The Lass Word: Pack Hopes to Hit on Rookie Safety

Finding them in the draft has been elusive.

The Green Bay Packers selected three safeties in the NFL draft last April.  They took Javon Bullard in the second round, Evan Williams in the fourth, and Kitan Oladapo in the fifth.  They are hoping at least one of them will break through and become a top flight safety companion to their newly signed free agent Xavier McKinney. 

The Packers are completely rebuilding the safety position this offseason, and with good reason.  The middle of the secondary has been a constant problem area for the team in recent years.  In the playoff loss to the 49ers last January, quarterback Brock Purdy continually hurt Green Bay with throws over the middle.  It is clear that if the Pack is to make a serious run at the Super Bowl in 2024, they have to get better coverage and tackling from the safeties. 

McKinney was considered the best free agent on the market at the position, but he can’t solve all the problems alone.  Last year’s seventh round pick, Anthony Johnson, played a lot of snaps because of injuries, but he hasn’t shown anything special.  The Packers truly need one of the drafted rookies to hit big. 

The law of averages should be with them.  Of all the various positions in pro football, safety has been one of the most elusive for the team in which to draft a star.  In 1990 the Packers hit the ultimate home run by taking Leroy Butler out of Florida State in the second round.  Butler would go on to be one of the key leaders on a Super Bowl championship team, and is now in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. 

Thirty-four drafts have taken place since then.  During that span, the Packers have had just three drafted safeties make a Pro Bowl team while still playing in Green Bay.  It hasn’t happened at all in the last ten seasons.   In 1997 the team picked Darren Sharper in the second round.  He would develop into a two time Pro Bowl player and made first team all pro in 2000.  After leaving Green Bay and signing with the Vikings, Sharper would go to three more Pro Bowls and make another all pro first team. 

In 2005 the Packers drafted Nick Collins.  He made second team all pro three years in a row from 2008 to 2010, and pulled off one of the most iconic plays in team history with his pick six in the Super Bowl following the 2010 season.  He might well have been a Hall of Fame candidate if injuries had not cut his career short. 

The team pulled off a major coup in 2006 with the signing of free agent Charles Woodson.  His seven years patrolling the secondary masked the need to draft a successful safety.  But it would catch up with the team eventually. 

With their first round pick in the 2014 draft the Pack took Alabama safety Ha Ha Clinton-Dix.  HCD was a Pro Bowl selection in 2016 when he had five interceptions.  But over the course of five seasons it became evident that he did little more than play deep center field and catch overthrows.  Green Bay traded him in 2018, after which he bounced to three different teams and then was out of the league. 

Micah Hyde was a decent pick in the fifth round in 2013.  He went to one Pro Bowl, but that was after he had left Green Bay and was playing for Buffalo. 

In between and amongst those players was a long list of drafted safeties who never panned out.  It included nostalgic names such as Bhawoh Jue (2001) and Aaron Rouse (2007).  Morgan Burnett, taken in the third round in 2010, played eight reasonably solid years for the green and gold, but never achieved a single post season honor.    

In 2015 the Packers took safety Damarious Randall in the first round, but the coaches were determined to play him at corner.   They gave up on the experiment after three mediocre seasons and traded Randall to Cleveland, who did play him at safety.  In 2017 Green Bay selected Josh Jones in the second round.  He was a complete bust and was allowed to walk after two years.   

Darnell Savage looked like the answer after his selection in the first round in 2019.  He was quick to the ball and made the occasional big play.  His pick six in last January’s playoff win over the Cowboys is probably the iconic play of the game.  But Savage dropped too many interceptions, missed too many tackles, and struggled in coverage.  The Packers let him walk in free agency this spring and he signed with the Jaguars. 

In recent years the Packers have taken lower round flyers on folks such as Vernon Scott, Tariq Carpenter and the aforementioned Anthony Johnson Jr.   

So, as you can see, Green Bay is overdue to finally hit on a drafted safety.  Somebody who will develop into a potential all pro, or at least pro bowl caliber player.  Bullard has all the tools and was considered the top safety in the draft.  Williams and Oladapo are raw but loaded with talent.  If just one of them emerges as a star, the middle of the defense is going to be set for years to come. 

 

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Ken Lass is a former Green Bay television sports anchor and 43 year media veteran, a lifelong Packers fan, and a shareholder.

