me up.

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golfpacker61's picture

May 17, 2026 at 09:27 am

All 6 of these drafted players are upgrades on players we have now, or in Smacks case the player we cut. And all 6 very easily could play early and alot.

Cisse- will start this year, maybe early unless St Juste beats him
McClellan-won't start right away but will play alot in 2026-he is too versatile not to
DDS-will start this year, and could take LVN's spot very easily
Burton-has the hardest path but will play at least special teams with his speed & agility
Jackson-a real wildcard pick, he will play a ton of special teams and if something clicks @ CB he could easily start in 2027
Smack-I didn't like the pick when it was made but now understand the importance- he starts for 10-12 years

throw in filling needs with WR Sturdivant as he is really like a 6th/7th round pick. On paper we have a great WR room.

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Jeff Hayes's picture

May 17, 2026 at 12:20 pm

My assessment is a little different.

1, Brandon Cisse-CB is a highly motivated athlete with a ton of upside potential. Looking at his tape he reminds me of Jaire Alexander a lot! Can he be all pro? Yes!

2. Chris McClellan - DT, will surprise everyone once he shows his ability to get after the QB, high motor is an understatement to say the least, this man never stops he's like the energizer bunny. Can he be all pro? Maybe!

3. Dani Dennis-Sutton - EDGE, AKA DDS, not only will this man be all pro he will be the best pick Gutey has acquired in the last few drafts and that's saying a ton! DDS paired with Parson & LVN is going to fun to watch along with McClellan these men are going to give QB's nightmares. Can he be all pro? Absolutely!

4. Jager Burton - IOL, I believe he will be the starting center this season, that says all you need to know, Can he be all pro? Yes

5. Domani Jackson - CB, I think he will be one step better than Valentine before the end of the season but until then he will just be a ST player. Can he be all pro? Doubtful.

6. Trey Smack - K, this one has me baffled so all I will say is he better be worth the picks Gutey gave up picking him. Can he be all pro? I sure hope so!

Conclusion- Time will tell just like any draft class but on paper Gutey filled positions of needs with solid players so let's all pray they will be the best players when it's all said and done!

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HarryHodag's picture

May 18, 2026 at 08:11 am

Here's something to consider: maybe the best Gm's in the league pattern themselves after Brian Gutekunst. This article starts at the assumption that other GM's are better and BG should learn something from them.

A really dumb article because you can't predict today what a player will be in three or more years.

Ron Wolf is in the Hall of Fame yet if you look at his drafts he bombed some picks. All GM's do. But Wolf and his two football off-springs, Ted Thompson and BG have put together winning teams. Wolf also had Andy Reid on staff when Mike Holmgren left and hired Ray Rhodes which lasted one year. Imagine if Reid had stayed and coached Favre and Rodgers....!

I'm looking forward to the Packers and the team that has been put together.

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Since'75's picture

May 19, 2026 at 04:52 pm

"A really dumb article because you can't predict today what a player will be in three or more years."
*********
If you look directly above you, i see a couple of people that know what a player is, before they even get to training camp.

I wonder if they can give me the winning powerball numbers 🤔

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