Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Packers in no rush with Bakhtiari

Left tackle only 8 months in to ACL recovery

- Ryan Wood

GREEN BAY – Even if David Bakhtiari's absence from the field to start this season didn't become official until Tuesday afternoon, it's an inevitabil­ity the Green Bay Packers have prepared to encounter for months.

There was a time midway through training camp, coach Matt LaFleur said, when the Packers hoped Bakhtiari might make a run at returning from the torn ACL in his left knee in time to be included on the team's initial 53-man roster. It never happened though, and as Tuesday's deadline for submitting the roster approached, it was clear Bakhtiari would not be activated from the physically unable to perform list.

“I think from the history and the timeline of the injury that he suffered and where he's at,” general manager Brian Gutekunst said Wednesday, “he's such a cornerston­e piece to this organizati­on, and he's such an important part of what we're doing. I just think where he's at and where we thought he could be in the first six weeks, this was the best thing for the team and for David.

“What he brings to our football team, rushing him out there was not something I was going to be comfortabl­e doing.”

Gutekunst said his medical staff advised him Bakhtiari would need between nine and 11 months to return from his injury. The All-Pro left tackle is approachin­g only the eight-month mark after his knee surgery.

The Packers, a team confident it can win a Super Bowl this season, are essentiall­y playing the long game with Bakhtiari. His absence was a major reason they lost last season's NFC championsh­ip game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers inside Lambeau Field. Gutekunst knows his team needs its franchise left tackle to have its best chance at making a deep postseason run.

It helps that the Packers have one of the NFL's most talented and versatile offensive linemen in Elgton Jenkins. He will be Bakhtiari's replacemen­t until the season's midway point, at the earliest. Gutekunst said Bakhtiari would have remained on PUP even if Jenkins wasn't available as an adequate replacemen­t.

“I think this is more about David's health and where he's at,” Gutekunst said. “If we didn't have Elgton for some reason, I don't think it would have changed the decision any.”

The Packers moved Jenkins to left tackle early this offseason, and they left him there throughout camp. He has been the team's starter on the blind side for months, and though the Packers won't really know what they have in Bakhtiari's replacemen­t until he plays in games, Jenkins should inspire more confidence in the plan for the next several weeks.

LaFleur said he expects a “learning curve” for Jenkins as he acclimates to left tackle, but it won't force him to change his scheme. It will be the same offense, with the same left tackle, the Packers have spent their offseason preparing to play with in the early regular season.

“I think from our standpoint as coaches,” LaFleur said, “we've kind of been preparing that way forever, since it happens. You've got to prepare for that. If you get him back earlier, great. That's a bonus. We kind of had our minds set on that from Day 1.”

Fixing the punting problem

Gutekunst didn't mind doubling down on another draft pick to fix the problem he had at punter.

The GM had drafted JK Scott in the 2019 fifth round, hoping he would be the Packers' long-term punter. Scott's inconsiste­ncies were always an issue, leading Gutekunst to look elsewhere. On Tuesday, Gutekunst finally found what he believes is a better option, swapping a sixth-round pick in 2023 for a seventh and acquiring Los Angeles Rams punter Corey Bojorquez.

Gutekunst said the Packers' order on the waiver wire was too far back for him to feel confident he could claim Bojorquez, leading to the trade.

“I think we just kind of felt if we wanted to acquire the player,” Gutekunst said, “this is what we needed to do, to do it. Flopping picks at 23 there, I didn't think that was much to give up for someone we kind of really wanted to bring into the squad.”

Bojorquez punted the past three seasons in Buffalo before signing with the Rams, who were going to release him Tuesday in favor of incumbent Johnny Hekker. So he is familiar with punting in cold-weather environmen­ts. Bojorquez led the NFL last season in gross punting with a 50.8-yard average.

“Corey had a fantastic season in Buffalo last year,” Gutekunst said, “and just watching him this preseason, we thought that this was a chance for us to get better.”

Benkert, EQ on practice squad

For all the concern over whether the Packers would have difficult decisions to make at the bottom of their roster, no one they released Tuesday was claimed by another team.

The Packers were able to retain quarterbac­k Kurt Benkert among their 16player practice squad. Benkert might have played his way onto the roster bubble this preseason, though the practice squad was always the team's preferred destinatio­n for their third quarterbac­k.

The Packers also retained receivers Equanimeou­s St. Brown, Juwann Winfree and Chris Blair, cornerback Kabion Ento, guard Ben Braden, guard/tackle Jacob Capra, guard/tackle Cole Van Lanen, safety Innis Gaines, outside linebacker Tipa Galeai, inside linebacker Ray Wilborn, tight end Bronson Kaufusi, kicker JJ Molson, defensive linemen Abdullah Anderson and Willington Previlon and running back Patrick Taylor.

Running back Dexter Williams, a sixth-round pick in 2019, was not brought back. Instead, he signed with the New York Giants' practice squad.

Injury updates

Za'Darius Smith was among three Packers players not practicing Wednesday, joining safety Vernon Scott and defensive lineman Tyler Lancaster.

The timeline for Smith's return to the field from a back injury remains uncertain, LaFleur said.

“I'd say he's up in the air,” LaFleur said, “but he is getting better on a daily basis, and he's really putting the time in. And I trust our training crew, Flea (head athletic trainer Bryan Engle) and those guys are doing an outstandin­g job with him. I think Z, he wants to be out there. So we're optimistic that potentiall­y he'll be back out there sooner than later.”

The Packers got good injury news Wednesday as tackle Dennis Kelly practiced after missing the second half of training camp with a knee injury.

 ?? MARK HOFFMAN/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Packers left tackle David Bakhtiari will miss at least six games.
MARK HOFFMAN/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Packers left tackle David Bakhtiari will miss at least six games.

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