GREEN BAY, Wis. — The Green Bay Packers face a defensive reckoning. A blazing 9-3-1 start evaporated the moment superstar edge rusher Micah Parsons tore his ACL late in the 2025 season. Without his historic pressure rate, the pass rush vanished. The secondary crumbled. Now, with the 2026 offseason officially underway, general manager Brian Gutekunst must plug a massive hole at cornerback.
ESPN’s Matt Bowen recently connected the dots, mocking former first-round pick Greg Newsome II to Green Bay. The 25-year-old defensive back offers exactly the kind of vision and versatility a bleeding secondary desperately needs.
A Custom Fit for Jonathan Gannon
The Packers overhauled their coaching staff in late January, hiring Jonathan Gannon to replace Jeff Hafley as defensive coordinator. Gannon runs a heavy zone coverage scheme. Newsome thrives in exactly that environment, reading the quarterback’s eyes and reacting to the ball.
Newsome split the 2025 season between the Cleveland Browns and Jacksonville Jaguars after an October trade. He brings inside-outside flexibility, logging significant snaps both on the boundary and in the slot. Spotrac projects him to land a three-year, $27 million contract on the open market.
That $9 million annual average looks like a pure bargain compared to the $12 million per year Gutekunst handed Nate Hobbs last offseason. Both Hobbs and fellow 2025 free-agent acquisition Aaron Banks battled injuries and underperformed. The chilly wind whipping through Titletown mirrors the cold reality of NFL free agency: front offices must keep swinging. Gutekunst remains aggressive, brushing off last year’s misfires.
“I feel really good. A lot of that will be dependent on the decisions we make with the roster right now and what we do. But I believe we have all the flexibility to do what we need to do.”
— Brian Gutekunst, Packers General Manager
Playoff Implications and What Comes Next
Green Bay must navigate a brutal salary cap while deciding the fate of their own high-profile free agents. Left tackle Rasheed Walker, linebacker Quay Walker, wide receiver Romeo Doubs, and quarterback Malik Willis all hit the open market soon. Retaining them feels highly unlikely given the massive contracts they command. Willis resurrected his career stepping in for Jordan Love and will undoubtedly chase starting quarterback money elsewhere.
To fund a move for Newsome, Gutekunst might swing the axe on massive veteran contracts. Whispers around Lambeau Field suggest the team could release Rashan Gary or Elgton Jenkins to clear the necessary cap room. Signing Newsome solidifies the back end, buying time for Parsons to complete his rehab and return the Green Bay defense to elite status by Week 1.