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Comments (26)

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NickPerry's picture

June 24, 2024 at 06:45 am

"But Savage dropped too many interceptions, missed too many tackles, and struggled in coverage. The Packers let him walk in free agency this spring and he signed with the Jaguars."

This weekend on the NFL Network they were showing a rivalry thing and were playing a bunch of Packers vs 49ers games. One of the games was the divisional game the Packers just lost in January. Savage dropped what would have been a pick-6 for sure. How might that game have turned out had Savage made the play? The same play he had made the week before on a pass my Grandma could have caught.

Good news Packers fans...The Packers play the Jaguars on October 27th in Jacksonville. The Jags paid him a decent chunk of $$$ so hopefully he's out there, TRYING to cover the likes of Musgrave, Kraft, or even Reed.

Or better yet, TACKLE the likes of Jacobs and Lloyd...

HA!!!! Good Luck!!!

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Minniman's picture

June 24, 2024 at 12:46 pm

It was a really bad game for Darnell, really bad.

Add to the dropped int (maybe pick 6) was failing to take the hand-off of coverage responsibility on the Kittle crossing route (which he took to the house), then the penguin flop "business decision" tackle attempt on McCaffrey on the goal line (another TD) ........... Gute had seen enough.

When the Packers play the Jags later this year, I see the Packers attacking the seam and testing Savage early (and often). He said this off-season that he played with an injured shoulder late last year, I think that he'll see a lot of Musgrave and Kraft in stride that week.

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GregC's picture

June 24, 2024 at 06:48 am

Every time they draft a safety in the first two rounds, I'm thinking, "THIS is the one!" (Well, maybe not so much with Aaron Rouse.) The two they picked in the first round, Clinton-Dix and Savage, had their moments, but neither of them panned out in the long run. The Packers have had better luck in the second round. Javon Bullard seems to have all the credentials to be a really good NFL safety. I'm looking forward to watching him play. The other two they drafted look more like role players.

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TKWorldWide's picture

June 24, 2024 at 08:55 am

(Rouse was a 3rd. Now he’s a senator!)

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GregC's picture

June 24, 2024 at 09:30 am

Good catch, thanks! I was just reading about Rouse, and he had some good moments, including a 99-yard interception return for a TD that I had completely forgotten about. But they cut him shortly into his third season.

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Guam's picture

June 24, 2024 at 06:57 am

"they have to get better coverage and tackling from the safeties."

I wonder how deep Hafley's scheme is going to have the safeties play? Under Barry's scheme the safeties played so deep they were rarely in position to provide any help within 10 yards of the LOS. I know Barry didn't want to get beaten deep, but covering TE's and RB's with Campbell or Smith with a safety nowhere in sight were sure ways to allow a 10 yard completion and a first down. Hopefully Hafley has a scheme that encourages safeties to be close enough to the LOS to get them involved in the middle of the field.

The author makes an excellent point about the Packers being short on safety talent of late, but I suspect scheme also had something to do with the problem, at least over the last three years.

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Ya_tittle's picture

June 24, 2024 at 09:36 am

What you said. Barry did NOT put his players in position to succeed. Fool.

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mrtundra's picture

June 24, 2024 at 07:08 am

It will be McKinney and Bullard at the Safety spots for GB. Johnson Jr will be a back up, at best. I'm betting Evan Williams and Kitan Oladapo play more than Johnson Jr does. Of course, that could change if Johnson Jr shows something in camp. I believe it was the East-West College game that had Bullard playing S for the East and Evan Williams playing S for the West.

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stockholder's picture

June 24, 2024 at 10:36 am

I'm going to disagree with you.
Williams and Oaldapo were picked for STs.
Williams is a liability on deeper passes.
Bullard was the best bet at FS.
But that won't happen with McKinney.
So they go slow with him.

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TKWorldWide's picture

June 24, 2024 at 08:57 am

LeRoy was drafted as a corner and was moved to safety.
Safety appears to be a position where instincts matter a whole lot. Oh, sure, I’ll take top-notch athleticals, but “know-how” seems to really determine success.
Oh, and tackling, too.

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LambeauPlain's picture

June 24, 2024 at 09:29 am

Also, Woodson played CB as a Packer from 2006 - 2011, on the field with two starting Safeties during that time.

