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Rodgers Future In Jeopardy
Rogers doesnt want to be on a "lame duck" contract and you extend him another 3 years you po Love...

GL to Gutey...


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Quote: @Akvike said:
signed a 4 year extension in 2018 when he still had 2 years left on his previous contract--now is fishing for another extension with 3 years left on current contract---so if I get this right he was only mollified for 3 years of the 6 year  deal before not feeling the love---pretty much like his personal life Danica gone---what 6 or so  months and already engaged to new beard
Ha!

Don't forget he also broke his family contract that is supposed to be for Life!
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Quote: @MaroonBells said:


https://twitter.com/WesleyAJohnson/statu...34784?s=20
Wow talk about late-stage denial.  Packer mgmt is a mess.
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Quote: @comet52 said:
Wow talk about late-stage denial.  Packer mgmt is a mess.
Maybe they will have a temper tantrum equivalent to "my feelings are always hurt" Erin (not Karen!)
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Former coach Mike Holmgren says Packers 'didn't handle it very well' with Aaron RodgersFormer Green Bay Packers coach Mike Holmgren said his old team is to blame when it comes to the splintered relationship with franchise quarterback Aaron Rodgers.
"They didn't handle it very well, I don't think," Holmgren said Friday during a radio appearance on the "Carmen & Jurko" show for ESPN Chicago.
"It's not good, that's for sure," Holmgren said of the current relationship between Rodgers and the Packers. "I can't imagine a relationship between the coach or management or whoever is making the decisions and the starting quarterback like that getting to this point. I just can't imagine it. I wouldn't allow it. It wouldn't happen. But now, it has happened." 
Rodgers, the reigning NFL MVP, is unhappy and wants to leave the Packers, according to multiple reports, with one report saying he will not return if general manager Brian Gutekunst remains in charge.  The relationship fractured when the Packers selected quarterback Jordan Love in the first round of the 2020 draft – shortly before Rodgers' eventual MVP campaign. 

Holmgren said the Packers should have discussed drafting Love with Rodgers beforehand. Now, Holmgren said it's gotten too far out of hand. 
"I would call (Rodgers) in, we'd sit down and not leave until we kind of had an understanding one way or the other," he said. "I would call him in (and say), 'This is how it's gonna affect you. We've got to get ready for when you retire. We've got to take care of the franchise, but nothing's going to happen now. You're the man, you're the guy.' Then, if he didn't like that, now all of a sudden you're in the current situation that you're having." 
Holmgren related the Rodgers-Packers saga to the QB controversy he was part of as the San Francisco 49ers quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Veteran Joe Montana was the starter and up-and-comer Steve Young was challenging in 1988 before Montana won his third and fourth Super Bowl rings in 1988 and 1989.
Holmgren acknowledged that times have changed, but it was an example of riding out a Hall of Famer's career while paving way for the future. Young helped the 49ers win it all in 1994 after Montana departed. 
"(49ers former head coach) Bill Walsh didn't tell Joe (Montana) they were bringing Steve Young in," Holmgren said. "He just did it."
https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nf...018467001/

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Packers general manager Brian Gutekunst said QB Jordan Love has "a long way to go" in his development. 
Packers officials have made no secret of their desire to retain Aaron Rodgers for at least the next season instead of turning to Love, 22, who has yet to play an NFL snap. Drafting Love in the first round of the 2020 draft proved a gaping wound in the team's relationship with their mercurial quarterback -- one that has festered for a year. Rodgers reportedly wants out of Green Bay, with the Broncos exploring trade possibilities for the 38 year old. “He’s got a long way to go,” Gutekunst said of Love. “But we’re ecstatic for his development. ... Obviously we think the world of Jordan and where he’s going to grow and develop." Love threw 52 touchdowns in his final two seasons as Utah State, completing 61 percent of his throws. He has a rushing component to his game: Love rushed 81 times (for a meager 175 yards) in his final collegiate season. At best, Love would be a desperation late-round option in supeflex and 2-QB fantasy formats if Rodgers were to depart Green Bay. 


Couldn't. Beat. Out. Tim. Boyle.


Lololololololololololol
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Quote: @purplefaithful said:
Former coach Mike Holmgren says Packers 'didn't handle it very well' with Aaron RodgersFormer Green Bay Packers coach Mike Holmgren said his old team is to blame when it comes to the splintered relationship with franchise quarterback Aaron Rodgers.
"They didn't handle it very well, I don't think," Holmgren said Friday during a radio appearance on the "Carmen & Jurko" show for ESPN Chicago.
"It's not good, that's for sure," Holmgren said of the current relationship between Rodgers and the Packers. "I can't imagine a relationship between the coach or management or whoever is making the decisions and the starting quarterback like that getting to this point. I just can't imagine it. I wouldn't allow it. It wouldn't happen. But now, it has happened." 
Rodgers, the reigning NFL MVP, is unhappy and wants to leave the Packers, according to multiple reports, with one report saying he will not return if general manager Brian Gutekunst remains in charge.  The relationship fractured when the Packers selected quarterback Jordan Love in the first round of the 2020 draft – shortly before Rodgers' eventual MVP campaign. 

Holmgren said the Packers should have discussed drafting Love with Rodgers beforehand. Now, Holmgren said it's gotten too far out of hand. 
"I would call (Rodgers) in, we'd sit down and not leave until we kind of had an understanding one way or the other," he said. "I would call him in (and say), 'This is how it's gonna affect you. We've got to get ready for when you retire. We've got to take care of the franchise, but nothing's going to happen now. You're the man, you're the guy.' Then, if he didn't like that, now all of a sudden you're in the current situation that you're having." 
Holmgren related the Rodgers-Packers saga to the QB controversy he was part of as the San Francisco 49ers quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Veteran Joe Montana was the starter and up-and-comer Steve Young was challenging in 1988 before Montana won his third and fourth Super Bowl rings in 1988 and 1989.
Holmgren acknowledged that times have changed, but it was an example of riding out a Hall of Famer's career while paving way for the future. Young helped the 49ers win it all in 1994 after Montana departed. 
"(49ers former head coach) Bill Walsh didn't tell Joe (Montana) they were bringing Steve Young in," Holmgren said. "He just did it."
https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nf...018467001/

He would know.
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Quote: @Vikergirl said:
https://twitter.com/TomPelissero/status/...33668?s=19
Chad Kelly, in the !and of cheap beer.

What could go wrong?
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Quote: @"BarrNone55" said:
Chad Kelly, in the !and of cheap beer.

What could go wrong?
Wonder if they still sell Old Mil pounder sixers for $1.99. 
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