Packers general manager Brian Gutekunst doesn't appear bothered by Josh Jacobs' comments on the team needing a No. 1 receiver.
But whatever they might say publicly — about, say, the team needing a bona fide No. 1 wide receiver, as running back Josh Jacobs contended in multiple interviews at Radio Row in the days leading up to Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans — doesn’t concern or bother Gutekunst at all.
Saquon Barkley, Derrick Henry, Josh Jacobs and more filled what was a loaded free agent class in 2024, but that won't be the case on this trip around the sun. The market is thin, resembling what you might find on the waiver wire during the middle of fantasy football season.
For the last two months, I've blindly believed that the Packers were going to bring Davante Adams back. Things in New York, uh, didn't go that well, and now Adams is looking for his next gig. The Packers desperately need a reliable #1 wide receiver – just ask Josh Jacobs – and while I'm not super sure that actually applies to Adams anymore,
Even at full strength, there are questions about the Green Bay Packers’ receiver corps. Injuries only add to the uncertainty.
Josh Jacobs' contract with the Green Bay Packers looks like an absolute bargain after Saquon Barkley's extension.
One year after signing safety Xavier McKinney and running back Josh Jacobs in free agency, general manager Brian Gutekunst is in a position to make another splash in 2025. Until free agency, Packers Wire will run through potential options,
Packers general manager Brian Gutekunst, speaking at the NFL Combine Tuesday, said he wasn’t bothered one bit by Josh Jacobs' comments about Green Bay's wide receivers.
Heisman Trophy runner-up Ashton Jeanty noticed running back values declining just as his college career started to take off. Then he watched the resurgence of free agent acquisitions Saquon Barkley, Derrick Henry and Josh Jacobs and realized things were back on the upswing — just as Jeanty was becoming a marquee name in college football.