×

Packers GM acknowledges need for cornerback depth

Chicago Bears' DJ Moore catches a touchdown pass with Green Bay Packers' Keisean Nixon defending diring overtime Dec. 20 in Chicago. (AP Photo/Erin Hooley, file)

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) — Green Bay general manager Brian Gutekunst isn’t shy about noting one position the Packers must address in this week’s draft.

They’re looking for cornerbacks.

“We’re going to add numbers there,” Gutekunst said Tuesday at a pre-draft news conference.

Green Bay returns Keisean Nixon and Carrington Valentine from the team that went 9-8-1 and lost at Chicago in the NFC wild-card playoff round last season. The Packers also added Benjamin St-Juste, who started two games for the Los Angeles Chargers last season and has 47 career starts.

But they lack proven cornerbacks beyond those three.

“That’s probably our group, from a numbers perspective that as we sit here today, we’re going to need to add the most numbers,” Gutekunst said. “So we’ll see how that goes.”

Finding cornerbacks who could contribute right away could prove troublesome because the Packers don’t have a first-round pick. They sent their 2026 and 2027 first-round selections to the Dallas Cowboys as part of the package that brought All-Pro pass rusher Micah Parsons to Green Bay.

This is the first time Green Bay has entered a draft without a first-round pick since 1986, though the Packers traded out of the first round on draft day in 2008 and 2017. The Packers’ first pick is at No. 52 overall.

Gutekunst said the lack of a first-round selection only caused minor alterations in the way they prepared for this draft, which starts Thursday in Pittsburgh.

“Maybe how we chopped up our 30 visits, what pro days maybe that I went to was maybe a little different than it would have been in the past,” Gutekunst said. “But it hasn’t been a whole lot different.”

Gutekunst does believe he will have flexibility to move up or down in this draft. The Packers have eight picks, including two each in the fifth and seventh rounds. They expect to have at least 11 picks in next year’s draft because of compensatory selections they should get following the free-agent departures of Malik Willis, Quay Walker and Romeo Doubs among others.

“I do feel like if, if the right player were there, that we would be able to go get him,” Gutekunst said.

While Gutekunst acknowledged the Packers need to boost their cornerback situation, he struck a more optimistic tone about the offensive line depth, another area that has generally been regarded as an area of need.

“I feel really good about it,” he said.

The Packers released two-time Pro Bowl lineman Elgton Jenkins and lost starting left tackle Rasheed Walker to Carolina in free agency.

Gutekunst said he feels good about his five projected starters on the offensive line. He also praised the way backup Jacob Monk performed at center during the Packers’ regular-season finale.

The Packers could still add to the offensive line by the end of the week. They have drafted multiple offensive linemen five of the past six years.

Starting at $3.50/week.

Subscribe Today