Texarkana Gazette

Packers share details of franchise’s finances

- —FROM WIRE REPORTS

GREEN BAY, Wis.—Training camp has yet to begin and Green Bay Packers president Mark Murphy is already looking forward to the end of the season.

Finishing the year at the Super Bowl, which is being played in Minneapoli­s at the home of the NFC North rival Vikings, would be quite a treat for Packers fans.

“I tell you it’s going to be a lot of fun this year for all our fans to drive across the state of Wisconsin,” Murphy joked at the Packers’ annual stockholde­rs meeting on Monday.

This was no chest-thumping guarantee, just a good-natured comment from Murphy to the roughly 7,000 people who sat through the 90-minute meeting on a sunny day at Lambeau Field. These die-hard Packers fans took no issue with the statement.

As the NFL’s only publicly-owned team, the Packers are required to host a shareholde­rs meeting each year. Most attendees show up decked in an Aaron Rodgers jersey or some other variety of green-and-gold attire. A handful wore foam cheesehead­s.

The Packers have released most of the financial informatio­n already, though Murphy did offer a few fresh tidbits:

Player costs rose to $192.5 million in 2017, up 16 percent from the previous year. This was attributed to the cyclical nature of player contracts.

The Packers have applied to host the draft in 2019, 2020 or 2021. Murphy said a decision from the NFL could come next summer.

Murphy was asked about a potential football series between Wisconsin and

Notre Dame to be played at Lambeau and Soldier Field in Chicago. He replied: “I would say we’ve been working on that for a while and I’m very, hopefully very soon we’ll be able to make an announceme­nt.”

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