In 2012 he was moved to SS for the first time but only started 7 games due to injury. He left after the season for the Raiders.

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LambeauPlain's picture

June 24, 2024 at 09:16 am

"After leaving Green Bay and signing with the Vikings, Sharper would go to three more Pro Bowls and make another all pro first team." And he went on to be awarded prison as a convicted serial rapist. Need to add this whenever discussing this man.

This man is actually scheduled to be released in 4 years after raping or sexually assaulting AT LEAST 9 women.

And he has remained eligible for the NFL HOF. The convicted rapist has actually been nominated to Hall of Fame but has not made it in...yet. The HOF standards do not take into account off field, convicted criminality. Huh.

If he makes it in, I expect and deeply hope he goes as a Viking.

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Ya_tittle's picture

June 24, 2024 at 09:37 am

Players don't go into the Hall as ANY TEAM. Having said that, Darren should NOT be in the HOF as a player irregardless of his criminal actions.

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Leatherhead's picture

June 24, 2024 at 10:23 am

OJ is in the HOF. Ray Lewis is in the HOF. Some other really shaky people are in the HOF. The former Packer QB is under investigation for stealing money from poor people.

I don't like what Sharper did. Or what Ray Lewis or OJ did. I'm not sure we start arbitrarily deciding who is morally worthy, and who is not. Judge not.

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Ya_tittle's picture

June 24, 2024 at 10:40 am

His play as a safety was selfish. Just check out the famous 4th and 26 play from the Eagles playoff game. Had he played it right instead of laying back for an INT, he could've broken the pass up.

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Leatherhead's picture

June 24, 2024 at 11:03 am

I thought he was overrated as a safety and I was happy when Thompson cut him loose. And he was in a better position than any other player on the field to prevent that 4th and 26 , he just didn't try to make a play on ball,preferring to defend a part of the field where there weren't any opposing players.

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stockholder's picture

June 24, 2024 at 10:04 am

Bullard will be the NB before his contract runs out.

So where does that leave the other two?
Back-up. Stepping in against a running Team.

So I'll take Johnson over all 3.

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jannes bjornson's picture

June 24, 2024 at 11:49 am

These guys will be compared to Bishop and Mustapha as per alternative draft choices. Six DB sets are prevalent in today's game.

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splitpea1's picture

June 24, 2024 at 11:20 am

It would also help if we finally hit on a defensive coordinator--who by the way is a former DB coach who should accelerate their development.

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NFLfan's picture

June 24, 2024 at 11:39 am

Can we focus on signing a talented cornerback, please?
Safety room already looks upgraded.
PFF grade on Nixon is 59.
" " Rasul Douglas is 82
--------------------Sauce Gardner 88.
Yes, Keisean tackles but he is not a cornerback-he is too slow.

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LLCHESTY's picture

June 24, 2024 at 01:22 pm

Just a guess but I'd bet they hope to hit on three of them.

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LLCHESTY's picture

June 24, 2024 at 01:25 pm

"The team pulled off a major coup in 2006 with the signing of free agent Charles Woodson. His seven years patrolling the secondary masked the need to draft a successful safety. But it would catch up with the team eventually. "

This couldn't be more wrong. Apparently the writer has never heard of a guy named Nick Collins. Also Woodson played nickel not safety and didn't start playing a lot of nickel until '09.

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Leatherhead's picture

June 24, 2024 at 01:45 pm

I hate to say this, but I think you two are actually agreeing. He didn't say Woodson was a Safety. He said that having Woodson masked the need for having a premiere Safety.

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GLM's picture

June 24, 2024 at 02:19 pm

Forgot to mention Antuan Edwards... :P

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GregC's picture

June 24, 2024 at 03:47 pm

First round pick in 1999. I had forgotten about him. He was neither good enough nor awful enough to be memorable.

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Leatherhead's picture

June 24, 2024 at 03:54 pm

Let's talk recent history. We won the Super Bowl in 2010, but in 2011 Collins' career ended, 2012 was Woodson's last year. In 2013 we took Hyde, but we didn't resign him to a second contract. The next year. In 2019, it was Savage. So it's not like the team hasn't tried to keep talent people at Safety. Gutekunst brought in Amos for four years as a FA, and now McKinnon.

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