Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Gutekunst takes hard-line stance

- Ryan Wood

GREEN BAY – Brian Gutekunst said he wasn’t sending any messages at Tuesday’s trade deadline. That’s his official stance, at least. In the first-year Green Bay Packers general manager’s calculatio­n, performanc­e was prioritize­d.

There were certainly other factors involved with Gutekunst’s decision to trade safety Ha Ha Clinton-Dix and running back Ty Montgomery. Locker room culture mattered. Team chemistry, or perhaps the waning of it. In the case of Clinton-Dix, Gutekunst also referenced assuring the Packers got a draft pick for a player who wasn’t going to play in Green Bay next season.

“Considerin­g that we’d like to be active in free agency, and obviously if we’re active in free agency, that affects the compensato­ry process,” Gutekunst said Wednesday. “So this was an ability to get a very valuable pick next year in 2019 that obviously there’s no conditions on him. It’s a fourth-round pick.”

So there were multiple factors involved at the trade deadline, an afternoon coach Mike McCarthy called “a different Tuesday” from usual.

Regardless, Tuesday’s shock waves were clearly felt.

It was, quite possibly, the day Gutekunst made the Packers his team. He had already gone through his first draft, which is looking better and better by the week, and his first final cuts. He was bold last spring, releasing Jordy Nelson and shipping former first-round pick Damarious Randall to Cleveland.

But trading a starting safety who was a Pro Bowler not long ago and a running back formerly viewed as a starter in the middle of a season is another level. That Clinton-Dix and Montgomery had become distractio­ns inside the locker room was no coincidenc­e. The message Gutekunst sent was definitive.

Don’t want to play for the Packers? Then leave.

“I think you take everything into considerat­ion when you make these kind of decisions,” Gutekunst said, “but performanc­e comes first. That’s always kind of the major factor in these decisions, but everything is taken into account.

“It’s never usually just one thing.”

Left tackle David Bakhtiari said he didn’t think Montgomery’s comments Monday, that the running back no longer trusted his teammates and questioned his role on the team, helped his cause. But Bakhtiari said he also felt bad for Montgomery after several teammates anonymousl­y questioned his motives for ignoring coaching instructio­ns and returning a kickoff instead of taking a touchback late in Sunday’s game.

With Montgomery gone, the Packers shrunk their running back rotation to two. Gutekunst said the need to get Aaron Jones more touches did not factor into his decision. But Montgomery’s departure likely will lead to a more featured role for Jones in the Packers’ offense.

Gutekunst also said it “isn’t enough” to have two running backs on the 53man roster. Not long after, the Packers announced running back Tra Carson was elevated from the practice squad to the active roster, and running back Lavon Coleman was signed to the practice squad.

Of the 28 players the Packers drafted from 2013-’15, only three remain on the 53-man roster: Bakhtiari (2013, fourth round), receiver Davante Adams (2014, second round) and center Corey Linsley (2014, fifth round). Each is among the NFL’s best at his position, but that leaves 25 other draft picks who are no longer with the team, including first rounders from those years: Datone Jones (2013, not re-signed), Clinton-Dix (2014, traded) and Randall (2015, traded).

“It’s the NFL,” Bakhtiari said. “If he wants to take a hardline stance and be a GM and keep guys he wants to keep and cut guys or trade guys, whatever he wants to do, good. I don’t think anyone should feel comfortabl­e. It’s a performanc­e-based league. We get paid to perform.”

Gutekunst’s predecesso­r, Ted Thompson, would have been more inclined to hold onto players the franchise had drafted.

There is some risk of his hard-line stance backfiring, especially in the decision to trade Montgomery. It could, perhaps, make players wary that any mistake could lead to a pink slip. The NFL game moves too fast to play with fear of making an error. Gutekunst said he isn’t worried about that.

 ?? JIM MATTHEWS / USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN ?? Ty Montgomery was traded Tuesday after fumbling a kickoff return into the lap of the Rams’ Ramik Wilson on Sunday.
JIM MATTHEWS / USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN Ty Montgomery was traded Tuesday after fumbling a kickoff return into the lap of the Rams’ Ramik Wilson on Sunday.

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