San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

MIGHT PACKERS ENTER ARMS RACE?

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

Brian Gutekunst was in the draft room in 2005. That’s the year his predecesso­r, Ted Thompson, used his first-round pick on Aaron Rodgers even though the Packers had Brett Favre at quarterbac­k.

Rodgers was the potential No 1 overall pick who tumbled all the way to No. 24.

“I remember getting up to get another Diet Coke and I asked Ted if he needed anything,” Gutekunst, the team’s Southeast region scout at the time, recalled on Friday. “We all knew he was taking the quarterbac­k if he got there.

“To have the courage at that time to do that, and what that one decision did for the organizati­on for how many years later? That stuck with me. It could have been real easy to do something different. He thought that was the right thing to do, and he did it. That’s always stuck with me.”

Fast forward to 2020. Gutekunst and his staff will be heading to Indianapol­is for this week’s scouting combine, with a “good crop” of quarterbac­ks part of this year’s draft class. On one hand, Rodgers turned 36 late last season and is coming off a second consecutiv­e subpar season. On the other hand, the Packers reached the NFC championsh­ip game and need a few more pieces to catch up with the 49ers, who routed the Packers in the regular season and playoffs.

Drafting a quarterbac­k with a first-round pick would do nothing to close the gap between the teams. Nonetheles­s, Gutekunst said “sure” when asked if he’d consider a quarterbac­k with the 30th overall selection.

“I think it’s such an important part of what makes this thing go. It’s quarterbac­ks,” he said. “I know what you’re saying. Aaron didn’t play for three years and for three years people were probably saying, well, that was a total waste. I just don’t think developing a young quarterbac­k is a waste. You just don’t know when the time is going to be when you’re going to need him.”

Rodgers owns the best passer rating in NFL history but finished only 12th in rating and 21st in completion percentage last season. Gutekunst insisted Rodgers has “got a lot left,” and that some of the offense’s problems were rooted in a lack of talent at tight end and receiver and some growing pains in first-year coach Matt Lafleur’s offense. Still, Thompson’s decision to draft Rodgers, even though he didn’t start a game until his fourth season, paid long-term dividends.

“It’s an instant gratificat­ion league, so everybody is trying to win now, now, now. But I think people don’t look at a long-term decision in the moment like probably they should,” Gutekunst said. “Nobody would look back and say that’s a bad decision by Ted to do that. But at the time, some people were pretty up in arms about it. I know there were people in the building that were. They were wrong.”

Other than Rodgers, the Packers have two other quarterbac­ks on the roster. Tim Boyle, an undrafted free agent in 2018, served as Rodgers’ backup last year. Manny Wilkins, an undrafted free agent in 2019, spent the year on the practice squad.

Amendola reportedly returning

Danny Amendola appears to be staying with Detroit. A Foxsports.com writer, citing unidentifi­ed sources, reported on Twitter that Amendola was signing a oneyear deal with the Lions. Erik Burkhardt, Amendola’s agent, retweeted that report and congratula­ted Amendola on “another well-earned deal.” Burkhardt did not respond to an email from The Associated Press.

Amendola caught 62 passes for 678 yards and a touchdown last year in his first season with the Lions.

Amendola just finished his 11th NFL season. He played four seasons with the Rams, five with the Patriots and one for the Dolphins before joining the Lions.

 ?? DUANE BURLESON AP ?? Packers quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers is 36 years old. Will Green Bay look for his successor in this year’s draft?
DUANE BURLESON AP Packers quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers is 36 years old. Will Green Bay look for his successor in this year’s draft?

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