Milwaukee Journal Sentinel - Packer Plus

GM sees depth in draft

- Kassidy Hill

Green Bay — The Green Bay Packers have 11 picks in the 2022 NFL draft, including four in the first two rounds. With that amount of capital and the strengths of this draft lying more in the middle rounds, the temptation to trade is prevalent Packers general manager Brian Gutekunst said Monday.

“Having more picks in the top three rounds than we have had in a while, there’s temptation on both sides to move around,” Gutekunst said in his annual pre-draft news conference. “We’ll see what’s available. A lot of it will be how the draft falls … having a feeling of where the board is strong is important.”

One area in which this draft is particular­ly deep is at wide receiver. The Packers signed a veteran pass catcher recently, 28year old Sammy Watkins. Gutekunst said Watkins “has got some juice left in him.” Still, the chances of the Packers drafting a receiver (even if not in the first round) are high.

When that player comes to Green Bay, it will be into a unit that does not boast a clear WR1. With Davante Adams having been traded to the Las Vegas Raiders, a rookie receiver will have chances few have had in years.

“We’ve got a good quarterbac­k so that certainly helps,” said Gutekunst of folding in a young receiver. “There’ll be more opportunit­ies for that player.”

As far as that quarterbac­k, Aaron Rodgers has not been present at voluntary workouts. Gutekunst feels comfortabl­e with their communicat­ion heading into the draft, however, something that had been an issue in year’s past, festering to the point of Rodgers’ discomfort with the team taking center stage at the 2021 NFL draft.

Gutekunst and Rodgers healed the relationsh­ip this past season and that has helped set the Packers up for the draft, Gutekunst said.

“I’m in pretty constant communicat­ion with Aaron,” he said. “This is his down time so I know he enjoys that. The specifics we talked about, I won’t get into that, but it’s carried over from what we talked about (last year).”

With the draft now just days away, Gutekunst and Packers coaches and scouts have

started to narrow down their draft board. “I would say we’ve spent a lot of time in the last few weeks thinning it out,” Gutekunst said.

But it has taken time because the board held more names than any year in recent memory. This was due to college players being offered an extra year of eligibilit­y because of COVID-19 truncating the 2020 season. Some prospects are nearing their mid-20’s.

“It’s something we haven’t seen a lot of you over the past (few years),” Gutekunst said. “The age factor is part of the equation as we look at it and kind of judging the merits of what they did in the past.”

No matter who the Packers take this weekend, the new players will be joining a roster that still holds many of the pieces of the reining NFC North champions.

“Every draft is important to your football team. This is the lifeblood of how you build your football team,” Gutekunst said. “But I’m excited about the team we have coming back.”

The NFL draft begins Thursday at 7 p.m. Central.

 ?? KIRBY LEE/USA TODAY ?? Armed with 11 picks, Green Bay Packers general manager Brian Gutekunst has a chance to move around the draft if he wants to make trades.
KIRBY LEE/USA TODAY Armed with 11 picks, Green Bay Packers general manager Brian Gutekunst has a chance to move around the draft if he wants to make trades.
 ?? JOSEPH MAIORANA / USA TODAY ?? Kicker Mason Crosby and the Green Bay Packers special teams had a fair share of ups and downs last season, but Crosby did move up to 14th on the NFL’s all-time scoring list with 1,806 career points.
JOSEPH MAIORANA / USA TODAY Kicker Mason Crosby and the Green Bay Packers special teams had a fair share of ups and downs last season, but Crosby did move up to 14th on the NFL’s all-time scoring list with 1,806 career points.

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